Beatrice H. Hahn, MD

Beatrice H. Hahn, MD

University of Pennsylvania

H-index: 150

North America-United States

Professor Information

University

University of Pennsylvania

Position

Professor of Medicine and Microbiology

Citations(all)

94951

Citations(since 2020)

21318

Cited By

82686

hIndex(all)

150

hIndex(since 2020)

74

i10Index(all)

427

i10Index(since 2020)

291

Email

University Profile Page

University of Pennsylvania

Top articles of Beatrice H. Hahn, MD

from humans

Humans and other primates harbour complex gut bacterial communities that influence health and disease, but the evolutionary histories of these symbioses remain unclear. This is partly due to limited information about the microbiota of ancestral primates. Here, using phylogenetic analyses of metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs), we show that hundreds of gut bacterial clades diversified in parallel (that is, co-diversified) with primate species over millions of years, but that humans have experienced widespread losses of these ancestral symbionts. Analyses of 9,460 human and non-human primate MAGs, including newly generated MAGs from chimpanzees and bonobos, revealed significant co-diversification within ten gut bacterial phyla, including Firmicutes, Actinobacteriota and Bacteroidota. Strikingly,~ 44% of the co-diversifying clades detected in African apes were absent from available metagenomic data from humans and~ 54% were absent from industrialized human populations. In contrast, only~ 3% of non-co-diversifying clades detected in African apes were absent from humans. Co-diversifying clades present in both humans and chimpanzees displayed consistent genomic signatures of natural selection between the two host species but differed in functional content from co-diversifying

Authors

Jon G Sanders,Daniel D Sprockett,Yingying Li,Deus Mjungu,Elizabeth V Lonsdorf,Jean-Bosco N Ndjango,Alexander V Georgiev,John A Hart,Crickette M Sanz,David B Morgan,Martine Peeters,Beatrice H Hahn,Andrew H Moeller

Published Date

2023/11/16

Role of Pfs47 in the dispersal of ancestral Plasmodium falciparum malaria through adaptation to different anopheline vectors

Plasmodium falciparum malaria originated when Plasmodium praefalciparum, a gorilla malaria parasite transmitted by African sylvan anopheline mosquitoes, adapted to humans. Pfs47, a protein on the parasite surface mediates P. falciparum evasion of the mosquito immune system by interacting with a midgut receptor and is critical for Plasmodium adaptation to different anopheline species. Genetic analysis of 4,971 Pfs47 gene sequences from different continents revealed that Asia and Papua New Guinea harbor Pfs47 haplotypes more similar to its ortholog in P. praefalciparum at sites that determine vector compatibility, suggesting that ancestral P. falciparum readily adapted to Asian vectors. Consistent with this observation, Pfs47-receptor gene sequences from African sylvan malaria vectors, such as Anopheles moucheti and An. marshallii, were found to share greater similarity with those of Asian vectors than …

Authors

Alvaro Molina-Cruz,Gaspar E Canepa,Ankit Dwivedi,Weimin Liu,Nadia Raytselis,Christophe Antonio-Nkondjio,Beatrice H Hahn,Joana C Silva,Carolina Barillas-Mury

Journal

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Published Date

2023/1/31

Exposure of progressive immune dysfunction by SARS-CoV-2 mRNA vaccination in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia: A prospective cohort study

Background Patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) have reduced seroconversion rates and lower binding antibody (Ab) and neutralizing antibody (NAb) titers than healthy individuals following Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) mRNA vaccination. Here, we dissected vaccine-mediated humoral and cellular responses to understand the mechanisms underlying CLL-induced immune dysfunction. Methods and findings We performed a prospective observational study in SARS-CoV-2 infection-naïve CLL patients (n = 95) and healthy controls (n = 30) who were vaccinated between December 2020 and June 2021. Sixty-one CLL patients and 27 healthy controls received 2 doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech BNT162b2 vaccine, while 34 CLL patients and 3 healthy controls received 2 doses of the Moderna mRNA-1273 vaccine. The median time to analysis was 38 days (IQR, 27 to 83) for CLL patients and 36 days (IQR, 28 to 57) for healthy controls. Testing plasma samples for SARS-CoV-2 anti-spike and receptor-binding domain Abs by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), we found that all healthy controls seroconverted to both antigens, while CLL patients had lower response rates (68% and 54%) as well as lower median titers (23-fold and 30-fold; both p < 0.001). Similarly, NAb responses against the then prevalent D614G and Delta SARS-CoV-2 variants were detected in 97% and 93% of controls, respectively, but in only 42% and 38% of CLL patients, who also exhibited >23-fold and >17-fold lower median NAb titers (both p < 0.001). Interestingly, 26% of CLL patients failed to develop NAbs but had …

Authors

Kai Qin,Kazuhito Honjo,Scott Sherrill-Mix,Weimin Liu,Regina M Stoltz,Allisa K Oman,Lucinda A Hall,Ran Li,Sarah Sterrett,Ellen R Frederick,Jeffrey R Lancaster,Mayur Narkhede,Amitkumar Mehta,Foluso J Ogunsile,Rima B Patel,Thomas J Ketas,Victor M Cruz Portillo,Albert Cupo,Benjamin M Larimer,Anju Bansal,Paul A Goepfert,Beatrice H Hahn,Randall S Davis

Journal

PLoS Medicine

Published Date

2023/6/29

Impact of HIV-1 Vpu-mediated downregulation of CD48 on NK-cell-mediated antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity

HIV-1 evades antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) responses not only by controlling Env conformation and quantity at the cell surface but also by altering NK cell activation via the downmodulation of several ligands of activating and co-activating NK cell receptors. The signaling lymphocyte activation molecule (SLAM) family of receptors, which includes NTB-A and 2B4, act as co-activating receptors to sustain NK cell activation and cytotoxic responses. These receptors cooperate with CD16 (FcγRIII) and other activating receptors to trigger NK cell effector functions. In that context, Vpu-mediated downregulation of NTB-A on HIV-1-infected CD4 T cells was shown to prevent NK cell degranulation via an homophilic interaction, thus contributing to ADCC evasion. However, less is known on the capacity of HIV-1 to evade 2B4-mediated NK cell activation and ADCC. Here, we show that HIV-1 downregulates the …

Authors

Lorie Marchitto,Mehdi Benlarbi,Jérémie Prévost,Annemarie Laumaea,Jade Descôteaux-Dinelle,Halima Medjahed,Catherine Bourassa,Gabrielle Gendron-Lepage,Frank Kirchhoff,Daniel Sauter,Beatrice H Hahn,Andrés Finzi,Jonathan Richard

Journal

Mbio

Published Date

2023/8/31

Structure-based stabilization of SOSIP Env enhances recombinant ectodomain durability and yield

The envelope glycoprotein (Env) is the main focus of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) vaccine development due to its critical role in viral entry. Despite advances in protein engineering, many Env proteins remain recalcitrant to recombinant expression due to their inherent metastability, making biochemical and immunological experiments impractical or impossible. Here, we report a novel proline stabilization strategy to facilitate the production of prefusion Env trimers. This approach, termed “2P,” works synergistically with previously described SOSIP mutations and dramatically increases the yield of recombinantly expressed Env ectodomains without altering the antigenic or conformational properties of near-native Env. We determined that the 2P mutations function by enhancing the durability of the prefusion conformation and that this stabilization strategy is broadly applicable to evolutionarily and …

Authors

Daniel Wrapp,Zekun Mu,Bhishem Thakur,Katarzyna Janowska,Oluwatobi Ajayi,Maggie Barr,Robert Parks,Katayoun Mansouri,Robert J Edwards,Beatrice H Hahn,Priyamvada Acharya,Kevin O Saunders,Barton F Haynes

Journal

Journal of Virology

Published Date

2023/1/31

Widespread extinctions of co-diversified primate gut bacterial symbionts from humans

Humans and other primates harbour complex gut bacterial communities that influence health and disease, but the evolutionary histories of these symbioses remain unclear. This is partly due to limited information about the microbiota of ancestral primates. Here, using phylogenetic analyses of metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs), we show that hundreds of gut bacterial clades diversified in parallel (that is, co-diversified) with primate species over millions of years, but that humans have experienced widespread losses of these ancestral symbionts. Analyses of 9,460 human and non-human primate MAGs, including newly generated MAGs from chimpanzees and bonobos, revealed significant co-diversification within ten gut bacterial phyla, including Firmicutes, Actinobacteriota and Bacteroidota. Strikingly, ~44% of the co-diversifying clades detected in African apes were absent from available metagenomic data …

Authors

Jon G Sanders,Daniel D Sprockett,Yingying Li,Deus Mjungu,Elizabeth V Lonsdorf,Jean-Bosco N Ndjango,Alexander V Georgiev,John A Hart,Crickette M Sanz,David B Morgan,Martine Peeters,Beatrice H Hahn,Andrew H Moeller

Journal

Nature microbiology

Published Date

2023/6

Reproductive inequality among males in the genus Pan

Reproductive inequality, or reproductive skew, drives natural selection, but has been difficult to assess, particularly for males in species with promiscuous mating and slow life histories, such as bonobos (Pan paniscus) and chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes). Although bonobos are often portrayed as more egalitarian than chimpanzees, genetic studies have found high male reproductive skew in bonobos. Here, we discuss mechanisms likely to affect male reproductive skew in Pan, then re-examine skew patterns using paternity data from published work and new data from the Kokolopori Bonobo Reserve, Democratic Republic of Congo and Gombe National Park, Tanzania. Using the multinomial index (M), we found considerable overlap in skew between the species, but the highest skew occurred among bonobos. Additionally, for two of three bonobo communities, but no chimpanzee communities, the highest ranking …

Authors

Maud Mouginot,Leveda Cheng,Michael L Wilson,Joseph T Feldblum,Veronika Städele,Emily E Wroblewski,Linda Vigilant,Beatrice H Hahn,Yingying Li,Ian C Gilby,Anne E Pusey,Martin Surbeck

Published Date

2023/8/14

Small CD4 mimetics sensitize HIV-1-infected macrophages to antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity

HIV-1 envelope (Env) conformation determines the susceptibility of infected CD4+ T cells to antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC). Upon interaction with CD4, Env adopts more "open" conformations, exposing ADCC epitopes. HIV-1 limits Env-CD4 interaction and protects infected cells against ADCC by downregulating CD4 via Nef, Vpu, and Env. Limited data exist, however, of the role of these proteins in downmodulating CD4 on infected macrophages and how this impacts Env conformation. While Nef, Vpu, and Env are all required to efficiently downregulate CD4 on infected CD4+ T cells, we show here that any one of these proteins is sufficient to downmodulate most CD4 from the surface of infected macrophages. Consistent with this finding, Nef and Vpu have a lesser impact on Env conformation and ADCC sensitivity in infected macrophages compared with CD4+ T cells. However, treatment of infected …

Authors

Annemarie Laumaea,Lorie Marchitto,Shilei Ding,Guillaume Beaudoin-Bussières,Jérémie Prévost,Romain Gasser,Debashree Chatterjee,Gabrielle Gendron-Lepage,Halima Medjahed,Hung-Ching Chen,Amos B Smith,Haitao Ding,John C Kappes,Beatrice H Hahn,Frank Kirchhoff,Jonathan Richard,Ralf Duerr,Andrés Finzi

Journal

Cell reports

Published Date

2023/1/31

Professor FAQs

What is Beatrice H. Hahn, MD's h-index at University of Pennsylvania?

The h-index of Beatrice H. Hahn, MD has been 74 since 2020 and 150 in total.

What is Beatrice H. Hahn, MD's total number of citations?

Beatrice H. Hahn, MD has 94,951 citations in total.

What are the co-authors of Beatrice H. Hahn, MD?

The co-authors of Beatrice H. Hahn, MD are David L Robertson, Anne Pusey, Frank Kirchhoff, Mario L. Santiago, PhD.

Co-Authors

H-index: 84
David L Robertson

David L Robertson

University of Glasgow

H-index: 82
Anne Pusey

Anne Pusey

Duke University

H-index: 82
Frank Kirchhoff

Frank Kirchhoff

Universität Ulm

H-index: 40
Mario L. Santiago, PhD

Mario L. Santiago, PhD

University of Colorado Denver

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