D
Dmytro Kobuley
Researcher at University of Pennsylvania
Publications - 7
Citations - 1829
Dmytro Kobuley is an academic researcher from University of Pennsylvania. The author has contributed to research in topics: Intestinal mucosa & Innate immune system. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 7 publications receiving 1591 citations.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Commensal bacteria–derived signals regulate basophil hematopoiesis and allergic inflammation
David A. Hill,Mark C. Siracusa,Michael C. Abt,Brian S. Kim,Dmytro Kobuley,Masato Kubo,Taku Kambayashi,David F. LaRosa,Ellen D. Renner,Jordan S. Orange,Frederic D. Bushman,David Artis +11 more
TL;DR: Results identify a previously unrecognized pathway through which commensal-derived signals influence basophil hematopoiesis and susceptibility to TH2 cytokine–dependent inflammation and allergic disease.
Journal ArticleDOI
Metagenomic analyses reveal antibiotic-induced temporal and spatial changes in intestinal microbiota with associated alterations in immune cell homeostasis
David A. Hill,Christian Hoffmann,Michael C. Abt,Yurong Du,Dmytro Kobuley,Thomas J. Kirn,Thomas J. Kirn,Frederic D. Bushman,David Artis +8 more
TL;DR: An oral antibiotic treatment protocol is developed and characterized its effects on murine intestinal bacterial communities and immune cell homeostasis and metagenomic analyses will provide a resource and framework to test the influence of bacterial communities in murine models of human disease.
Journal ArticleDOI
Commensal-dependent expression of IL-25 regulates the IL-23–IL-17 axis in the intestine
Colby Zaph,Yurong Du,Steven A. Saenz,Meera G. Nair,Jacqueline G. Perrigoue,Betsy C. Taylor,Amy E. Troy,Dmytro Kobuley,Robert A. Kastelein,Daniel J. Cua,Yimin Yu,David Artis +11 more
TL;DR: It is proposed that acquisition of, or alterations in, commensal bacteria influences intestinal immune homeostasis via direct regulation of the IL-25–IL-23– IL-17 axis.
Journal ArticleDOI
Virus-helminth coinfection reveals a microbiota-independent mechanism of immunomodulation
Lisa C. Osborne,Laurel A. Monticelli,Timothy J. Nice,Tara E. Sutherland,Mark C. Siracusa,Matthew R. Hepworth,Vesselin T. Tomov,Dmytro Kobuley,Sara Tran,Kyle Bittinger,Aubrey Bailey,Alice Laughlin,Jean-Luc Boucher,E. John Wherry,Frederic D. Bushman,Judith E. Allen,Herbert W. Virgin,David Artis +17 more
TL;DR: Data indicate that helminth-induced immunomodulation occurs independently of changes in the microbiota but is dependent on Ym1, a chitinase-like molecule that is associated with alternatively activated macrophages, which could partially restore antiviral immunity.
Journal ArticleDOI
Endothelial TLR4 and the microbiome drive cerebral cavernous malformations
Alan T. Tang,Jaesung P. Choi,Jonathan J. Kotzin,Yiqing Yang,Courtney C. Hong,Nicholas Hobson,Romuald Girard,Hussein A. Zeineddine,Rhonda Lightle,Thomas R. Moore,Ying Cao,Robert Shenkar,Mei Chen,Patricia Mericko,Jisheng Yang,Li Li,Ceylan Tanes,Dmytro Kobuley,Urmo Võsa,Kevin J. Whitehead,Dean Y. Li,Lude Franke,Blaine L. Hart,Markus Schwaninger,Jorge Henao-Mejia,Jorge Henao-Mejia,Leslie Morrison,Helen Kim,Issam A. Awad,Xiangjian Zheng,Xiangjian Zheng,Mark L. Kahn +31 more
TL;DR: These studies identify unexpected roles for the microbiome and innate immune signalling in the pathogenesis of a cerebrovascular disease, as well as strategies for its treatment.