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Dive into the research topics where Brendon P. Scicluna is active.

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Featured researches published by Brendon P. Scicluna.


Nature Genetics | 2010

Genome-wide association study identifies a susceptibility locus at 21q21 for ventricular fibrillation in acute myocardial infarction

Connie R. Bezzina; Raha Pazoki; Abdennasser Bardai; Roos F. Marsman; Jonas S.S.G. de Jong; Marieke T. Blom; Brendon P. Scicluna; J. Wouter Jukema; Navin R. Bindraban; Peter Lichtner; Arne Pfeufer; Nanette H. Bishopric; Dan M. Roden; Thomas Meitinger; Sumeet S. Chugh; Robert J. Myerburg; Xavier Jouven; Stefan Kääb; Lukas R.C. Dekker; Hanno L. Tan; Michael W. T. Tanck; Arthur A.M. Wilde

Sudden cardiac death from ventricular fibrillation during acute myocardial infarction is a leading cause of total and cardiovascular mortality. To our knowledge, we here report the first genome-wide association study for this trait, conducted in a set of 972 individuals with a first acute myocardial infarction, 515 of whom had ventricular fibrillation and 457 of whom did not, from the Arrhythmia Genetics in The Netherlands (AGNES) study. The most significant association to ventricular fibrillation was found at 21q21 (rs2824292, odds ratio = 1.78, 95% CI 1.47–2.13, P = 3.3 × 10−10). The association of rs2824292 with ventricular fibrillation was replicated in an independent case-control set consisting of 146 out-of-hospital cardiac arrest individuals with myocardial infarction complicated by ventricular fibrillation and 391 individuals who survived a myocardial infarction (controls) (odds ratio = 1.49, 95% CI 1.14–1.95, P = 0.004). The closest gene to this SNP is CXADR, which encodes a viral receptor previously implicated in myocarditis and dilated cardiomyopathy and which has recently been identified as a modulator of cardiac conduction. This locus has not previously been implicated in arrhythmia susceptibility.


Gut | 2016

The gut microbiota plays a protective role in the host defence against pneumococcal pneumonia

Tim J. Schuijt; Jacqueline M. Lankelma; Brendon P. Scicluna; Felipe de Sousa e Melo; Joris J. T. H. Roelofs; J. Daan de Boer; Aj Hoogendijk; Regina de Beer; Alex F. de Vos; Clara Belzer; Willem M. de Vos; Tom van der Poll; W. Joost Wiersinga

Objective Pneumonia accounts for more deaths than any other infectious disease worldwide. The intestinal microbiota supports local mucosal immunity and is increasingly recognised as an important modulator of the systemic immune system. The precise role of the gut microbiota in bacterial pneumonia, however, is unknown. Here, we investigate the function of the gut microbiota in the host defence against Streptococcus pneumoniae infections. Design We depleted the gut microbiota in C57BL/6 mice and subsequently infected them intranasally with S. pneumoniae. We then performed survival and faecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) experiments and measured parameters of inflammation and alveolar macrophage whole-genome responses. Results We found that the gut microbiota protects the host during pneumococcal pneumonia, as reflected by increased bacterial dissemination, inflammation, organ damage and mortality in microbiota-depleted mice compared with controls. FMT in gut microbiota-depleted mice led to a normalisation of pulmonary bacterial counts and tumour necrosis factor-α and interleukin-10 levels 6 h after pneumococcal infection. Whole-genome mapping of alveolar macrophages showed upregulation of metabolic pathways in the absence of a healthy gut microbiota. This upregulation correlated with an altered cellular responsiveness, reflected by a reduced responsiveness to lipopolysaccharide and lipoteichoic acid. Compared with controls, alveolar macrophages derived from gut microbiota-depleted mice showed a diminished capacity to phagocytose S. pneumoniae. Conclusions This study identifies the intestinal microbiota as a protective mediator during pneumococcal pneumonia. The gut microbiota enhances primary alveolar macrophage function. Novel therapeutic strategies could exploit the gut–lung axis in bacterial infections.


Nature Immunology | 2016

Broad defects in the energy metabolism of leukocytes underlie immunoparalysis in sepsis

Shih-Chin Cheng; Brendon P. Scicluna; Rob J.W. Arts; Mark S. Gresnigt; Ekta Lachmandas; Evangelos J. Giamarellos-Bourboulis; Matthijs Kox; Ganesh R. Manjeri; Jori A.L. Wagenaars; Olaf L. Cremer; Jenneke Leentjens; Anne Jan van der Meer; Frank L. van de Veerdonk; Marc J. M. Bonten; Marcus J. Schultz; Peter H. G. M. Willems; Peter Pickkers; Leo A. B. Joosten; Tom van der Poll; Mihai G. Netea

The acute phase of sepsis is characterized by a strong inflammatory reaction. At later stages in some patients, immunoparalysis may be encountered, which is associated with a poor outcome. By transcriptional and metabolic profiling of human patients with sepsis, we found that a shift from oxidative phosphorylation to aerobic glycolysis was an important component of initial activation of host defense. Blocking metabolic pathways with metformin diminished cytokine production and increased mortality in systemic fungal infection in mice. In contrast, in leukocytes rendered tolerant by exposure to lipopolysaccharide or after isolation from patients with sepsis and immunoparalysis, a generalized metabolic defect at the level of both glycolysis and oxidative metabolism was apparent, which was restored after recovery of the patients. Finally, the immunometabolic defects in humans were partially restored by therapy with recombinant interferon-γ, which suggested that metabolic processes might represent a therapeutic target in sepsis.


JAMA | 2016

Incidence, Risk Factors, and Attributable Mortality of Secondary Infections in the Intensive Care Unit After Admission for Sepsis

Lonneke A. van Vught; Peter M. C. Klein Klouwenberg; Cristian Spitoni; Brendon P. Scicluna; Maryse A. Wiewel; Janneke Horn; Marcus J. Schultz; Peter Nürnberg; Marc J. M. Bonten; Olaf L. Cremer; Tom van der Poll

IMPORTANCE Sepsis is considered to induce immune suppression, leading to increased susceptibility to secondary infections with associated late mortality. OBJECTIVE To determine the clinical and host genomic characteristics, incidence, and attributable mortality of intensive care unit (ICU)-acquired infections in patients admitted to the ICU with or without sepsis. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS Prospective observational study comprising consecutive admissions of more than 48 hours in 2 ICUs in the Netherlands from January 2011 to July 2013 stratified according to admission diagnosis (sepsis or noninfectious). MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES The primary outcome was ICU-acquired infection (onset >48 hours). Attributable mortality risk (fraction of mortality that can be prevented by elimination of the risk factor, acquired infection) was determined using time-to-event models accounting for competing risk. In a subset of sepsis admissions (n = 461), blood gene expression (whole-genome transcriptome in leukocytes) was analyzed at baseline and at onset of ICU-acquired infectious (n = 19) and noninfectious (n = 9) events. RESULTS The primary cohort included 1719 sepsis admissions (1504 patients; median age, 62 years; interquartile range [IQR], 51-71 years]; 924 men [61.4%]). A comparative cohort included 1921 admissions (1825 patients, median age, 62 years; IQR, 49-71 years; 1128 men [61.8%] in whom infection was not present in the first 48 hours. Intensive care unit-acquired infections occurred in 13.5% of sepsis ICU admissions (n = 232) and 15.1% of nonsepsis ICU admissions (n = 291). Patients with sepsis who developed an ICU-acquired infection had higher disease severity scores on admission than patients with sepsis who did not develop an ICU-acquired infection (Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation IV [APACHE IV] median score, 90 [IQR, 72-107] vs 79 [IQR, 62-98]; P < .001) and throughout their ICU stay but did not have differences in baseline gene expression. The population attributable mortality fraction of ICU-acquired infections in patients with sepsis was 10.9% (95% CI, 0.9%-20.6%) by day 60; the estimated difference between mortality in all patients with a sepsis admission diagnosis and mortality in those without ICU-acquired infection was 2.0% (95% CI, 0.2%-3.8%; P = .03) by day 60. Among nonsepsis ICU admissions, ICU-acquired infections had a population attributable mortality fraction of 21.1% (95% CI, 0.6%-41.7%) by day 60. Compared with baseline, blood gene expression at the onset of ICU-acquired infections showed reduced expression of genes involved in gluconeogenesis and glycolysis. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Intensive care unit-acquired infections occurred more commonly in patients with sepsis with higher disease severity, but such infections contributed only modestly to overall mortality. The genomic response of patients with sepsis was consistent with immune suppression at the onset of secondary infection.


Nature Reviews Immunology | 2017

The immunopathology of sepsis and potential therapeutic targets

Tom van der Poll; Frank L. van de Veerdonk; Brendon P. Scicluna; Mihai G. Netea

Sepsis is defined as a life-threatening organ dysfunction that is caused by a dysregulated host response to infection. In sepsis, the immune response that is initiated by an invading pathogen fails to return to homeostasis, thus culminating in a pathological syndrome that is characterized by sustained excessive inflammation and immune suppression. Our understanding of the key mechanisms involved in the pathogenesis of sepsis has increased tremendously, yet this still needs to be translated into novel targeted therapeutic strategies. Pivotal for the clinical development of new sepsis therapies is the selection of patients on the basis of biomarkers and/or functional defects that provide specific insights into the expression or activity of the therapeutic target.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2011

Load-Reducing Therapy Prevents Development of Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Cardiomyopathy in Plakoglobin-Deficient Mice

Larissa Fabritz; Mark G. Hoogendijk; Brendon P. Scicluna; Shirley C.M. van Amersfoorth; Lisa Fortmueller; Susanne Wolf; Sandra Laakmann; Nina Kreienkamp; Ilaria Piccini; Günter Breithardt; Patricia Ruiz Noppinger; Henning Witt; Klaus Ebnet; Thomas Wichter; Bodo Levkau; Werner W. Franke; Sebastian Pieperhoff; Jacques M.T. de Bakker; Ruben Coronel; Paulus Kirchhof

OBJECTIVES We used a murine model of arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC) to test whether reducing ventricular load prevents or slows development of this cardiomyopathy. BACKGROUND At present, no therapy exists to slow progression of ARVC. Genetically conferred dysfunction of the mechanical cell-cell connections, often associated with reduced expression of plakoglobin, is thought to cause ARVC. METHODS Littermate pairs of heterozygous plakoglobin-deficient mice (plako(+/-)) and wild-type (WT) littermates underwent 7 weeks of endurance training (daily swimming). Mice were randomized to blinded load-reducing therapy (furosemide and nitrates) or placebo. RESULTS Therapy prevented training-induced right ventricular (RV) enlargement in plako(+/-) mice (RV volume: untreated plako(+/-) 136 ± 5 μl; treated plako(+/-) 78 ± 5 μl; WT 81 ± 5 μl; p < 0.01 for untreated vs. WT and untreated vs. treated; mean ± SEM). In isolated, Langendorff-perfused hearts, ventricular tachycardias (VTs) were more often induced in untreated plako(+/-) hearts (15 of 25), than in treated plako(+/-) hearts (5 of 19) or in WT hearts (6 of 21, both p < 0.05). Epicardial mapping of the RV identified macro-re-entry as the mechanism of ventricular tachycardia. The RV longitudinal conduction velocity was reduced in untreated but not in treated plako(+/-) mice (p < 0.01 for untreated vs. WT and untreated vs. treated). Myocardial concentration of phosphorylated connexin43 was lower in plako(+/-) hearts with VTs compared with hearts without VTs and was reduced in untreated plako(+/-) compared with WT (both p < 0.05). Plako(+/-) hearts showed reduced myocardial plakoglobin concentration, whereas β-catenin and N-cadherin concentration was not changed. CONCLUSIONS Load-reducing therapy prevents training-induced development of ARVC in plako(+/-) mice.


Circulation Research | 2012

Functional NaV1.8 Channels in Intracardiac Neurons The Link Between SCN10A and Cardiac Electrophysiology

Arie O. Verkerk; Carol Ann Remme; Cees A. Schumacher; Brendon P. Scicluna; Rianne Wolswinkel; Berend de Jonge; Connie R. Bezzina; Marieke W. Veldkamp

Rationale: The SCN10A gene encodes the neuronal sodium channel isoform NaV1.8. Several recent genome-wide association studies have linked SCN10A to PR interval and QRS duration, strongly suggesting an as-yet unknown role for NaV1.8 in cardiac electrophysiology. Objective: To demonstrate the functional presence of SCN10A/Nav1.8 in intracardiac neurons of the mouse heart. Methods and Results: Immunohistochemistry on mouse tissue sections showed intense NaV1.8 labeling in dorsal root ganglia and intracardiac ganglia and only modest NaV1.8 expression within the myocardium. Immunocytochemistry further revealed substantial NaV1.8 staining in isolated neurons from murine intracardiac ganglia but no NaV1.8 expression in isolated ventricular myocytes. Patch-clamp studies demonstrated that the NaV1.8 blocker A-803467 (0.5–2 &mgr;mol/L) had no effect on either mean sodium current (INa) density or INa gating kinetics in isolated myocytes but significantly reduced INa density in intracardiac neurons. Furthermore, A-803467 accelerated the slow component of current decay and shifted voltage dependence of inactivation toward more negative voltages, as expected for blockade of NaV1.8-based INa. In line with these findings, A-803467 did not affect cardiomyocyte action potential upstroke velocity but markedly reduced action potential firing frequency in intracardiac neurons, confirming a functional role for NaV1.8 in cardiac neural activity. Conclusions: Our findings demonstrate the functional presence of SCN10A/NaV1.8 in intracardiac neurons, indicating a novel role for this neuronal sodium channel in regulation of cardiac electric activity.Rationale: The SCN10A gene encodes the neuronal sodium channel isoform NaV1.8. Several recent genome-wide association studies have linked SCN10A to PR interval and QRS duration, strongly suggesting an as-yet unknown role for NaV1.8 in cardiac electrophysiology. Objective: To demonstrate the functional presence of SCN10A /Nav1.8 in intracardiac neurons of the mouse heart. Methods and Results: Immunohistochemistry on mouse tissue sections showed intense NaV1.8 labeling in dorsal root ganglia and intracardiac ganglia and only modest NaV1.8 expression within the myocardium. Immunocytochemistry further revealed substantial NaV1.8 staining in isolated neurons from murine intracardiac ganglia but no NaV1.8 expression in isolated ventricular myocytes. Patch-clamp studies demonstrated that the NaV1.8 blocker A-803467 (0.5–2 μmol/L) had no effect on either mean sodium current (INa) density or INa gating kinetics in isolated myocytes but significantly reduced INa density in intracardiac neurons. Furthermore, A-803467 accelerated the slow component of current decay and shifted voltage dependence of inactivation toward more negative voltages, as expected for blockade of NaV1.8-based INa. In line with these findings, A-803467 did not affect cardiomyocyte action potential upstroke velocity but markedly reduced action potential firing frequency in intracardiac neurons, confirming a functional role for NaV1.8 in cardiac neural activity. Conclusions: Our findings demonstrate the functional presence of SCN10A /NaV1.8 in intracardiac neurons, indicating a novel role for this neuronal sodium channel in regulation of cardiac electric activity. # Novelty and Significance {#article-title-33}


Circulation Research | 2009

Genetically determined differences in sodium current characteristics modulate conduction disease severity in mice with cardiac sodium channelopathy.

Carol Ann Remme; Brendon P. Scicluna; Arie O. Verkerk; Ahmad S. Amin; Sandra van Brunschot; Leander Beekman; Vera H.M. Deneer; Catherine Chevalier; Fumitaka Oyama; Haruko Miyazaki; Nobuyuki Nukina; Ronald Wilders; Denis Escande; Rémi Houlgatte; Arthur A.M. Wilde; Hanno L. Tan; Marieke W. Veldkamp; Jacques M.T. de Bakker; Connie R. Bezzina

Conduction slowing of the electric impulse that drives the heartbeat may evoke lethal cardiac arrhythmias. Mutations in SCN5A, which encodes the pore-forming cardiac sodium channel &agr; subunit, are associated with familial arrhythmia syndromes based on conduction slowing. However, disease severity among mutation carriers is highly variable. We hypothesized that genetic modifiers underlie the variability in conduction slowing and disease severity. With the aim of identifying such modifiers, we studied the Scn5a1798insD/+ mutation in 2 distinct mouse strains, FVB/N and 129P2. In 129P2 mice, the mutation resulted in more severe conduction slowing particularly in the right ventricle (RV) compared to FVB/N. Pan-genomic mRNA expression profiling in the 2 mouse strains uncovered a drastic reduction in mRNA encoding the sodium channel auxiliary subunit &bgr;4 (Scn4b) in 129P2 mice compared to FVB/N. This corresponded to low to undetectable &bgr;4 protein levels in 129P2 ventricular tissue, whereas abundant &bgr;4 protein was detected in FVB/N. Sodium current measurements in isolated myocytes from the 2 mouse strains indicated that sodium channel activation in myocytes from 129P2 mice occurred at more positive potentials compared to FVB/N. Using computer simulations, this difference in activation kinetics was predicted to explain the observed differences in conduction disease severity between the 2 strains. In conclusion, genetically determined differences in sodium current characteristics on the myocyte level modulate disease severity in cardiac sodium channelopathies. In particular, the sodium channel subunit &bgr;4 (SCN4B) may constitute a potential genetic modifier of conduction and cardiac sodium channel disease.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2015

A molecular biomarker to diagnose community-acquired pneumonia on intensive care unit admission.

Brendon P. Scicluna; Peter M. C. Klein Klouwenberg; Lonneke A. van Vught; Maryse A. Wiewel; David S. Y. Ong; Aeilko H. Zwinderman; Marek Franitza; Mohammad R. Toliat; Peter Nürnberg; Arie J. Hoogendijk; Janneke Horn; Olaf L. Cremer; Marcus J. Schultz; Marc J. M. Bonten; Tom van der Poll

RATIONALE Community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) accounts for a major proportion of intensive care unit (ICU) admissions for respiratory failure and sepsis. Diagnostic uncertainty complicates case management, which may delay appropriate cause-specific treatment. OBJECTIVES To characterize the blood genomic response in patients with suspected CAP and identify a candidate biomarker for the rapid diagnosis of CAP on ICU admission. METHODS The study comprised two cohorts of consecutively enrolled patients treated for suspected CAP on ICU admission. Patients were designated CAP (cases) and no-CAP patients (control subjects) by post hoc assessment. The first (discovery) cohort (101 CAP and 33 no-CAP patients) was enrolled between January 2011 and July 2012; the second (validation) cohort (70 CAP and 30 no-CAP patients) between July 2012 and June 2013. Blood was collected within 24 hours of ICU admission. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS Blood microarray analysis of CAP and no-CAP patients revealed shared and distinct gene expression patterns. A 78-gene signature was defined for CAP, from which a FAIM3:PLAC8 gene expression ratio was derived with area under curve of 0.845 (95% confidence interval, 0.764-0.917) and positive and negative predictive values of 83% and 81%, respectively. Robustness of the FAIM3:PLAC8 ratio was ascertained by quantitative polymerase chain reaction in the validation cohort. The FAIM3:PLAC8 ratio outperformed plasma procalcitonin and IL-8 and IL-6 in discriminating between CAP and no-CAP patients. CONCLUSIONS CAP and no-CAP patients presented shared and distinct blood genomic responses. We propose the FAIM3:PLAC8 ratio as a candidate biomarker to assist in the rapid diagnosis of CAP on ICU admission. Clinical trial registered with www.clinicaltrials.gov (NCT 01905033).


Cardiovascular Research | 2010

Tubulin polymerization modifies cardiac sodium channel expression and gating

Simona Casini; Hanno L. Tan; Ilker Demirayak; Carol Ann Remme; Ahmad S. Amin; Brendon P. Scicluna; Houssine Chatyan; Jan M. Ruijter; Connie R. Bezzina; Antoni C.G. van Ginneken; Marieke W. Veldkamp

AIMS Treatment with the anticancer drug taxol (TXL), which polymerizes the cytoskeleton protein tubulin, may evoke cardiac arrhythmias based on reduced human cardiac sodium channel (Na(v)1.5) function. Therefore, we investigated whether enhanced tubulin polymerization by TXL affects Na(v)1.5 function and expression and whether these effects are beta1-subunit-mediated. METHODS AND RESULTS Human embryonic kidney (HEK293) cells, transfected with SCN5A cDNA alone (Na(v)1.5) or together with SCN1B cDNA (Na(v)1.5 + beta1), and neonatal rat cardiomyocytes (NRCs) were incubated in the presence and in the absence of 100 microM TXL. Sodium current (I(Na)) characteristics were studied using patch-clamp techniques. Na(v)1.5 membrane expression was determined by immunocytochemistry and confocal microscopy. Pre-treatment with TXL reduced peak I(Na) amplitude nearly two-fold in both Na(v)1.5 and Na(v)1.5 + beta1, as well as in NRCs, compared with untreated cells. Accordingly, HEK293 cells and NRCs stained with anti-Na(v)1.5 antibody revealed a reduced membrane-labelling intensity in the TXL-treated groups. In addition, TXL accelerated I(Na) decay of Na(v)1.5 + beta1, whereas I(Na) decay of Na(v)1.5 remained unaltered. Finally, TXL reduced the fraction of channels that slow inactivated from 31% to 18%, and increased the time constant of slow inactivation by two-fold in Na(v)1.5. Conversely, slow inactivation properties of Na(v)1.5 + beta1 were unchanged by TXL. CONCLUSION Enhanced tubulin polymerization reduces sarcolemmal Na(v)1.5 expression and I(Na) amplitude in a beta1-subunit-independent fashion and causes I(Na) fast and slow inactivation impairment in a beta1-subunit-dependent way. These changes may underlie conduction-slowing-dependent cardiac arrhythmias under conditions of enhanced tubulin polymerization, e.g. TXL treatment and heart failure.

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Janneke Horn

University of Amsterdam

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