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    Date Issued2019 (1)2015 (1)AuthorKurt-Jones, Evelyn A. (2)
    Pang, Catherine J. (2)
    Blom, Anna M. (1)Clancy, Lauren (1)Corkrey, Heather A. (1)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Medicine, Division of Cardiovascular Medicine (1)Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Disease and Immunology (1)Division of Infectious Diseases and Immunology, Department of Medicine (1)Document TypeJournal Article (2)KeywordImmunology of Infectious Disease (2)Immunopathology (2)Infectious Disease (2)Bacterial Infections and Mycoses (1)Bacterial pathogens (1)View MoreJournalNature communications (1)PLoS pathogens (1)

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    The role of platelets in mediating a response to human influenza infection

    Koupenova-Zamor, Milka; Corkrey, Heather A.; Vitseva, Olga; Manni, Giorgia; Pang, Catherine J.; Clancy, Lauren; Yao, Chen; Rade, Jeffrey J.; Levy, Daniel; Wang, Jennifer P.; et al. (2019-04-16)
    Influenza infection increases the incidence of myocardial infarction but the reason is unknown. Platelets mediate vascular occlusion through thrombotic functions but are also recognized to have immunomodulatory activity. To determine if platelet processes are activated during influenza infection, we collected blood from 18 patients with acute influenza infection. Microscopy reveals activated platelets, many containing viral particles and extracellular-DNA associated with platelets. To understand the mechanism, we isolate human platelets and treat them with influenza A virus. Viral-engulfment leads to C3 release from platelets as a function of TLR7 and C3 leads to neutrophil-DNA release and aggregation. TLR7 specificity is confirmed in murine models lacking the receptor, and platelet depletion models support platelet-mediated C3 and neutrophil-DNA release post-influenza infection. These findings demonstrate that the initial intrinsic defense against influenza is mediated by platelet-neutrophil cross-communication that tightly regulates host immune and complement responses but can also lead to thrombotic vascular occlusion.
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    Virulence of Group A Streptococci Is Enhanced by Human Complement Inhibitors

    Ermert, David; Shaughnessy, Jutamas; Joeris, Thorsten; Kaplan, Jakub; Pang, Catherine J.; Kurt-Jones, Evelyn A.; Rice, Peter A.; Ram, Sanjay; Blom, Anna M. (2015-07-22)
    Streptococcus pyogenes, also known as Group A Streptococcus (GAS), is an important human bacterial pathogen that can cause invasive infections. Once it colonizes its exclusively human host, GAS needs to surmount numerous innate immune defense mechanisms, including opsonization by complement and consequent phagocytosis. Several strains of GAS bind to human-specific complement inhibitors, C4b-binding protein (C4BP) and/or Factor H (FH), to curtail complement C3 (a critical opsonin) deposition. This results in diminished activation of phagocytes and clearance of GAS that may lead to the host being unable to limit the infection. Herein we describe the course of GAS infection in three human complement inhibitor transgenic (tg) mouse models that examined each inhibitor (human C4BP or FH) alone, or the two inhibitors together (C4BPxFH or 'double' tg). GAS infection with strains that bound C4BP and FH resulted in enhanced mortality in each of the three transgenic mouse models compared to infection in wild type mice. In addition, GAS manifested increased virulence in C4BPxFH mice: higher organism burdens and greater elevations of pro-inflammatory cytokines and they died earlier than single transgenic or wt controls. The effects of hu-C4BP and hu-FH were specific for GAS strains that bound these inhibitors because strains that did not bind the inhibitors showed reduced virulence in the 'double' tg mice compared to strains that did bind; mortality was also similar in wild-type and C4BPxFH mice infected by non-binding GAS. Our findings emphasize the importance of binding of complement inhibitors to GAS that results in impaired opsonization and phagocytic killing, which translates to enhanced virulence in a humanized whole animal model. This novel hu-C4BPxFH tg model may prove invaluable in studies of GAS pathogenesis and for developing vaccines and therapeutics that rely on human complement activation for efficacy.
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