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Arnold I. Levinson, M.D.

Professor of Medicine and Neurology
Chief, Allergy and Immunology Section
Director, Penn Center for Clinical Immunology

University of Pennsylvania Medical Center
Pulmonary, Allergy & Critical Care Division
Biomedical Research Building II/III, Rm. 1014
421 Curie Boulevard
Philadelphia, PA 19104-6160
tel.: (215) 898-4592
fax: (215) 898-0193
email: frog@mail.med.upenn.edu

Education:

  • MD: University of Maryland
  • Residency: Baltimore City Hospitals
  • Fellowship: University of Pennsylvania, University of California at San Francisco
  • Military Service: Walter Reed Army Medical Center
Dr. Levinson joined the Allergy and Immunology Division at the University of Pennsylvania in 1978, after completing three years as the Chief of the Allergy and Clinical Immunology Laboratory at Walter Reed Army Medical Center. He assumed its leadership in 1998. Over the years, Dr. Levinson has maintained a high profile in the educational, research, and clinical arenas. At Penn, he has received the Class of '92 teaching award, the 2004 Donald B. Martin Teaching Service Award, and the Leonard Berwick teaching award, the latter in recognition of his skills bridging basic science and clinical medicine. On the national scene, he has been the recipient of many invited lectureships and a frequently invited presenter at national allergy and immunology forums. He has published over 144 scientific papers, book chapters, and reviews and has enjoyed consistent funding of his research by the N.I.H., Veterans' Administration and private foundations. Board certified in both Internal Medicine and Allergy and Immunology, Dr. Levinson maintains an active consultative clinical practice where he sees patients with complex allergic, autoimmune, and immunodeficiency disorders. At Penn, Dr. Levinson serves as the Chief of the Allergy and Immunology Section and Director of the recently established Penn Center for Clinical Immunology.

On the national scene, Dr. Levinson has served on N.I.H. and Veterans' Administration research panels, the Immunology Advisory Panels of several Pharmaceutical companies, the editorial boards of the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology and the Journal of Clinical Immunology, and as an Associate Editor of Clinical Immunology. He also was elected to the Chairmanship of the American Board of Allergy and Immunology, the presidency of the Clinical Immunology Society, and the Board of Directors of the American academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology.

Dr. Levinson's research interests are in the cellular and molecular mechanisms of immunoregulation and autoimmune disease.

Research Summary

Role of the Thymus in the Pathogenesis of Myasthenia Gravis
Dr. Levinson analyzes the expression of acetylcholine receptors in the thymus in an effort to determine how intrathymic expression of this autoantigen may predispose to development of the prototypic autoimmune disease, myasthenia gravis (MG). His studies focus on the cellular localization of these receptors at the protein and mRNA levels, as well as their quantitation, and molecular regulation. In addition, he has established a mouse model of thymic inflammation to determine if an antecedent inflammatory response in the thymus alters lymphocyte trafficking to this organ and leads to a breach of tolerance to locally expressed self-antigens, including acetylcholine receptors.

Impact of a B Cell Superantigen on the Immune Response
Dr. Levinson is studying the impact of a novel type of antigen, a B cell superantigen, on the immune system. Unlike a conventional antigen, a B cell superantigen has the potential to react with a large numbers of B cells and/or large amounts of soluble immunoglobulin. He found that the interaction of a prototypic B cell superantigen with the immune system leads to the development of immune complex mediated inflammation in certain tissue compartments. During the course of exploring whether the microbial B cell superantigen under study induced immune complex mediated inflammation in the lung, he made the surprising discovery that the elicited inflammatory response was dependent on the protein MyD88, a pivotal signaling molecule of Toll-like receptors. Current studies are directed at identifying the responsible Toll-like receptor, its cellular source, and the effector molecules responsible for this novel mechanism of inflammation.

Activation of Human B-lymphocytes Via Toll-like Receptors
Dr. Levinson examines the effects of Toll-like receptor activation on human B-lymphocytes. He has discovered that a Toll-like receptor-7 agonist activates naïve human B cells to undergo isotype switch and differentiation to immunoglobulin secreting cells in the absence of B cell receptor cross-linking. The molecular basis of this apparent “innate humeral” immune response is under study.

Representative Publications:
Visvanathan S, Keenan GF, Baker DG, Levinson AI, and Wagner CL. Response to the Pneumococcal Vaccine in Patients with Early Rheumatoid Arthritis Receiving Infliximab plus Methotrexate or Methotrexate Alone, J Rheum., Journal of Rheum. 34:952-7.2007

Levinson A.I.: Myasthenia Gravis. In Principles and Practice of Clinical Immunology, 3rd edition (R.Rich et al, Edit.) St. Louis, in press.

Anderson AL, Sporici R, Lambris J, LaRosa D, and Levinson AI. Pathogenesis of B Cell Superantigen-Induced Immune Complex-Mediated Inflammation Infect. Immun. 74: 1196-1203, 2006.

Levinson AI, Zheng Y, Gaulton G, and Song D. Intrathymic Expression of Neuromuscular Acetylcholine Receptors and the Immunopathogenesis of Myasthenia Gravis. In Molecular Autoimmunity, Zouali M, edit. (Springer, publishers), pages 151-164, 2005.

Zheng Y, Wheatley LM, Liu T, Levinson A.I. Acetylcholine receptor alpha subunit mRNA expression in human thymus: Augmented expression in myasthenia gravis and upregulation by interferon-gamma. Clinical Immunology 91(2):170-177,1999.

Kozlowski LM, Li W, Goldschmidt M, and Levinson AI. In vivo inflammation induced by a prototypic B cell superantigen: elicitation of an Arthus reaction by Staphylococcal protein A requires its immunoglobulin VH binding site. Journal of Immunology 160 (11):5246-5252, 1998.

 

revised 10/07


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