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Dive into the research topics where Ann-Charlotte Lundstedt is active.

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Featured researches published by Ann-Charlotte Lundstedt.


Journal of Leukocyte Biology | 2001

Neutrophil recruitment, chemokine receptors, and resistance to mucosal infection

Gabriela Godaly; Göran Bergsten; L Hang; Hans Fischer; B Frendeus; Ann-Charlotte Lundstedt; M Samuelsson; P Samuelsson; Catharina Svanborg

Neutrophil migration to infected mucosal sites involves a series of complex interactions with molecules in the lamina propria and at the epithelial barrier. Much attention has focussed on the vascular compartment and endothelial cells, but less is known about the molecular determinants of neutrophil behavior in the periphery. We have studied urinary tract infections (UTIs) to determine the events that initiate neutrophil recruitment and interactions of the recruited neutrophils with the mucosal barrier. Bacteria activate a chemokine response in uroepithelial cells, and the chemokine repertoire depends on the bacterial virulence factors and on the specific signaling pathways that they activate. In addition, epithelial chemokine receptor expression is enhanced. Interleukin (IL)‐8 and CXCR1 direct neutrophil migration across the epithelial barrier into the lumen. Indeed, mIL‐8Rh knockout mice showed impaired transepithelial neutrophil migration, with tissue accumulation of neutrophils, and these mice developed renal scarring. They had a defective antibacterial defense and developed acute pyelonephritis with bacteremia. Low CXCR1 expression was also detected in children with acute pyelonephritis. These results demonstrate that chemokines and chemokine receptors are essential to orchestrate a functional antimicrobial defense of the urinary tract mucosa. Mutational inactivation of the IL‐8R caused both acute disease and chronic tissue damage.


PLOS ONE | 2007

A genetic basis of susceptibility to acute pyelonephritis.

Ann-Charlotte Lundstedt; Shane McCarthy; Mattias C. U. Gustafsson; Gabriela Godaly; Ulf Jodal; Diana Karpman; Irene Leijonhufvud; Carin Lindén; Jeanette Martinell; Bryndís Ragnarsdóttir; Martin Samuelsson; Lennart Truedsson; Björn Andersson; Catharina Svanborg

Background For unknown reasons, urinary tract infections (UTIs) are clustered in certain individuals. Here we propose a novel, genetically determined cause of susceptibility to acute pyelonephritis, which is the most severe form of UTI. The IL-8 receptor, CXCR1, was identified as a candidate gene when mIL-8Rh mutant mice developed acute pyelonephritis (APN) with severe tissue damage. Methods and Findings We have obtained CXCR1 sequences from two, highly selected APN prone patient groups, and detected three unique mutations and two known polymorphisms with a genotype frequency of 23% and 25% compared to 7% in controls (p<0.001 and p<0.0001, respectively). When reflux was excluded, 54% of the patients had CXCR1 sequence variants. The UTI prone children expressed less CXCR1 protein than the pediatric controls (p<0.0001) and two sequence variants were shown to impair transcription. Conclusions The results identify a genetic innate immune deficiency, with a strong link to APN and renal scarring.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Toll-like receptor 4 promoter polymorphisms: common TLR4 variants may protect against severe urinary tract infection.

Bryndís Ragnarsdóttir; Klas Jönsson; Alexander Urbano; Jenny Grönberg-Hernandez; Nataliya Lutay; Martti T. Tammi; Mattias C. U. Gustafsson; Ann-Charlotte Lundstedt; Irene Leijonhufvud; Diana Karpman; Björn Wullt; Lennart Truedsson; Ulf Jodal; Björn Andersson; Catharina Svanborg

Background Polymorphisms affecting Toll-like receptor (TLR) structure appear to be rare, as would be expected due to their essential coordinator role in innate immunity. Here, we assess variation in TLR4 expression, rather than structure, as a mechanism to diversify innate immune responses. Methodology/Principal Findings We sequenced the TLR4 promoter (4,3 kb) in Swedish blood donors. Since TLR4 plays a vital role in susceptibility to urinary tract infection (UTI), promoter sequences were obtained from children with mild or severe disease. We performed a case-control study of pediatric patients with asymptomatic bacteriuria (ABU) or those prone to recurrent acute pyelonephritis (APN). Promoter activity of the single SNPs or multiple allelic changes corresponding to the genotype patterns (GPs) was tested. We then conducted a replication study in an independent cohort of adult patients with a history of childhood APN. Last, in vivo effects of the different GPs were examined after therapeutic intravesical inoculation of 19 patients with Escherichia coli 83972. We identified in total eight TLR4 promoter sequence variants in the Swedish control population, forming 19 haplotypes and 29 genotype patterns, some with effects on promoter activity. Compared to symptomatic patients and healthy controls, ABU patients had fewer genotype patterns, and their promoter sequence variants reduced TLR4 expression in response to infection. The ABU associated GPs also reduced innate immune responses in patients who were subjected to therapeutic urinary E. coli tract inoculation. Conclusions The results suggest that genetic variation in the TLR4 promoter may be an essential, largely overlooked mechanism to influence TLR4 expression and UTI susceptibility.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2007

Inherited susceptibility to acute pyelonephritis : A family study of urinary tract infection

Ann-Charlotte Lundstedt; Irene Leijonhufvud; Bryndís Ragnarsdóttir; Diana Karpman; Björn Andersson; Catharina Svanborg

BACKGROUND Urinary tract infections (UTIs) are important causes of morbidity and death. The present study investigated whether genetic factors influence susceptibility to acute pyelonephritis (APN). CXCR1 expression was investigated as a factor predisposing to APN, because low CXCR1 expression has been associated with disease susceptibility in mice and disease-prone children. METHODS The families of APN-prone children (n=130) and of age-matched control subjects without UTI (n=101) were studied. Three-generation pedigrees of UTI-associated morbidity were established by means of structured interviews of the families. CXCR1 expression was quantified by flow cytometric analysis of peripheral blood neutrophils obtained from family members and control subjects. RESULTS APN was significantly more common in the family members of the APN-prone children (20 [15%] of 130 family members) than in the relatives of the control subjects (3 [3%] of 101 family members) (P<.002). Acute cystitis, in contrast, occurred with equal frequency in both groups (19%; P=1.0). Some families included many affected individuals, consistent with a dominant pattern of inheritance, whereas other families showed a recessive pattern of disease susceptibility. CXCR1 expression was significantly lower in the APN-prone children and in their relatives than in pediatric and adult control subjects (P<.0001). CONCLUSIONS Our results suggest that susceptibility to APN is inherited and that low CXCR1 expression might predispose to disease.


European Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2008

TLR- and CXCR1-dependent innate immunity: insights into the genetics of urinary tract infections.

Bryndís Ragnarsdóttir; Hans Fischer; Gabriela Godaly; Jenny Grönberg-Hernandez; Mattias C. U. Gustafsson; Diana Karpman; Ann-Charlotte Lundstedt; Nataliya Lutay; Sebastian Rämisch; Majlis Svensson; Björn Wullt; Manisha Yadav; Catharina Svanborg

The susceptibility to urinary tract infection (UTI) is controlled by the innate immune response and Toll like receptors (TLRs) are the sentinels of this response. If productive, TLR4 signalling may initiate the symptomatic disease process. In the absence of TLR4 signalling the infected host instead develops an asymptomatic carrier state. The activation of mucosal TLR4 is also influenced by the properties of the infecting strain, and pathogens use their virulence factors to trigger ‘pathogen‐specific’ TLR4 responses in the urinary tract but do not respond to the asymptomatic carrier strains in patients with asymptomatic bacteriuria (ABU). The TLR4 dependence has been demonstrated in mice and the relevance of low TLR4 function for protection for human disease was recently confirmed in children with asymptomatic bacteriuria, who expressed less TLR4 than age matched controls. Functional chemokines and functional chemokine receptors are crucial for neutrophil recruitment, and for the neutrophil dependent bacterial clearance. Interleukin (IL)‐8 receptor deficient mice develop acute septic infections and chronic tissue damage, due to aberrant neutrophil function. This mechanism is relevant for human UTI as pyelonephritis prone children express low levels of the human CXCL8 (Il‐8) receptor, CXC chemokine receptor 1 (CXCR1) and often have heterozygous CXCR1 polymorphisms.


Infectious Disease Clinics of North America | 2003

The host response to urinary tract infection.

Björn Wullt; Göran Bergsten; Hans Fischer; Gabriela Godaly; Diana Karpman; Irene Leijonhufvud; Ann-Charlotte Lundstedt; Patrik Samuelsson; Martin Samuelsson; Majlis Svensson; Catharina Svanborg

The authors use the UTI model to identify basic mechanisms of disease pathogenesis, host response induction, and defense. Their studies hold the promise to provide a molecular and genetic explanation for susceptibility to UTI, and to offer more precise tools for diagnosis and therapy of these infections. There are few infections where the host response is understood in such detail and where pathologic host responses can be linked to distinct disease states. The susceptibility to UTI varies greatly in the population. The studies suggest that distinct molecular defects can cause the clinical entity of acute pyelonephritis with renal scarring, and suggest that the susceptibility to UTI in certain patient groups may have a genetic basis. In addition, the distinct signal transduction pathways explain the development of symptoms, and propose that defects in those signaling mechanisms may occur in patients with ABU. In the future, it may be useful to include these host response parameters in the diagnostic arsenal, to help in early detection of patients susceptible to recurrent UTI and renal scarring. These patients may then be offered therapies that strengthen their defense, and be offered close surveillance for recurrences and other complications.


Annals of Medicine | 2001

The ‘innate’ host response protects and damages the infected urinary tract

Catharina Svanborg; Göran Bergsten; Hans Fischer; Björn Frendéus; Gabriella Godaly; Erika Gustafsson; Long Hang; Maria Hedlund; Diana Karpman; Ann-Charlotte Lundstedt; Martin Samuelsson; Patrik Samuelsson; Majlis Svensson; Björn Wullt

Symptoms of infection and tissue pathology are caused by the host response: not by the microbe per se. The same response is also critical for the defence and is needed to clear infection. It is therefore essential to understand how the host response is activated and to identify the critical effector mechanisms of the defence. We have studied these issues in the urinary tract infection (UTI) model. The symptoms of UTI and the host defence both rely on the so-called ‘innate’ immune system, making this one of the best characterized human disease models of ‘innate immunity’. We discuss the critical molecular events that determine whether the host response will be activated by P-fimbriated uropathogenic Escherichio coli as well as factors determining whether the patient develops acute pyelonephritis or asymptomatic bacteriuria. We will describe the glycoconjugate receptors used by the P-fimbriated bacteria adhering to host tissues, the recruitment of TLR4 co-receptors and the signalling pathways that allow progression to symptomatic disease, and discuss how these mechanisms are altered in asymptomatic carriers, presenting the possible genetic basis for unresponsiveness. We have shown that neutrophils are the critical effectors of the host defence and that neutrophil dysfunctions lead to acute pyelonephritis and renal scarring. Here we discuss the mechanisms of neutrophil-mediated, chemokine receptor (CXCR1)-dependent clearance, and the defect in inter-leukin-8 receptor homolog knock-out (IL-8Rh KO) mice and describe the data linking low CXCRI expression to recurrent pyelonephritis in man, as well as the information on the genetic basis for low CXCR1 expression in affected patients. Finally, the mechanisms of renal scarring in IL8Rh KO mice will be discussed in relation to human disease. Our studies hold the promise to provide a molecular and genetic explanation for disease susceptibility in some patients with UTI and to offer more precise tools for the diagnosis and therapy of these infections.


Mucosal Immunology | 2005

Urinary tract infections and the mucosal Immune system

Gabriela Godaly; Göran Bergsten; Hans Fischer; Heikki Irjala; Ann-Charlotte Lundstedt; Patrick Samuelsson; Majlis Svensson; Catharina Svanborg

Abstract Urinary tract infections offer an important and highly relevant model to understand innate immune-mediated protection against mucosal infection and innate immune genetics of susceptibility, including promoter polymorphisms reducing Toll-like receptor (TLR) and interferon regulatory factor expression. Whereas virulent Escherichia coli causes severe, potentially life-threatening disease by breaking the inertia of the mucosal barrier, the most common outcome of bacteriuria is an asymptomatic carrier state (ABU) resembling commensalism at other mucosal sites. Pathogens gain a short-term advantage by expressing virulence factors that dysregulate a range of innate signaling pathways and effector functions, including molecules that inactivate TLR signaling. Genome sequencing has revealed that ABU strains, in contrast, have evolved by reductive evolution with a loss of virulence genes and gain of a new class of host RNA polymerase II suppressive activity. These extremes illustrate aspects of “good” versus “bad” inflammation, pathology versus symbiosis. Novel therapeutic approaches based on these molecular interactions are discussed.


Mucosal Immunology (Third Edition) | 2005

Chapter 93 – Urinary Tract Infections and the Mucosal Immune System

Gabriela Godaly; Göran Bergsten; Hans Fischer; Heikki Irjala; Ann-Charlotte Lundstedt; Patrick Samuelsson; Majlis Svensson; Catharina Svanborg

Bacteriuria is extremely common in all age groups, and symptomatic urinary tract infections (UTIs) are a major cause of morbidity and mortality. This variation in susceptibility depends on the efficiency of the mucosal defense. Acute pyelonephritis is the most severe form of UTI, characterized by general malaise, elevated temperature, and acute-phase reactants in the circulation, as well as local symptoms and signs from the urinary tract. Two main steps determine the activation of innate immunity in the urinary tract and the outcome of infection. Step 1 determines if the inertia of the mucosal barrier will be broken and if the innate response will be activated. Step 2 is the effector phase that determines bacterial clearance. Antibodies and immunoglobulin fragments constitute a large portion of the protein excreted daily into the urine. In an uninfected host, these molecules have little specific antibody activity against the bacterial pathogens that cause UTI, but a specific urinary antibody response occurs in children with acute pyelonephritis within 7 to 10 days after diagnosis.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2000

Interleukin 8 Receptor Deficiency Confers Susceptibility to Acute Experimental Pyelonephritis and May Have a Human Counterpart

Björn Frendéus; Gabriela Godaly; Long Hang; Diana Karpman; Ann-Charlotte Lundstedt; Catharina Svanborg

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