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Dive into the research topics where Andrea Santeford is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrea Santeford.


Cell Reports | 2016

Zika Virus Infection in Mice Causes Panuveitis with Shedding of Virus in Tears.

Jonathan J. Miner; Abdoulaye Sene; Justin M. Richner; Amber M. Smith; Andrea Santeford; Norimitsu Ban; James Weger-Lucarelli; Francesca Manzella; Claudia Rückert; Jennifer Govero; Kevin K. Noguchi; Gregory D. Ebel; Michael S. Diamond; Rajendra S. Apte

Zika virus (ZIKV) is an emerging flavivirus that causes congenital abnormalities and Guillain-Barré syndrome. ZIKV infection also results in severe eye disease characterized by optic neuritis, chorioretinal atrophy, and blindness in newborns and conjunctivitis and uveitis in adults. We evaluated ZIKV infection of the eye by using recently developed mouse models of pathogenesis. ZIKV-inoculated mice developed conjunctivitis, panuveitis, and infection of the cornea, iris, optic nerve, and ganglion and bipolar cells in the retina. This phenotype was independent of the entry receptors Axl or Mertk, given that Axl(-/-), Mertk(-/-), and Axl(-/-)Mertk(-/-) double knockout mice sustained levels of infection similar to those of control animals. We also detected abundant viral RNA in tears, suggesting that virus might be secreted from lacrimal glands or shed from the cornea. This model provides a foundation for studying ZIKV-induced ocular disease, defining mechanisms of viral persistence, and developing therapeutic approaches for viral infections of the eye.


Cell Metabolism | 2013

Impaired Cholesterol Efflux in Senescent Macrophages Promotes Age-Related Macular Degeneration

Abdoulaye Sene; Aslam Ali Khan; Douglas Cox; Rei Nakamura; Andrea Santeford; Bryan M. Kim; Rohini Sidhu; Michael D. Onken; J. William Harbour; Shira Hagbi-Levi; Itay Chowers; Peter A. Edwards; Ángel Baldán; John S. Parks; Daniel S. Ory; Rajendra S. Apte

Pathologic angiogenesis mediated by abnormally polarized macrophages plays a central role in common age-associated diseases such as atherosclerosis, cancer, and macular degeneration. Here we demonstrate that abnormal polarization in older macrophages is caused by programmatic changes that lead to reduced expression of ATP binding cassette transporter ABCA1. Downregulation of ABCA1 by microRNA-33 impairs the ability of macrophages to effectively efflux intracellular cholesterol, which in turn leads to higher levels of free cholesterol within senescent macrophages. Elevated intracellular lipid polarizes older macrophages to an abnormal, alternatively activated phenotype that promotes pathologic vascular proliferation. Mice deficient for Abca1, but not Abcg1, demonstrate an accelerated aging phenotype, whereas restoration of cholesterol efflux using LXR agonists or miR-33 inhibitors reverses it. Monocytes from older humans with age-related macular degeneration showed similar changes. These findings provide an avenue for therapeutic modulation of macrophage function in common age-related diseases.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

VEGF is essential for hypoxia-inducible factor-mediated neovascularization but dispensable for endothelial sprouting.

Sunday S. Oladipupo; Song Hu; Joanna R. Kovalski; Junjie Yao; Andrea Santeford; Rebecca E. Sohn; Ralph V. Shohet; Konstantin Maslov; Lihong V. Wang; Jeffrey M. Arbeit

Although our understanding of the molecular regulation of adult neovascularization has advanced tremendously, vascular-targeted therapies for tissue ischemia remain suboptimal. The master regulatory transcription factors of the hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) family are attractive therapeutic targets because they coordinately up-regulate multiple genes controlling neovascularization. Here, we used an inducible model of epithelial HIF-1 activation, the TetON-HIF-1 mouse, to test the requirement for VEGF in HIF-1 mediated neovascularization. TetON-HIF-1, K14-Cre, and VEGFflox/flox alleles were combined to create TetON-HIF-1:VEGFΔ mice to activate HIF-1 and its target genes in adult basal keratinocytes in the absence of concomitant VEGF. HIF-1 induction failed to produce neovascularization in TetON-HIF-1:VEGFΔ mice despite robust up-regulation of multiple proangiogenic HIF targets, including PlGF, adrenomedullin, angiogenin, and PAI-1. In contrast, endothelial sprouting was preserved, enhanced, and more persistent, consistent with marked reduction in Dll4-Notch-1 signaling. Optical-resolution photoacoustic microscopy, which provides noninvasive, label-free, high resolution, and wide-field vascular imaging, revealed the absence of both capillary expansion and arteriovenous remodeling in serially imaged individual TetON-HIF-1:VEGFΔ mice. Impaired TetON-HIF-1:VEGFΔ neovascularization could be partially rescued by 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate skin treatment. These data suggest that therapeutic angiogenesis for ischemic cardiovascular disease may require treatment with both HIF-1 and VEGF.


Blood | 2011

Conditional HIF-1 induction produces multistage neovascularization with stage-specific sensitivity to VEGFR inhibitors and myeloid cell independence.

Sunday S. Oladipupo; Song Hu; Andrea Santeford; Junjie Yao; Joanna R. Kovalski; Ralph V. Shohet; Konstantin Maslov; Lihong V. Wang; Jeffrey M. Arbeit

Neovascularization is a crucial component of tumor growth and ischemia. Although prior work primarily used disease models, delineation of neovascularization in the absence of disease can reveal intrinsic mechanisms of microvessel regulation amenable to manipulation in illness. We created a conditional model of epithelial HIF-1 induction in adult mice (TetON-HIF-1 mice). Longitudinal photoacoustic microscopy (L-PAM) was coincidentally developed for noninvasive, label-free serial imaging of red blood cell-perfused vasculature in the same mouse for weeks to months. TetON-HIF-1 mice evidenced 3 stages of neovascularization: development, maintenance, and transgene-dependent regression. Regression occurred despite extensive and tight pericyte coverage. L-PAM mapped microvascular architecture and quantified volumetric changes in neocapillary morphogenesis, arteriovenous remodeling, and microvessel regression. Developmental stage endothelial proliferation down-regulation was associated with a DNA damage checkpoint consisting of p53, p21, and endothelial γ-H2AX induction. The neovasculature was temporally responsive to VEGFR2 immuno-blockade, with the developmental stage sensitive, and the maintenance stage resistant, to DC101 treatment. L-PAM analysis also pinpointed microvessels ablated or resistant to VEGFR2 immuno-blockade. HIF-1-recruited myeloid cells did not mediate VEGFR2 inhibitor resistance. Thus, HIF-1 neovascularization in the absence of disease is self-regulated via cell autonomous endothelial checkpoints, and resistant to angiogenesis inhibitors independent of myeloid cells.


Nature Communications | 2015

IL10-driven STAT3 signalling in senescent macrophages promotes pathological eye angiogenesis

Rei Nakamura; Abdoulaye Sene; Andrea Santeford; Abdelaziz Gdoura; Shunsuke Kubota; Nicole Zapata; Rajendra S. Apte

Macrophage dysfunction plays a pivotal role during neovascular proliferation in diseases of ageing including cancers, atherosclerosis and blinding eye disease. In the eye, choroidal neovascularization (CNV) causes blindness in patients with age-related macular degeneration (AMD). Here we report that increased IL10, not IL4 or IL13, in senescent eyes activates STAT3 signalling that induces the alternative activation of macrophages and vascular proliferation. Targeted inhibition of both IL10 receptor-mediated signalling and STAT3 activation in macrophages reverses the ageing phenotype. In addition, adoptive transfer of STAT3-deficient macrophages into eyes of old mice significantly reduces the amount of CNV. Systemic and CD163+ eye macrophages obtained from AMD patients also demonstrate STAT3 activation. Our studies demonstrate that impaired SOCS3 feedback leads to permissive IL10/STAT3 signalling that promotes alternative macrophage activation and pathological neovascularization. These findings have significant implications for our understanding of the pathobiology of age-associated diseases and may guide targeted immunotherapy.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Endothelial cell FGF signaling is required for injury response but not for vascular homeostasis

Sunday S. Oladipupo; Craig M. Smith; Andrea Santeford; Changwon Park; Abdoulaye Sene; Luke A. Wiley; Patrick Osei-Owusu; Joann Hsu; Nicole Zapata; Fang Liu; Rei Nakamura; Kory J. Lavine; Kendall J. Blumer; Kyunghee Choi; Rajendra S. Apte; David M. Ornitz

Significance FGF receptor (FGFR) signaling is thought to be essential for vascular development, homeostasis, and pathological angiogenesis. However, the in vivo requirements and the cellular targets of FGF in the vasculature are not known. Here, we show that endothelial FGFR1 and FGFR2 are not required for vascular homeostasis or physiological functions and are likely not required for embryonic development. However, endothelial FGFR1 and FGFR2 are essential for neovascularization after skin or eye injury or following retinal ischemia. These findings reveal a key requirement for cell-autonomous endothelial FGFR signaling in tissue repair and neovascularization following injury and validate the endothelial cell FGFR as a target for diseases associated with aberrant vascular proliferation such as age-related macular degeneration, diabetic retinopathy, and wound healing. Endothelial cells (ECs) express fibroblast growth factor receptors (FGFRs) and are exquisitely sensitive to FGF signals. However, whether the EC or another vascular cell type requires FGF signaling during development, homeostasis, and response to injury is not known. Here, we show that Flk1-Cre or Tie2-Cre mediated deletion of FGFR1 and FGFR2 (Fgfr1/2Flk1-Cre or Fgfr1/2Tie2-Cre mice), which results in deletion in endothelial and hematopoietic cells, is compatible with normal embryonic development. As adults, Fgfr1/2Flk1-Cre mice maintain normal blood pressure and vascular reactivity and integrity under homeostatic conditions. However, neovascularization after skin or eye injury was significantly impaired in both Fgfr1/2Flk1-Cre and Fgfr1/2Tie2-Cre mice, independent of either hematopoietic cell loss of FGFR1/2 or vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2 (Vegfr2) haploinsufficiency. Also, impaired neovascularization was associated with delayed cutaneous wound healing. These findings reveal a key requirement for cell-autonomous EC FGFR signaling in injury-induced angiogenesis, but not for vascular homeostasis, identifying the EC FGFR signaling pathway as a target for diseases associated with aberrant vascular proliferation, such as age-related macular degeneration, and for modulating wound healing without the potential toxicity associated with direct manipulation of systemic FGF or VEGF activity.


Magnetic Resonance in Medicine | 2008

Detection of targeted perfluorocarbon nanoparticle binding using 19F diffusion weighted MR spectroscopy

Emily A. Waters; Junjie Chen; Xiaoxia Yang; Huiying Zhang; Robert Neumann; Andrea Santeford; Jeffrey M. Arbeit; Gregory M. Lanza; Samuel A. Wickline

Real‐time detection of targeted contrast agent binding is challenging due to background signal from unbound agent. 19F diffusion weighted MR spectroscopy (DWS) could selectively detect binding of angiogenesis‐targeted perfluorocarbon nanoparticles in vivo. Transgenic K14‐HPV16 mice with epidermal squamous carcinomas exhibiting up‐regulated neovasculature were used, with nontransgenic littermates as controls. Mice were treated with αvβ3‐integrin targeted perfluorocarbon nanoparticles. 19F DWS (b‐values from 0 to 16,000 s/mm2) was performed on mouse ears in vivo at 11.74 Tesla. Progressive decay of 19F signal with increased diffusion weighting at low b‐values (< 1500 s/mm2) was observed in ears of both K14‐HPV16 and control mice, demonstrating suppression of background 19F signal from unbound nanoparticles in the blood. Much of the 19F signal from ears of K14‐HPV16 mice persisted at high b‐values, indicating a stationary signal source, reflecting abundant nanoparticle binding to angiogenesis. 19F signal in controls decayed completely at high b‐values (> 1500 s/mm2), reflecting a moving signal source due to absence of angiogenesis (no binding sites). Estimated ADCs of nanoparticles in K14‐HPV16 and control mice were 33.1 ± 12.9 μm2/s and 19563 ± 5858 μm2/s (p < 0.01). In vivo 19F DWS can be used for specific detection of bound perfluorocarbon nanoparticles by selectively suppressing background 19F signal from nanoparticles flowing in blood. Magn Reson Med 60:1232–1236, 2008.


Bios | 2010

Optical-resolution photoacoustic microscopy of angiogenesis in a transgenic mouse model

Song Hu; Sunday S. Oladipupo; Junjie Yao; Andrea Santeford; Konstantin Maslov; Joanna R. Kovalski; Jeffrey M. Arbeit; Lihong V. Wang

A major obstacle in studying angiogenesis is the inability to noninvasively image neovascular development in an individual animal. We applied optical-resolution photoacoustic microscopy (OR-PAM) to determine the kinetics of hypoxia-inducible factor-1 (HIF-1)-mediated angiogenesis in a transgenic mouse model. During continuous 30-day activation of HIF-1α, we used OR-PAM to monitor alterations in microvasculature in transgenic mice compared to nontransgenic mice. OR-PAM has demonstrated the potential to precisely monitor antiangiogenic therapy of human cancers, allowing for rapid determinations of therapeutic efficacy or resistance.


Nature | 2018

Electrophilic properties of itaconate and derivatives regulate the IκBζ–ATF3 inflammatory axis

Monika Bambouskova; Laurent Gorvel; Vicky Lampropoulou; Alexey Sergushichev; Ekaterina Loginicheva; Kendall Johnson; Daniel Korenfeld; Mary Elizabeth Mathyer; Hyeryun Kim; Li-Hao Huang; Dustin Duncan; Howard Bregman; Abdurrahman Keskin; Andrea Santeford; Rajendra S. Apte; Raghav Sehgal; Britney Johnson; Gaya K. Amarasinghe; Miguel P. Soares; Takashi Satoh; Shizuo Akira; Tsonwin Hai; Cristina de Guzman Strong; Karine Auclair; Thomas P. Roddy; Scott A. Biller; Marko Jovanovic; Eynav Klechevsky; Kelly M. Stewart; Gwendalyn J. Randolph

Metabolic regulation has been recognized as a powerful principle guiding immune responses. Inflammatory macrophages undergo extensive metabolic rewiring1 marked by the production of substantial amounts of itaconate, which has recently been described as an immunoregulatory metabolite2. Itaconate and its membrane-permeable derivative dimethyl itaconate (DI) selectively inhibit a subset of cytokines2, including IL-6 and IL-12 but not TNF. The major effects of itaconate on cellular metabolism during macrophage activation have been attributed to the inhibition of succinate dehydrogenase2,3, yet this inhibition alone is not sufficient to account for the pronounced immunoregulatory effects observed in the case of DI. Furthermore, the regulatory pathway responsible for such selective effects of itaconate and DI on the inflammatory program has not been defined. Here we show that itaconate and DI induce electrophilic stress, react with glutathione and subsequently induce both Nrf2 (also known as NFE2L2)-dependent and -independent responses. We find that electrophilic stress can selectively regulate secondary, but not primary, transcriptional responses to toll-like receptor stimulation via inhibition of IκBζ protein induction. The regulation of IκBζ is independent of Nrf2, and we identify ATF3 as its key mediator. The inhibitory effect is conserved across species and cell types, and the in vivo administration of DI can ameliorate IL-17–IκBζ-driven skin pathology in a mouse model of psoriasis, highlighting the therapeutic potential of this regulatory pathway. Our results demonstrate that targeting the DI–IκBζ regulatory axis could be an important new strategy for the treatment of IL-17–IκBζ-mediated autoimmune diseases.The immunoregulatory metabolite itaconate and its dimethyl derivative induce electrophilic stress and react with glutathione to induce both Nrf2-dependent and Nrf2-independent responses, resulting in AF3-mediated inhibition of the inflammation-related protein IκBζ.


Cancer Research | 2009

Magnetic Resonance Imaging Defines Cervicovaginal Anatomy, Cancer, and VEGF Trap Antiangiogenic Efficacy in Estrogen-Treated K14-HPV16 Transgenic Mice

Joel R. Garbow; Andrea Santeford; Jeff R. Anderson; John A. Engelbach; Jeffrey M. Arbeit

Noninvasive detection of dysplasia provides a potential platform for monitoring the efficacy of chemopreventive therapy of premalignancy, imaging the tissue compartments comprising dysplasia: epithelium, microvasculature, and stromal inflammatory cells. Here, using respiratory-gated magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), the anatomy of premalignant and malignant stages of cervical carcinogenesis in estrogen-treated K14-HPV16 transgenic mice was noninvasively defined. Dynamic contrast enhanced (DCE)-MRI was used to quantify leakage across premalignant dysplastic microvasculature. Vascular permeability as measured by DCE-MRI, K(trans), was similar in transgenic (0.053 +/- 0.020 min(-1); n = 32 mice) and nontransgenic (0.056 +/- 0.029 min(-1); n = 17 mice) animals despite a 2-fold increase in microvascular area in the former compared with the latter. DCE-MRI did detect a significant decrease in vascular permeability accompanying diminution of dysplastic microvasculature by the antiangiogenic agent, vascular endothelial growth factor Trap (K(trans) = 0.052 +/- 0.013 min(-1) pretreatment; n = 6 mice versus K(trans) = 0.019 +/- 0.008 min(-1) post-treatment; n = 5 mice). Thus, we determined that the threshold of microvessel leakage associated with cervical dysplasia was <17 kDa and highlighted the potential of DCE-MRI to noninvasively monitor the efficacy of antiangiogenic drugs or chemoprevention regimens targeting the vasculature in premalignant cervical dysplasia.

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Rajendra S. Apte

Washington University in St. Louis

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Abdoulaye Sene

Washington University in St. Louis

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Jonathan B. Lin

Washington University in St. Louis

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Norimitsu Ban

Washington University in St. Louis

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Sunday S. Oladipupo

Washington University in St. Louis

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Rei Nakamura

Washington University in St. Louis

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Daniel S. Ory

Washington University in St. Louis

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Joanna R. Kovalski

Washington University in St. Louis

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