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Dive into the research topics where Elisavet Vasilopoulou is active.

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Featured researches published by Elisavet Vasilopoulou.


Nature Clinical Practice Endocrinology & Metabolism | 2009

The role of the placenta in thyroid hormone delivery to the fetus

Shiao Chan; Elisavet Vasilopoulou; Mark D. Kilby

The transplacental passage of thyroid hormones from the maternal circulation to the fetal circulation within the human hemochorial placenta is important for normal fetal development, particularly the development of the central nervous system. The role of maternal thyroid hormones is particularly important in the first half of pregnancy, before the onset of endogenous thyroid hormone production in the fetus. The human placenta regulates the quantity and composition of different forms of transported thyroid hormones to ensure that the requisite levels are present in the fetus for each stage of development. Transplacental thyroid hormone supply to the fetus is modulated by several factors, including the following proteins: plasma membrane transporters, which regulate the passage of thyroid hormones in and out of cells; iodothyronine deiodinases, which metabolize thyroid hormones; and proteins within trophoblast cells, which bind thyroid hormones. In pathological situations of either maternal or fetal thyroid hormone deficiency during pregnancy, the placenta seems to lack the full compensatory mechanisms necessary to optimize maternal–fetal transfer of thyroid hormones. Inadequate passage of thyroid hormones can lead to suboptimal fetal thyroid hormone levels, which might contribute to the neurodevelopmental delay associated with such conditions. Thus, maintaining normal maternal thyroid hormone status is likely to be the primary factor in ensuring adequate transplacental thyroid hormone passage and appropriate iodide supply to the fetus.


Placenta | 2010

Expression of thyroid hormone transporters in the human placenta and changes associated with intrauterine growth restriction

Laurence Loubiere; Elisavet Vasilopoulou; Judith N. Bulmer; P.M. Taylor; B. Stieger; François Verrey; Christopher J. McCabe; Jayne A. Franklyn; Mark D. Kilby; Shiao Chan

Thyroid hormones (TH) are important for the development of the human fetus and placenta from very early gestation. The transplacental passage of TH from mother to fetus and the supply of TH into trophoblasts require the expression of placental TH plasma membrane transporters. We describe the ontogeny of the TH transporters MCT8, MCT10, LAT1, LAT2, OATP1A2 and OATP4A1 in a large series (n = 110) of normal human placentae across gestation and describe their expression changes with intrauterine fetal growth restriction (IUGR n = 22). Quantitative RT-PCR revealed that all the mRNAs encoding TH transporters are expressed in human placenta from 6 weeks gestation and throughout pregnancy. MCT8, MCT10, OATP1A2 and LAT1 mRNA expression increased with gestation. OATP4A1 and CD98 (LATs obligatory associated protein) mRNA expression reached a nadir in mid-gestation before increasing towards term. LAT2 mRNA expression did not alter throughout gestation. Immunohistochemistry localised MCT10 and OATP1A2 to villous cytotrophoblasts and syncytiotrophoblasts, and extravillous trophoblasts while OATP4A1 was preferentially expressed in the villous syncytiotrophoblasts. Whilst MCT8 protein expression was increased, MCT10 mRNA expression was decreased in placentae from IUGR pregnancies delivered in the early 3rd trimester compared to age matched appropriately grown for gestational age controls. No significant change was found in the mRNA expression of the other transporters with IUGR. In conclusion, several TH transporters are present in the human placenta from early 1st trimester with varying patterns of expression throughout gestation. Their coordinated effects may regulate both transplacental TH passage and TH supply to trophoblasts, which are critical for the normal development of the fetus and placenta. Increased MCT8 and decreased MCT10 expression within placentae of pregnancies complicated by IUGR may contribute to aberrant development of the fetoplacental unit.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Monocarboxylate Transporter 8 Modulates the Viability and Invasive Capacity of Human Placental Cells and Fetoplacental Growth in Mice

Elisavet Vasilopoulou; Laurence Loubiere; Heike Heuer; Marija Trajkovic-Arsic; Veerle Darras; Theo J. Visser; Gendie E. Lash; Guy Whitley; Christopher J. McCabe; Jayne A. Franklyn; Mark D. Kilby; Shiao Chan

Monocarboxylate transporter 8 (MCT8) is a well-established thyroid hormone (TH) transporter. In humans, MCT8 mutations result in changes in circulating TH concentrations and X-linked severe global neurodevelopmental delay. MCT8 is expressed in the human placenta throughout gestation, with increased expression in trophoblast cells from growth-restricted pregnancies. We postulate that MCT8 plays an important role in placental development and transplacental TH transport. We investigated the effect of altering MCT8 expression in human trophoblast in vitro and in a Mct8 knockout mouse model. Silencing of endogenous MCT8 reduced T3 uptake into human extravillous trophoblast-like cells (SGHPL-4; 40%, P<0.05) and primary cytotrophoblast (15%, P<0.05). MCT8 over-expression transiently increased T3 uptake (SGHPL-4∶30%, P<0.05; cytotrophoblast: 15%, P<0.05). Silencing MCT8 did not significantly affect SGHPL-4 invasion, but with MCT8 over-expression T3 treatment promoted invasion compared with no T3 (3.3-fold; P<0.05). Furthermore, MCT8 silencing increased cytotrophoblast viability (∼20%, P<0.05) and MCT8 over-expression reduced cytotrophoblast viability independently of T3 (∼20%, P<0.05). In vivo, Mct8 knockout reduced fetal:placental weight ratios compared with wild-type controls at gestational day 18 (25%, P<0.05) but absolute fetal and placental weights were not significantly different. The volume fraction of the labyrinthine zone of the placenta, which facilitates maternal-fetal exchange, was reduced in Mct8 knockout placentae (10%, P<0.05). However, there was no effect on mouse placental cell proliferation in vivo. We conclude that MCT8 makes a significant contribution to T3 uptake into human trophoblast cells and has a role in modulating human trophoblast cell invasion and viability. In mice, Mct8 knockout has subtle effects upon fetoplacental growth and does not significantly affect placental cell viability probably due to compensatory mechanisms in vivo.


Placenta | 2015

Vitamin D promotes human extravillous trophoblast invasion in vitro

Shiao Chan; Radhika Susarla; D. Canovas; Elisavet Vasilopoulou; O. Ohizua; Christopher J. McCabe; Martin Hewison; Mark D. Kilby

INTRODUCTION Incomplete human extravillous trophoblast (EVT) invasion of the decidua and maternal spiral arteries is characteristic of pre-eclampsia, a condition linked to low maternal vitamin D status. It is hypothesized that dysregulated vitamin D action in uteroplacental tissues disrupts EVT invasion leading to malplacentation. METHODS This study assessed the effects of the active vitamin D metabolite, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 (1,25-D3), and its precursor, 25-hydroxyvitamin D3 (25-D3), on primary human EVT isolated from first trimester pregnancies. Expression of EVT markers (cytokeratin-7, HLA-G), the vitamin D-activating enzyme (CYP27B1) and 1,25-D3 receptor (VDR) was assessed by immunocytochemistry. EVT responses following in vitro treatment with 1,25-D3 (0-10 nM) or 25-D3 (0-100 nM) for 48-60 h were assessed using quantitative RT-PCR (qRT-PCR) analysis of key target genes. Effects on EVT invasion through Matrigel(®) were quantified alongside zymographic analysis of secreted matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs). Effects on cell viability were assessed by measurement of MTT. RESULTS EVT co-expressed mRNA and protein for CYP27B1 and VDR, and demonstrated induction of mRNA encoding vitamin D-responsive genes, 24-hydroxylase (CYP24A1) and cathelicidin following 1,25-D3 treatment. EVT could respond to 1,25-D3 and 25-D3, both of which significantly increased EVT invasion, with maximal effect at 1 nM 1,25-D3 (1.9-fold; p < 0.01) and 100 nM 25-D3 (2.2-fold; p < 0.05) respectively compared with untreated controls. This was accompanied by increased pro-MMP2 and pro-MMP9 secretion. The invasion was independent of cell viability, which remained unchanged. DISCUSSION These data support a role for vitamin D in EVT invasion during human placentation and suggest that vitamin D-deficiency may contribute to impaired EVT invasion and pre-eclampsia.


Human Reproduction | 2014

Triiodothyronine regulates angiogenic growth factor and cytokine secretion by isolated human decidual cells in a cell-type specific and gestational age-dependent manner

Elisavet Vasilopoulou; Laurence Loubiere; Gendie E. Lash; O. Ohizua; Christopher J. McCabe; Jayne A. Franklyn; Mark D. Kilby; Shiao Chan

STUDY QUESTION Does triiodothyronine (T3) regulate the secretion of angiogenic growth factors and cytokines by human decidual cells isolated from early pregnancy? SUMMARY ANSWER T3 modulates the secretion of specific angiogenic growth factors and cytokines, with different regulatory patterns observed amongst various isolated subpopulations of human decidual cells and with a distinct change between the first and second trimesters of pregnancy. WHAT IS KNOWN ALREADY Maternal thyroid dysfunction during early pregnancy is associated with complications of malplacentation including miscarriage and pre-eclampsia. T3 regulates the proliferation and apoptosis of fetal-derived trophoblasts, as well as promotes the invasive capability of extravillous trophoblasts (EVT). We hypothesize that T3 may also have a direct impact on human maternal-derived decidual cells, which are known to exert paracrine regulation upon trophoblast behaviour and vascular development at the uteroplacental interface. STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATION This laboratory-based study used human decidua from first (8–11 weeks; n = 18) and second (12–16 weeks; n = 12) trimester surgical terminations of apparently uncomplicated pregnancies. PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTING, METHODS Primary cultures of total decidual cells, and immunomagnetic bead-isolated populations of stromal-enriched (CD10+) and stromal-depleted (CD10−) cells, uterine natural killer cells (uNK cells; CD56+) and macrophages (CD14+) were assessed for thyroid hormone receptors and transporters by immunocytochemistry. Each cell population was treated with T3 (0, 1, 10, 100 nM) and assessments were made of cell viability (MTT assay) and angiogenic growth factor and cytokine secretion (immunomediated assay). The effect of decidual cell-conditioned media on EVT invasion through Matrigel® was evaluated. MAIN RESULTS AND THE ROLE OF CHANCE Immunocytochemistry showed the expression of thyroid hormone transporters (MCT8, MCT10) and receptors (TRα1, TRβ1) required for thyroid hormone-responsiveness in uNK cells and macrophages from the first trimester. The viability of total decidual cells and the different cell isolates were unaffected by T3 so changes in cell numbers could not account for any observed effects. In the first trimester, T3 decreased VEGF-A secretion by total decidual cells (P < 0.05) and increased angiopoietin-2 secretion by stromal-depleted cells (P < 0.05) but in the second trimester total decidual cells showed only increased angiogenin secretion (P < 0.05). In the first trimester, T3 reduced IL-10 secretion by total decidual cells (P < 0.05), and reduced granulocyte macrophage colony stimulating factor (P < 0.01), IL-8 (P < 0.05), IL-10 (P < 0.01), IL-1β (P < 0.05) and monocyte chemotactic protein -1 (P < 0.001) secretion by macrophages, but increased tumour necrosis factor-α secretion by stromal-depleted cells (P < 0.05) and increased IL-6 by uNK cells (P < 0.05). In contrast, in the second trimester T3 increased IL-10 secretion by total decidual cells (P < 0.01) but did not affect cytokine secretion by uNK cells and macrophages. Conditioned media from first trimester T3-treated total decidual cells and macrophages did not alter EVT invasion compared with untreated controls. Thus, treatment of decidual cells with T3 resulted in changes in both angiogenic growth factor and cytokine secretion in a cell type-specific and gestational age-dependent manner, with first trimester decidual macrophages being the most responsive to T3 treatment, but these changes in decidual cell secretome did not affect EVT invasion in vitro. LIMITATIONS, REASONS FOR CAUTION Our results are based on in vitro findings and we cannot be certain if a similar response occurs in human pregnancy in vivo. WIDER IMPLICATIONS OF THE FINDINGS Optimal maternal thyroid hormone concentrations could play a critical role in maintaining a balanced inflammatory response in early pregnancy to prevent fetal immune rejection and promote normal placental development through the regulation of the secretion of critical cytokines and angiogenic growth factors by human decidual cells. Our data suggest that there is an ontogenically determined regulatory ‘switch’ in T3 responsiveness between the first and second trimesters, and support the notion that the timely and early correction of maternal thyroid dysfunction is critical in influencing pregnancy outcomes. STUDY FUNDING/COMPETING INTEREST(S) This study is funded by Wellbeing of Women (RG/1082/09 to S.Y.C., M.D.K., J.A.F., L.S.L., G.E.L.) and Action Medical Research – Henry Smith Charity (SP4335 to M.D.K., S.Y.C., L.S.L., J.A.F.). The authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2010

Differential Triiodothyronine Responsiveness and Transport by Human Cytotrophoblasts from Normal and Growth-Restricted Pregnancies

Elisavet Vasilopoulou; Laurence Loubiere; Azucena Martin-Santos; Christopher J. McCabe; Jayne A. Franklyn; Mark D. Kilby; Shiao Chan

Context: Abnormal placentation in human pregnancy is associated with intrauterine fetal growth restriction (IUGR). Our group has previously reported the association between severe IUGR, lower fetal circulating concentrations of thyroid hormones (THs), and altered expression of TH receptors and TH transporters within human placental villi. We postulate that altered TH bioavailability to trophoblasts may contribute to the pathogenesis of IUGR. Design and Objective: Cytotrophoblasts were isolated from normal and IUGR human placentae to compare their responsiveness to T3 and their capability for T3 transport. Results: Compared with normal cytotrophoblasts, the viability of IUGR cytotrophoblasts (assessed by methyltetrazoleum assay) was significantly reduced (P < 0.001), whereas apoptosis (assessed using caspase 3/7 activity and M30 immunoreactivity) was significantly increased after T3 treatment for 48 h (P < 0.001 and P < 0.01, respectively). The secretion of human chorionic gonadotropin was significantly increased by IUGR cytotrophoblasts compared with normal cytotrophoblasts (P < 0.001), independently of T3 treatment. Net transport of [125I]T3 was 20% higher by IUGR cytotrophoblasts compared with normal cytotrophoblasts (P < 0.001), and this was accompanied by a 2-fold increase in the protein expression of the TH transporter, monocarboxylate transporter 8, as assessed by Western immunoblotting (P < 0.01). Conclusions: IUGR cytotrophoblasts demonstrate altered responsiveness to T3 with significant effects on cell survival and apoptosis compared with normal cytotrophoblasts. Increased monocarboxylate transporter 8 expression and intracellular T3 accumulation may contribute to the altered T3 responsiveness of IUGR cytotrophoblasts.


Kidney International | 2016

Loss of endogenous thymosin β4 accelerates glomerular disease

Elisavet Vasilopoulou; Maria Kolatsi-Joannou; Maja T. Lindenmeyer; Kathryn White; Michael G. Robson; Clemens D. Cohen; Nj Sebire; Paul R. Riley; Paul J.D. Winyard; David A. Long

Glomerular disease is characterized by morphologic changes in podocyte cells accompanied by inflammation and fibrosis. Thymosin β4 regulates cell morphology, inflammation, and fibrosis in several organs and administration of exogenous thymosin β4 improves animal models of unilateral ureteral obstruction and diabetic nephropathy. However, the role of endogenous thymosin β4 in the kidney is unknown. We demonstrate that thymosin β4 is expressed prominently in podocytes of developing and adult mouse glomeruli. Global loss of thymosin β4 did not affect healthy glomeruli, but accelerated the severity of immune-mediated nephrotoxic nephritis with worse renal function, periglomerular inflammation, and fibrosis. Lack of thymosin β4 in nephrotoxic nephritis led to the redistribution of podocytes from the glomerular tuft toward the Bowman capsule suggesting a role for thymosin β4 in the migration of these cells. Thymosin β4 knockdown in cultured podocytes also increased migration in a wound-healing assay, accompanied by F-actin rearrangement and increased RhoA activity. We propose that endogenous thymosin β4 is a modifier of glomerular injury, likely having a protective role acting as a brake to slow disease progression.


Expert Opinion on Biological Therapy | 2015

The role of thymosin-β4 in kidney disease

Elisavet Vasilopoulou; Paul J.D. Winyard; Paul R. Riley; David A. Long

Therapies that modulate inflammation and fibrosis have the potential to reduce the morbidity and mortality associated with chronic kidney disease (CKD). A promising avenue may be manipulating thymosin-β4, a naturally occurring peptide, which is the major G-actin sequestering protein in mammalian cells and a regulator of inflammation and fibrosis. Thymosin-β4 is already being tested in clinical trials for heart disease and wound healing. This editorial outlines the evidence that thymosin-β4 may also have therapeutic benefit in CKD.


Expert Opinion on Biological Therapy | 2018

Thymosin-β4: A key modifier of renal disease

Elisavet Vasilopoulou; Paul R. Riley; David A. Long

ABSTRACT Introduction: There is an urgent need for new treatments for chronic kidney disease (CKD). Thymosin-β4 is a peptide that reduces inflammation and fibrosis and has the potential to restore endothelial and epithelial cell injury, biological processes involved in the pathophysiology of CKD. Therefore, thymosin-β4 could be a novel therapeutic direction for CKD. Areas covered: Here, we review the current evidence on the actions of thymosin-β4 in the kidney in health and disease. Using transgenic mice, two recent studies have demonstrated that endogenous thymosin-β4 is dispensable for healthy kidneys. In contrast, lack of endogenous thymosin-β4 exacerbates mouse models of glomerular disease and angiotensin-II-induced renal injury. Administration of exogenous thymosin-β4, or its metabolite, Ac-SDKP, has shown therapeutic benefits in a range of experimental models of kidney disease. Expert opinion: The studies conducted so far reveal a protective role for thymosin-β4 in the kidney and have shown promising results for the therapeutic potential of exogenous thymosin-β4 in CKD. Further studies should explore the mechanisms by which thymosin-β4 modulates kidney function in different types of CKD. Ac-SDKP treatment has beneficial effects in many experimental models of kidney disease, thus supporting its potential use as a new treatment strategy.


Endocrinology | 2012

Expression and function of thyroid hormone transporters in the microvillous plasma membrane of human term placental syncytiotrophoblast.

Laurence Loubiere; Elisavet Vasilopoulou; Jocelyn D. Glazier; P.M. Taylor; Jayne A. Franklyn; Mark D. Kilby; Shiao Chan

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Mark D. Kilby

University of Birmingham

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Shiao Chan

University of Birmingham

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David A. Long

UCL Institute of Child Health

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Jayne Franklyn

European Institute of Oncology

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