Grant C. Nicholson
National Institutes of Health
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Featured researches published by Grant C. Nicholson.
Clinical & Experimental Allergy | 2005
Edward M. Erin; Angela Zacharasiewicz; Grant C. Nicholson; Andrew J. Tan; L. A. Higgins; Timothy J. Williams; R. D. Murdoch; Stephen R. Durham; P J Barnes; Trevor T. Hansel
Background Cytokines and chemokines produced by allergen‐reactive T‐helper type 2 (Th2) cells may be pivotal to the pathophysiology of allergic disorders.
The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2010
Bo L. Chawes; Matthew J. Edwards; Betty Shamji; Christoph Walker; Grant C. Nicholson; Andrew J. Tan; Nilofar V. Følsgaard; Klaus Bønnelykke; Hans Bisgaard; Trevor T. Hansel
To the Editor: There is a need to develop noninvasive methods to sample epithelial lining fluid (ELF) from the respiratory system. The nasal mucosa is easily accessible, and it has long been recognized that there is a strong functional and immunologic relationship between the nose and bronchi. It is possible to obtain samples of ELF by means of nasal lavage, which has been used to measure inflammatory protein secretion after nasal allergen challenge. However, nasal allergen challenge exaggerates natural exposures, and the unknown dilution factor from nasal lavage is a significant confounder and might dilute the mediators to less than the detection limit of the assay. Therefore there is a need to measure mediators in the undisturbed ELF. We propose a method for sampling nasal ELF using a synthetic absorptive matrix (SAM), separating the fluid by means of centrifugation, and analyzing the sample with a multiplex quantitative protein assay for a panel of inflammatory mediators. The advantage of this technique is that it analyzes undiluted ELF at the tissue interface without need for stimulation of the mucosa. We conducted a case-control study of children with symptomatic allergic rhinitis and healthy control subjects from the Copenhagen Prospective Study on Asthma in Childhood birth cohort to assess whether unchallenged levels of nasal mediators could be detected in ELF collected with SAM and whether such levels associated with symptoms of allergic rhinitis. The study was conducted August to September 2008 and was approved by the Copenhagen Ethics Committee. Case status was determined based on allergic rhinitis with troublesome symptoms in the previous 24 hours, and control
Clinical & Experimental Allergy | 2006
Edward M. Erin; B. R. Leaker; Angela Zacharasiewicz; L. A. Higgins; Grant C. Nicholson; M. J. Boyce; P. Boer; R. C. Jones; Stephen R. Durham; P J Barnes; Trevor T. Hansel
Background β‐Tryptase is a multifunctional mast cell serine protease released during mast cell degranulation and tryptase/trypsin inhibitors are a novel potential therapeutic approach for allergic inflammatory diseases.
Chest | 2008
Edward M. Erin; Angela Zacharasiewicz; Grant C. Nicholson; Andrew J. Tan; Helen Neighbour; Renate Engelstätter; Michael Hellwig; Onn Min Kon; Peter J. Barnes; Trevor T. Hansel
BACKGROUND Ciclesonide is a novel inhaled corticosteroid for the treatment of asthma, and it is important to measure the onset of effect of this therapy on airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR), exhaled nitric oxide (NO), and levels of eosinophils in induced sputum. METHODS In a randomized, double-blind, crossover study, 21 patients with mild asthma inhaled ciclesonide 320 microg (ex-actuator) qd, ciclesonide 640 microg (ex-actuator) bid, and placebo for 7 days. Exhaled NO and AHR to adenosine monophosphate (AMP), measured as the provocative concentration of AMP producing a 20% reduction in FEV1 (PC20FEV1), were assessed after inhalation on days 1, 3 and 7. Eosinophil levels in induced sputum were also measured. RESULTS Ciclesonide 320 microg qd and 640 microg bid produced significantly greater improvements in PC20FEV1 compared with placebo on day 1 (within 2.5 h), and on days 3 and 7 (all p < 0.0001). On day 3, both ciclesonide doses significantly reduced exhaled NO levels by - 17.7 parts per billion (p < 0.0001) and - 15.4 parts per billion (p < 0.003) vs placebo, respectively. Significant reductions were maintained during the study with both ciclesonide doses (p < 0.01). A nonsignificant trend towards a decrease in eosinophil cell numbers was observed after 7 days of ciclesonide treatment, especially in patients receiving the higher dose. CONCLUSIONS A single dose of ciclesonide decreased AHR to AMP and exhaled NO within 3 h, while FEV, improved at 3 days and 7 days.
Mucosal Immunology | 2017
B R Leaker; Vladislav Malkov; Robin Mogg; Marcella Ruddy; Grant C. Nicholson; Andrew J. Tan; Catherine Tribouley; G Chen; I De Lepeleire; Nicole Calder; H Chung; Paul Lavender; Leonidas N. Carayannopoulos; Trevor T. Hansel
Non-invasive mucosal sampling (nasosorption and nasal curettage) was used following nasal allergen challenge with grass pollen in subjects with allergic rhinitis, in order to define the molecular basis of the late allergic reaction (LAR). It was found that the nasal LAR to grass pollen involves parallel changes in pathways of type 2 inflammation (IL-4, IL-5 and IL-13), inflammasome-related (IL-1β), and complement and circadian-associated genes. A grass pollen nasal spray was given to subjects with hay fever followed by serial sampling, in which cytokines and chemokines were measured in absorbed nasal mucosal lining fluid, and global gene expression (transcriptomics) assessed in nasal mucosal curettage samples. Twelve of 19 subjects responded with elevations in interleukin (IL)-5, IL-13, IL-1β and MIP-1β/CCL4 protein levels in the late phase. In addition, in these individuals whole-genome expression profiling showed upregulation of type 2 inflammation involving eosinophils and IL-4, IL-5 and IL-13; neutrophil recruitment with IL-1α and IL-1β; the alternative pathway of complement (factor P and C5aR); and prominent effects on circadian-associated transcription regulators. Baseline IL-33 mRNA strongly correlated with these late-phase responses, whereas a single oral dose of prednisone dose-dependently reversed most nasal allergen challenge-induced cytokine and transcript responses. This study shows that the LAR to grass pollen involves a range of inflammatory pathways and suggests potential new biomarkers and therapeutic targets. Furthermore, the marked variation in mucosal inflammatory events between different patients suggests that in the future precision mucosal sampling may enable rational specific therapy.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Jaideep Dhariwal; Jeremy D. Kitson; Reema E. Jones; Grant C. Nicholson; Tanushree Tunstall; Ross P. Walton; Grace Francombe; Jane Gilbert; Andrew J. Tan; Robert D. Murdoch; Onn Min Kon; Peter J. M. Openshaw; Trevor T. Hansel
Background Practical methods of monitoring innate immune mucosal responsiveness are lacking. Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) is a component of the cell wall of Gram negative bacteria and a potent activator of Toll-like receptor (TLR)-4. To measure LPS responsiveness of the nasal mucosa, we administered LPS as a nasal spray and quantified chemokine and cytokine levels in mucosal lining fluid (MLF). Methods We performed a 5-way cross-over, single blind, placebo-controlled study in 15 healthy non-atopic subjects (n = 14 per protocol). Doses of ultrapure LPS (1, 10, 30 or 100μg/100μl) or placebo were administered by a single nasal spray to each nostril. Using the recently developed method of nasosorption with synthetic adsorptive matrices (SAM), a series of samples were taken. A panel of seven cytokines/chemokines were measured by multiplex immunoassay in MLF. mRNA for intercellular cell adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) was quantified from nasal epithelial curettage samples taken before and after challenge. Results Topical nasal LPS was well tolerated, causing no symptoms and no visible changes to the nasal mucosa. LPS induced dose-related increases in MLF levels of IL-1β, IL-6, CXCL8 (IL-8) and CCL3 (MIP-1α) (AUC at 0.5 to 10h, compared to placebo, p<0.05 at 30 and 100μg LPS). At 100μg LPS, IL-10, IFN-α and TNF-α were also increased (p<0.05). Dose-related changes in mucosal ICAM-1 mRNA were also seen after challenge, and neutrophils appeared to peak in MLF at 8h. However, 2 subjects with high baseline cytokine levels showed prominent cytokine and chemokine responses to relatively low LPS doses (10μg and 30μg LPS). Conclusions Topical nasal LPS causes dose-dependent increases in cytokines, chemokines, mRNA and cells. However, responsiveness can show unpredictable variations, possibly because baseline innate tone is affected by environmental factors. We believe that this new technique will have wide application in the study of the innate immune responses of the respiratory mucosa. Key Messages Ultrapure LPS was used as innate immune stimulus in a human nasal challenge model, with serial sampling of nasal mucosal lining fluid (MLF) by nasosorption using a synthetic absorptive matrix (SAM), and nasal curettage of mucosal cells. A dose response could be demonstrated in terms of levels of IL-1β, IL-6, CXCL8 and CCL3 in MLF, as well as ICAM-1 mRNA in nasal curettage specimens, and levels of neutrophils in nasal lavage. Depending on higher baseline levels of inflammation, there were occasional magnified innate inflammatory responses to LPS. Trial Registration Clinical Trials.gov NCT02284074
BMJ Open Respiratory Research | 2016
Grant C. Nicholson; Rebecca Holloway; B R Leaker; Iain Kilty; M Salganik; Lisa Tan; Peter J. Barnes; Louise E. Donnelly
Introduction Janus kinases (JAKs) regulate inflammatory gene expression through phosphorylation of signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT) proteins. Expression of STAT proteins is increased in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and may be involved in driving chronic inflammation. Oral JAK inhibitors are effective as anti-inflammatory therapy but exhibit dose-limiting adverse effects. Development of inhaled compounds would be enhanced by robust biomarkers that directly reflect the anti-inflammatory and pharmacological activity in the lung. Methods A novel flow cytometry assay was developed to measure STAT1 phosphorylation in sputum inflammatory cells. The standard sputum processing method was refined to improve sputum cell viability. The flow cytometric assay was used to assess the reproducibility of the measurement of STAT1 phosphorylation and the in vitro activity of a pan JAK-inhibitor on three separate visits in patients with COPD. Results Upregulation of STAT1 phosphorylation was measured following in vitro IFNγ stimulation of sputum macrophages (stimulated/unstimulated ratio 1.57; p<0.00001). Upregulation was inhibited following in vitro preincubation with a pan JAK-inhibitor (inhibited+stimulated/unstimulated ratio 0.97). STAT1 phosphorylation activity could only be measured in macrophages. Conclusions Sputum from patients with COPD can be used to reproducibly measure phospho-STAT expression in sputum macrophages. The flow cytometry-based method can be used to evaluate kinase inhibitors in vitro and subsequently in ex vivo studies. The assay is particularly useful for the assessment of inhaled compounds where whole blood assays may not be relevant.
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2006
Edward M. Erin; Grant C. Nicholson; Andrew J. Tan; Linda M. Green; Helen Neighbour; Angela Zacharasiewicz; Jackie Turner; Elliot S. Barnathan; Onn Min Kon; Peter J. Barnes; Trevor T. Hansel
The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2011
Grant C. Nicholson; Harsha H. Kariyawasam; Andrew J. Tan; Jens M. Hohlfeld; Deborah A. Quinn; Christoph Walker; David M. Rodman; John Westwick; Stipo Jurcevic; Onn Min Kon; Peter J. Barnes; Norbert Krug; Trevor T. Hansel
Pulmonary Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2007
Grant C. Nicholson; Rachel C. Tennant; Donald C. Carpenter; Henry M. Sarau; Onn Min Kon; Peter J. Barnes; Michael Salmon; Rupert Vessey; Ruth Tal-Singer; Trevor T. Hansel