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Immunogenetics
 Autoimmunity and Functional Genomics
 Chemotaxis Signal
 Lymphocyte Activation
 Molecular Cellular Immunology
 Receptor Cell Biology
 Structural Biology
 Structural Immunology


Laboratory of Immunogenetics

Susan K. Pierce, Ph.D.

Chief, Laboratory of Immunogenetics
Chief, Lymphocyte Activation Section

Lymphocyte Activation Section

Dr. Pierce came to NIH from Northwestern University, where she was the William A. and Gayle Cook chair in the biological sciences and a biochemistry professor in the Department of Biochemistry, Molecular Biology, and Cell Biology, which she chaired from 1990 to 1993. Before coming to the NIAID intramural research program, Dr. Pierce was an NIH grant recipient for research in the area of antigen processing and presentation. She also served NIAID's intramural program as a member of the Board of Scientific Counselors and received a merit award from NIAID.

Overview

The B cell receptor (BCR) serves two essential functions in B cell activation, namely the initiation of signaling cascades that lead to the transcription of a variety of genes associated with B cell activation and the transport of antigen to intracellular compartments where the antigen is processed and presented on MHC class II molecules for recognition by helper T cells. Provided with the appropriate T cell help following antigen contact, B cells proliferate and differentiate into short lived antibody secreting plasma cells as well as long lived plasma cells and memory B cells that constitute immunological memory. The long range goal of the Lymphocyte Activation Section (LAS) is to gain an understanding of the cellular and molecular mechanisms that underlie the initiation of BCR signaling, the intracellular trafficking of the BCR and the generation, maintenance and activation of B cell memory. Of particular interest is the regulation of these processes by B cell activating and inhibitory coreceptors and during immune responses to infection. The long range goals of the LAS are:

  • To gain an understanding of the molecular mechanisms by which antigen engagement by the BCR triggers a signaling cascade. A key element of this aim is the use of live-cell imaging techniques that allows analyses of the earliest events in the initiation of signaling that follow within seconds of the binding of the antigen to the BCR at the single molecule level.
  • To determine the mechanisms that underlie the internalization and trafficking of the BCR to MHC class II-containing intracellular compartments. These studies are defining the spatial relationship between the location of the BCR and the activation of various components of the signaling cascade including the location of the interactions of the BCR with the intracellular innate immune system Toll-like receptors expressed by B cells that modulate BCR signaling.
  • To define the mechanisms that underlie the regulation of B cell responses by the innate immune system receptors including the Toll-like receptors and the activating receptor complex CD19/CD21 and the inhibitory receptor FcγRIIB.
  • To gain an understanding of the cellular mechanisms underlying the generation, maintenance and activation of B cell immunological memory. These studies are focused on the acquisition and maintenance of memory in response to antigens of the malaria parasite, P. falciparum, in response to vaccination in the U.S. and to natural infection in Africa.

It is hoped that knowledge gained through these studies will add fundamentally to our understanding of B cell activation and its regulation. Such knowledge is likely to aid research efforts in two areas of high public health priority, namely, the development of new therapeutics to control B cell responses in autoimmune disease and the design of effective vaccines to control infectious diseases.

Imaging the earliest events in BCR signaling and trafficking in living B cells in real time

Organization of the BCR during Synapse Formation
Shown (left) is the total internal reflection (TIRF) image of a B cell expressing fluorescent BCR as it engages a fluid lipid bilayer that contains the B cell antigen. The view is looking up at the B cell showing the BCRs as the B cell contacts the bilayer, spreads and then actively moves the BCRs to form a synapse.
Recruitment of clathrin to the BCR synapse
Shown (right) is a TIRF image of the recruitment of clatherin (in green) from the cytosol to the synapse as the BCR internalizes antigen (in red) into the cell.

Immobilization of single BCRs in clusters
Shown are single molecule images of individual BCR (green) as they stop when encounter BCR-antigen clusters (red).

Understanding the mechanisms underlying synergy in signaling between adaptive and innate immune receptors

TLR9 ligand colocalize with internalized BCR

Shown is a confocal image demonstrating the recruitment of TLR9 to the intracellular compartment where the BCR is internalized from the surface. Synergistic signaling to the MAP kinase occurs in this compartment.

Understanding immunological memory in malaria

Two children in Mali
Proteomic microarray: Sorted by Age and by Yes/No Malaria

We are carrying out a longitudinal study in Mali, Africa to determine the effect of malaria infections on the acquisition of immunity to malaria. Shown (above) are two volunteers in our study and (right) a proteomic microarray containing proteins from approximately 25% of the Plasmodium falciparum genome probed with sera from volunteers in our study sorted by those who had malaria and those that did not. The protein microarray is one of several immune parameters we are assessing.

Selected Publications

Tolar, Pavel, Sohn, Hae Won and Pierce, Susan K. (2005) The initiation of antigen-induced BCR signaling viewed in living cells by FRET. Nat. Immunol. 6, 1168.

Sohn, Hae Won, Tolar, Pavel, Jin, Tian and Pierce, Susan K. (2006) Fluorescence resonance energy transfer in living cells reveals dynamic membrane changes in the initiation of B cell signaling. Proc.Natl.Acad.Sci., 103, 8143.

Sohn, Hae Won, Tolar, Pavel and Pierce, Susan K. (2008) Membrane heterogeneities in the formation of B cell receptor-Lyn-kinase microclusters and the immune synapse. J. Cell Biol. (in press).

Chaturvedi, Akanksha, Dorward, David and Pierce, Susan K. (2008) The B cell receptor governs the subcellular location of Toll-like receptor 9 leading to hyper-responses to DNA-containing antigens. Immunity 28, 1-11.

Crompton, Peter D., Traore, Boubacar, Kayentao, Kassoum, Doumbo, Safiatou, Ongoiba, Aissata, Diakite, Seidina A.S., Krause, Michael A., Doumtabe, Didier, Kone, Younoussou, Weiss, Greta, Huang, Chiung-Yu, Doumbia, Seydou, Guindo, Aldiouma, Fairhurst, Rick M., Miller, Louis H., Pierce, Susan K. and Doumbo, Ogobara K. (2008) Sickle cell trait is associated with a delayed onset of malaria: Implications for time to event analysis in clinical studies of malaria. J. Infect. Dis. (in press).

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Photo of Susan Pierce, Ph.D.

Contact Info

Susan Pierce, Ph.D.
Phone: 301-496-9589
E-mail: spierce@niaid.nih.gov
Mail:
12441 Parklawn Drive
Twinbrook II, Room 213
Rockville, MD 20852

See Also

  • Division of Intramural Research (DIR)
  • Training Resources

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    Photo of Susan Pierce, Ph.D.

    Contact Info

    Susan Pierce, Ph.D.
    Phone: 301-496-9589
    E-mail: spierce@niaid.nih.gov
    Mail:
    12441 Parklawn Drive
    Twinbrook II, Room 213
    Rockville, MD 20852

    See Also

  • Division of Intramural Research (DIR)
  • Training Resources