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Dive into the research topics where Anna Rita Bellu is active.

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Featured researches published by Anna Rita Bellu.


Journal of General Virology | 2008

Polyinosinic acid enhances delivery of adenovirus vectors in vivo by preventing sequestration in liver macrophages

Hidde J. Haisma; Jan A. A. M. Kamps; Gera Kamps; J.A. Plantinga; Marianne G. Rots; Anna Rita Bellu

Adenovirus is among the preferred vectors for gene therapy because of its superior in vivo gene-transfer efficiency. However, upon systemic administration, adenovirus is preferentially sequestered by the liver, resulting in reduced adenovirus-mediated transgene expression in targeted tissues. In the liver, Kupffer cells are responsible for adenovirus degradation and contribute to the inflammatory response. As scavenger receptors present on Kupffer cells are responsible for the elimination of blood-borne pathogens, we investigated the possible implication of these receptors in the clearance of the adenovirus vector. Polyinosinic acid [poly(I)], a scavenger receptor A ligand, was analysed for its capability to inhibit adenovirus uptake specifically in macrophages. In in vitro studies, the addition of poly(I) before virus infection resulted in a specific inhibition of adenovirus-induced gene expression in a J774 macrophage cell line and in primary Kupffer cells. In in vivo experiments, pre-administration of poly(I) caused a 10-fold transient increase in the number of adenovirus particles circulating in the blood. As a consequence, transgene expression levels measured in different tissues were enhanced (by 5- to 15-fold) compared with those in animals that did not receive poly(I). Finally, necrosis of Kupffer cells, which normally occurs as a consequence of systemic adenovirus administration, was prevented by the use of poly(I). No toxicity, as measured by liver-enzyme levels, was observed after poly(I) treatment. From our data, we conclude that poly(I) can prevent adenovirus sequestration by liver macrophages. These results imply that, by inhibiting adenovirus uptake by Kupffer cells, it is possible to reduce the dose of the viral vector to diminish the liver-toxicity effect and to improve the level of transgene expression in target tissues. In systemic gene-therapy applications, this will have great impact on the development of targeted adenoviral vectors.


Molecular Pharmaceutics | 2009

Scavenger Receptor A: A New Route for Adenovirus 5

Hidde J. Haisma; Marije Boesjes; A. M. J. Beerens; Barry W. A. van der Strate; David T. Curiel; Annette Plueddemann; Siamon Gordon; Anna Rita Bellu

Adenoviruses are common pathogens associated with respiratory diseases, gastrointestinal illnesses and/or conjunctivitis. Currently, this virus is used as a vector in gene therapy trials. The promise of viral gene therapy applications is substantially reduced because the virus is cleared by liver macrophages upon systemic administration. The mechanism underlying adenoviral tropism to and degradation in macrophages is poorly understood. We identified a new adenoviral receptor, the scavenger receptor A (SR-A), responsible for uptake of the virus in macrophages. CHO cells expressing SR-A showed increased viral transgene expression when compared with wild type cells. Preincubation of J774 macrophage cells with SR-A ligands decreased significantly adenoviral uptake. Electron-microscopy analysis of infected J774 cells showed activation of a viral degradation pathway. Infection of mice with adenovirus resulted in a substantial decrease of the virus in liver macrophages when SR-A was blocked. Our data provide a basis for understanding of the adenoviral uptake and degradation mechanism in macrophages in vitro and in vivo. Inhibition of adenoviral SR-A uptake can be utilized in gene therapy applications to increase its efficiency and efficacy.


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2010

Epicardium-derived cells enhance proliferation, cellular maturation and alignment of cardiomyocytes

Alida H. Weeke-Klimp; Noortje A.M. Bax; Anna Rita Bellu; Elizabeth M. Winter; Johannes Vrolijk; J.A. Plantinga; Saskia Maas; Marja G. L. Brinker; Edris A.F. Mahtab; Adriana C. Gittenberger-de Groot; Marja J. A. van Luyn; Martin C. Harmsen; Heleen Lie-Venema

During heart development, cells from the proepicardial organ spread over the naked heart tube to form the epicardium. From here, epicardium-derived cells (EPDCs) migrate into the myocardium. EPDCs proved to be indispensable for the formation of the ventricular compact zone and myocardial maturation, by largely unknown mechanisms. In this study we investigated in vitro how EPDCs affect cardiomyocyte proliferation, cellular alignment and contraction, as well as the expression and cellular distribution of proteins involved in myocardial maturation. Embryonic quail EPDCs induced proliferation of neonatal mouse cardiomyocytes. This required cell-cell interactions, as proliferation was not observed in transwell cocultures. Western blot analysis showed elevated levels of electrical and mechanical junctions (connexin43, N-cadherin), sarcomeric proteins (Troponin-I, alpha-actinin), extracellular matrix (collagen I and periostin) in cocultures of EPDCs and cardiomyocytes. Immunohistochemistry indicated more membrane-bound expression of Cx43, N-cadherin, the mechanotransduction molecule focal adhesion kinase, and higher expression of the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+) ATPase (SERCA2a). Newly developed software for analysis of directionality in immunofluorescent stainings showed a quantitatively determined enhanced cellular alignment of cardiomyocytes. This was functionally related to increased contraction. The in vitro effects of EPDCs on cardiomyocytes were confirmed in three reciprocal in vivo models for EPDC-depletion (chicken and mice) in which downregulation of myocardial N-cadherin, Cx43, and FAK were observed. In conclusion, direct interaction of EPDCs with cardiomyocytes induced proliferation, correct mechanical and electrical coupling of cardiomyocytes, ECM-deposition and concurrent establishment of cellular array. These findings implicate that EPDCs are ideal candidates as adjuvant cells for cardiomyocyte integration during cardiac (stem) cell therapy.


Current Genetics | 1999

A Pichia pastoris VPS15 homologue is required in selective peroxisome autophagy

Ov Stasyk; I.J. van der Klei; Anna Rita Bellu; Sg Shen; Jakw Kiel; Jm Cregg; Marten Veenhuis; Oleh V. Stasyk; Shigang Shen; James M. Cregg

Abstract Methylotrophic yeasts contain large peroxisomes during growth on methanol. Upon exposure to excess glucose or ethanol these organelles are selectively degraded by autophagy. Here we describe the cloning of a Pichia pastoris gene (PpVPS15) involved in peroxisome degradation, which is homologous to Saccharomyces cerevisiae VPS15. In methanol-grown cells of a P. pastoris VPS15 deletion strain, the levels of peroxisomal marker enzymes remained high after addition of excess glucose or ethanol. Electron microscopic studies revealed that the organelles were not taken up by vacuoles, suggesting that PpVPS15 is required at an early stage in peroxisome degradation.


Molecular Pharmaceutics | 2011

Pharmacological Interventions for Improving Adenovirus Usage in Gene Therapy

Hidde J. Haisma; Anna Rita Bellu

Gene therapy may be an innovative and promising new treatment strategy for cancer but is limited due to a low efficiency and specificity of gene delivery to the target cells. Adenovirus is the preferred gene therapy vector for systemic delivery because of its unparalleled in vivo transduction efficiency. Intravenous administration of low doses of adenovirus results in adenovirus sequestration in the liver due to binding to the scavenger receptor present on Kupffer cells. When the amount of adenovirus surpasses the binding capacity of Kupffer cells, hepatocytes absorb adenovirus particles in a blood factor-dependent manner. Increasing the Ad dose even more will saturate both the Kupffer cells and hepatocytes. Then sinusoid endothelial cells bind adenovirus particles in an RGD motif-dependent manner. Strategies to eradicate the binding to liver cells include drugs to interfere or eliminate binding to specific cell types, adenovirus capsid protein mutations and chemical modifications of adenovirus to shield the capsid proteins from cellular receptors. The combined use of these approaches should ultimately lead to successful systemic application of adenovirus in humans.


International Journal of Pharmaceutics | 2010

Selective targeting of adenovirus to alpha(v)beta(3) integrins, VEGFR2 and Tie2 endothelial receptors by angio-adenobodies

Hidde J. Haisma; Gera Kamps; Arend Bouma; Tessa M. Geel; Marianne G. Rots; Anu Kariath; Anna Rita Bellu

Tumor angiogenesis is a prominent mechanism, driving the development and progression of solid tumors and the formation of cancer cell metastasis. Newly formed tumor vessels represent an elective target for the activity and the delivery of cancer therapeutics. We targeted adenovirus (Ad5) to endothelial receptors which are up-regulated during the formation of new blood vessels, to enhance the efficiency of anticancer gene therapy applications. Bifunctional angio-adenobodies were constructed by the fusion of a single chain antibody directed against the adenoviral fiber knob, to different peptides recognizing the alpha(v)beta(3) integrins, VEGFR2 and Tie2 receptors on endothelial cells. The angio-adenobodies were coupled to the adenoviral vector, containing luciferase and GFP as reporter genes. In vitro data showed selective targeting of the Ad5 to the endothelial receptors both in mouse (H5V) and human cell lines (HUVEC). H5V cells, refractory to Ad5 infection, showed high level of luciferase expression when cells were infected with targeted virus. Viral transgene expression increased in HUVEC cells when cells were infected with Ad5 conjugated with angio-adenobody thereby demonstrating the affinity of the peptides for human endothelial cells also. In vivo data obtained from mice bearing a C26 colon carcinoma subcutaneously show viral transgene expression only in tumors infected with angio-adenobodies retargeted adenovirus. The results of the present study demonstrate that endothelial targeted angio-adenobodies represent a versatile tool to direct adenovirus from its native receptors to the integrins alpha(v)beta(3), VEGFR2 and Tie2 receptors that are fundamental in many angiogenesis related diseases such as cancer.


Journal of Controlled Release | 2013

Targeted adenovirus mediated inhibition of NF-κB-dependent inflammatory gene expression in endothelial cells in vitro and in vivo

Joanna M. Kułdo; Sigridur A. Ásgeirsdóttir; Peter J. Zwiers; Anna Rita Bellu; Marianne G. Rots; Johanna A. C. Schalk; Ken-ichi Ogawara; Christian Trautwein; Bernhard Banas; Hidde J. Haisma; Grietje Molema; Jan A. A. M. Kamps

In chronic inflammatory diseases the endothelium expresses mediators responsible for harmful leukocyte infiltration. We investigated whether targeted delivery of a therapeutic transgene that inhibits nuclear factor κB signal transduction could silence the proinflammatory activation status of endothelial cells. For this, an adenovirus encoding dominant-negative IκB (dnIκB) as a therapeutic transgene was employed. Selectivity for the endothelial cells was achieved by introduction of antibodies specific for inflammatory endothelial adhesion molecules E-selectin or VCAM-1 chemically linked to the virus via polyethylene glycol. In vitro, the retargeted adenoviruses selectively infected cytokine-activated endothelial cells to express functional transgene. The comparison of transductional capacity of both retargeted viruses revealed that E-selectin based transgene delivery exerted superior pharmacological effects. Targeted delivery mediated dnIκB transgene expression in endothelial cells inhibited the induced expression of several inflammatory genes, including adhesion molecules, cytokines, and chemokines. In vivo, in mice suffering from glomerulonephritis, E-selectin-retargeted adenovirus selectively homed in the kidney to microvascular glomerular endothelium. Subsequent downregulation of endothelial adhesion molecule expression 2 days after induction of inflammation demonstrated the pharmacological potential of this gene therapy approach. The data justify further studies towards therapeutic virus design and optimization of treatment schedules to investigate their capacity to interfere with inflammatory disease progression.


Yeast | 1999

Characterization of the Hansenula polymorpha CPY gene encoding carboxypeptidase Y

Anna Rita Bellu; I.J. van der Klei; K. B. Rechinger; M. Yavuz; Marten Veenhuis; J.A.K.W. Kiel

We have isolated the Hansenula polymorpha CPY gene encoding carboxypeptidase Y (Hp‐CPY). The deduced amino acid sequence revealed that Hp‐CPY consists of 541 amino acids and has a calculated Mr of 60,793. The protein is highly similar to Saccharomyces cerevisiae CPY (61·8% identity). At the N‐terminus of Hp‐CPY signals for the entry into the secretory pathway and subsequent sorting to the vacuole were identified. Immunocytochemically, using monospecific antibodies raised against Hp‐CPY, the protein was localized to the vacuole. On Western blots, a diffuse protein band was observed in extracts of H. polymorpha cells, suggesting that the protein is glycosylated. This was confirmed by endoglycosidase H treatment, which resulted in a strong reduction of the apparent Mr of the protein. We have investigated the effect of CPY deletion on the degradation of peroxisomes, an autophagous process that occurs when the organelles become redundant for growth. In Δcpy cells peroxisomal proteins were degraded in the vacuole as efficiently as in wild‐type H. polymorpha cells, indicating that CPY is not a major proteinase in this pathway. Copyright


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002

Removal of Pex3p is an important initial stage in selective peroxisome degradation in Hansenula polymorpha

Anna Rita Bellu; Florian A. Salomons; Jan A. K. W. Kiel; Marten Veenhuis; Ida J. van der Klei


Human Gene Therapy | 2005

Adenovirus-mediated gene transfer of placental growth factor to perivascular tissue induces angiogenesis via upregulation of the expression of endogenous vascular endothelial growth factor-A.

Himadri Roy; Shalini Bhardwaj; Mohan Babu; Suvi Jauhiainen; Karl-Heinz Herzig; Anna Rita Bellu; Hidde J. Haisma; Peter Carmeliet; Kari Alitalo; Seppo Ylä-Herttuala

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Gera Kamps

University of Groningen

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Jan A. A. M. Kamps

University Medical Center Groningen

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Arend Bouma

University of Groningen

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