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Bijay Mukherji

Professor of Medicine
mukherji@nso2.uchc.edu

 
Areas of Interest

The understanding of the basic mechanisms involved in cellular immune response against human cancer is the major goal of Dr. Mukherji’s laboratory. Cytolytic T lymphocyte response, the specificity of response, the role of professional antigen-presenting cells and mechanisms of peripheral regulation are studied using T cell lines and various T cell determined peptide epitopes. The studies are carried out in autologous human tumor systems as the model. More specifically, the interest of Dr. Mukherji’s laboratory centers around the question of how T cells that are capable of recognizing peptide epitopes on cancer cells but exist in an unresponsive state can be reactivated. In this context, the development of an antigen presentation system capable of activating and amplifying tumor specific cytolytic T lymphocytes is sought by putting professional antigen-presenting cells in the center of the schema. Several cell biological and molecular biological approaches are studied with the goal of engineering professional antigen-presenting cells that will provide the requisite signals for activating the relevant T cell populations. Along with in vitro studies, in vivo translation studies are also carried out with well-defined patient population. 

Lab Rotation Projects

Our major interest centers around the question of how to orchestrate a robust and long-lived cytolytic T cell (CTL) response to tumor associated epitope in human models. Since CTLs are prone to undergoing programmed cell death (PCD) as well as activation induced cell death (AICD), we are probing the molecular mechanism underlying PCD and AICD. We have found that caspases are not involved in the AICD of CTLs. They die via a mitochondria-based process that is caspase-independent. it seems that the death is quite likely mediated by single stranded DNA breaks induced by the pro-apoptotic protein,apoptosis inducing factor (AIF) released from mitochondrial dysregulation. Our work suggests that JNK is a player in themitochondrial release of AIF which then translocates to teh nucleus where it causes ssDNA breaks. Our present goals are to probe this pathway in further details and to find points of possible interdiction so as to keep the CTLs alive longer.

Our other interest is on the subject of peripheral regulation of CTL activation. Specifically, we wish to figure out which CD4+ T regulatory cells (natural Tregs or induced Tregs) are the major constraints in generating tumor epitope specific CTLs. We have recently found that contrary to the popular belief that natural Treg cells control tumor immunity, the generation of tumor epitope specific CTLs is not usually affected by CD4+CD25+ (nTreg cells) but by a regulatory population that is induced from CD4+CD25- precursors. We are interested in understanding the mechanism underlying the generation of these types of induced Treg cells.

Publications

Selected Publications

Schumacher L, Ribas A, Dissette VB, McBride WH, Mukherji B, Economou JS, Butterfield LH. Human dendritic cell maturation by adenovirus transduction enhances tumor antigen-specific T-cell responses. J Immunother. 2004 May-Jun;27(3):191-200.

Mehrotra S, Stevens R, Zengou R, Chakraborty NG, Butterfield LH, Economou JS, Dorsky DI, Mukherji B. Regulation of melanoma epitope-specific cytolytic T lymphocyte response by immature and activated dendritic cells, in vitro. Cancer Res. 2003 Sep 1;63(17):5607-14.

Butterfield LH, Ribas A, Dissette VB, Amarnani SN, Vu HT, Oseguera D, Wang HJ, Elashoff RM, McBride WH, Mukherji B, Cochran AJ, Glaspy JA, Economou JS. Determinant spreading associated with clinical response in dendritic cell-based

immunotherapy for malignant melanoma. Clin Cancer Res. 2003 Mar;9(3):998-1008.

Schuman JS, Massicotte EC, Connolly S, Hertzmark E, Mukherji B, Kunen MZ. Increased intraocular pressure and visual field defects in high resistance wind instrument players. Ophthalmology. 2000 Jan;107(1):127-33.

Chakraborty A, Li L, Chakraborty NG, Mukherji B. Stimulatory and inhibitory differentiation of human myeloid dendritic cells. Clin Immunol. 2000 Feb;94(2):88-98.

Paper icon View more publications, see Pubmed listing.

  
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