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Koen Schepers

Leiden University Medical Center

ORCID: 0000-0003-2442-242X

Publishes on T-cell and B-cell Immunology, Immune Cell Function and Interaction, Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation. 49 papers and 3.3k citations.

49Publications
3.3kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Invasive breast cancer reprograms early myeloid differentiation in the bone marrow to generate immunosuppressive neutrophils
Amy-Jo Casbon, Damien Reynaud, Chanhyuk Park et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|2015
Cited by 465Open Access

Expansion of myeloid cells associated with solid tumor development is a key contributor to neoplastic progression. Despite their clinical relevance, the mechanisms controlling myeloid cell production and activity in cancer remains poorly understood. Using a multistage mouse model of breast cancer, we show that production of atypical T cell-suppressive neutrophils occurs during early tumor progression, at the onset of malignant conversion, and that these cells preferentially accumulate in peripheral tissues but not in the primary tumor. Production of these cells results from activation of a myeloid differentiation program in bone marrow (BM) by a novel mechanism in which tumor-derived granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) directs expansion and differentiation of hematopoietic stem cells to skew hematopoiesis toward the myeloid lineage. Chronic skewing of myeloid production occurred in parallel to a decrease in erythropoiesis in BM in mice with progressive disease. Significantly, we reveal that prolonged G-CSF stimulation is both necessary and sufficient for the distinguishing characteristics of tumor-induced immunosuppressive neutrophils. These results demonstrate that prolonged G-CSF may be responsible for both the development and activity of immunosuppressive neutrophils in cancer.

One naive T cell, multiple fates in CD8+ T cell differentiation
Carmen Gerlach, Jeroen W. J. van Heijst, Erwin Swart et al.|The Journal of Experimental Medicine|2010
Cited by 216Open Access

The mechanism by which the immune system produces effector and memory T cells is largely unclear. To allow a large-scale assessment of the development of single naive T cells into different subsets, we have developed a technology that introduces unique genetic tags (barcodes) into naive T cells. By comparing the barcodes present in antigen-specific effector and memory T cell populations in systemic and local infection models, at different anatomical sites, and for TCR-pMHC interactions of different avidities, we demonstrate that under all conditions tested, individual naive T cells yield both effector and memory CD8+ T cell progeny. This indicates that effector and memory fate decisions are not determined by the nature of the priming antigen-presenting cell or the time of T cell priming. Instead, for both low and high avidity T cells, individual naive T cells have multiple fates and can differentiate into effector and memory T cell subsets.