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Dive into the research topics where Gurpanna Saggu is active.

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Featured researches published by Gurpanna Saggu.


Journal of Immunology | 2013

Identification of a Novel Mode of Complement Activation on Stimulated Platelets Mediated by Properdin and C3(H2O)

Gurpanna Saggu; Claudio Cortes; Heather N. Emch; Galia Ramírez; Randall G. Worth; Viviana P. Ferreira

Elevated numbers of activated platelets circulate in patients with chronic inflammatory diseases, including atherosclerosis and coronary disease. Activated platelets can activate the complement system. Although complement activation is essential for immune responses and removal of spent cells from circulation, it also contributes to inflammation and thrombosis, especially in patients with defective complement regulation. Proinflammatory activated leukocytes, which interact directly with platelets in response to vascular injury, are among the main sources of properdin, a positive regulator of the alternative pathway. The role of properdin in complement activation on stimulated platelets is unknown. Our data show that physiological forms of human properdin bind directly to human platelets after activation by strong agonists in the absence of C3, and bind nonproportionally to surface CD62P expression. Activation of the alternative pathway on activated platelets occurs when properdin is on the surface and recruits C3b or C3(H2O) to form C3b,Bb or a novel cell-bound C3 convertase [C3(H2O),Bb], which normally is present only in the fluid phase. Alternatively, properdin can be recruited by C3(H2O) on the platelet surface, promoting complement activation. Inhibition of factor H–mediated cell surface complement regulation significantly increases complement deposition on activated platelets with surface properdin. Finally, properdin released by activated neutrophils binds to activated platelets. Altogether, these data suggest novel molecular mechanisms for alternative pathway activation on stimulated platelets that may contribute to localization of inflammation at sites of vascular injury and thrombosis.


Frontiers in Immunology | 2013

Local release of properdin in the cellular microenvironment: role in pattern recognition and amplification of the alternative pathway of complement

Claudio Cortes; Jennifer A Ohtola; Gurpanna Saggu; Viviana P. Ferreira

Properdin, the only positive regulatory protein of the complement system, acts as both a stabilizer of the alternative pathway (AP) convertases and as a selective pattern recognition molecule of certain microorganisms and host cells (i.e., apoptotic/necrotic cells) by serving as a platform for de novo C3b,Bb assembly. Properdin, a highly positively charged protein, normally exists as cyclic dimers (P2), trimers (P3), and tetramers (P4) of head-to-tail associations of monomeric 53 kDa subunits. While most complement proteins are produced mainly in the liver, properdin is synthesized primarily by various cell types, including neutrophils, monocytes, primary T cells, and shear-stressed endothelial cells resulting in properdin serum levels of 4–25 μg/ml. Multiple inflammatory agonists stimulate the release of properdin from stimulated leukocytes into the cellular microenvironment. Concentrated, focused increases in properdin levels may lead to stabilization and initiation of AP convertases, thus greatly amplifying the complement response to a local stimulus. This review highlights current knowledge related to these properties and discusses the implications of properdin production in a pro-inflammatory microenvironment.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Low-dose recombinant properdin provides substantial protection against Streptococcus pneumoniae and Neisseria meningitidis infection

Youssif M. Ali; Azam Hayat; Bayad Mawlood Saeed; Kashif S. Haleem; Saleh Alshamrani; Hany Kenawy; Viviana P. Ferreira; Gurpanna Saggu; Anna Buchberger; Peter J. Lachmann; Robert B. Sim; Dimitrios Goundis; Peter W. Andrew; Nicholas J. Lynch; Wilhelm J. Schwaeble

Significance This paper describes the successful therapeutic application of properdin, a positive regulator of complement activation. Recombinant expression of properdin generated a highly polymerized artificial form of properdin, Pn, with significantly higher functional activity than the lower-grade properdin polymers in serum. Adding low pharmacologic quantities of Pn to serum markedly enhanced complement deposition on Neisseria meningitidis and Streptococcus pneumoniae and dramatically boosted serum lysis of meningococci. In mouse models of infection for these two major human pathogens, a single low-dose application of Pn significantly reduced bacteremia and markedly increased survival rates. Interestingly, therapeutic induction of massive complement mediated lysis of meningococci did not induce septic shock symptoms through the release of bacterial toxins. Modern medicine has established three central antimicrobial therapeutic concepts: vaccination, antibiotics, and, recently, the use of active immunotherapy to enhance the immune response toward specific pathogens. The efficacy of vaccination and antibiotics is limited by the emergence of new pathogen strains and the increased incidence of antibiotic resistance. To date, immunotherapy development has focused mainly on cytokines. Here we report the successful therapeutic application of a complement component, a recombinant form of properdin (Pn), with significantly higher activity than native properdin, which promotes complement activation via the alternative pathway, affording protection against N. menigitidis and S. pneumoniae. In a mouse model of infection, we challenged C57BL/6 WT mice with N. menigitidis B-MC58 6 h after i.p. administration of Pn (100 µg/mouse) or buffer alone. Twelve hours later, all control mice showed clear symptoms of infectious disease while the Pn treated group looked healthy. After 16 hours, all control mice developed sepsis and had to be culled, while only 10% of Pn treated mice presented with sepsis and recoverable levels of live Meningococci. In a parallel experiment, mice were challenged intranasally with a lethal dose of S. pneumoniae D39. Mice that received a single i.p. dose of Pn at the time of infection showed no signs of bacteremia at 12 h postinfection and had prolonged survival times compared with the saline-treated control group (P < 0.0001). Our findings show a significant therapeutic benefit of Pn administration and suggest that its antimicrobial activity could open new avenues for fighting infections caused by multidrug-resistant neisserial or streptococcal strains.


Nature Communications | 2016

Protection from septic peritonitis by rapid neutrophil recruitment through omental high endothelial venules

Konrad Buscher; Huiyu Wang; Xueli Zhang; Paul Striewski; Benedikt Wirth; Gurpanna Saggu; Stefan Lütke-Enking; Tanya N. Mayadas; Klaus Ley; Lydia Sorokin; Jian Song

Acute peritonitis is a frequent medical condition that can trigger severe sepsis as a life-threatening complication. Neutrophils are first-responders in infection but recruitment mechanisms to the abdominal cavity remain poorly defined. Here, we demonstrate that high endothelial venules (HEVs) of the greater omentum constitute a main entry pathway in TNFα-, Escherichia coli (E. coli)- and caecal ligation and puncture-induced models of inflammation. Neutrophil transmigration across HEVs is faster than across conventional postcapillary venules and requires a unique set of adhesion receptors including peripheral node addressin, E-, L-selectin and Mac-1 but not P-selectin or LFA-1. Omental milky spots readily concentrate intra-abdominal E. coli where macrophages and recruited neutrophils collaborate in phagocytosis and killing. Inhibition of the omental neutrophil response exacerbates septic progression of peritonitis. This data identifies HEVs as a clinically relevant vascular recruitment site for neutrophils in acute peritonitis that is indispensable for host defence against early systemic bacterial spread and sepsis.


Journal of Immunology | 2016

Properdin-Mediated C5a Production Enhances Stable Binding of Platelets to Granulocytes in Human Whole Blood

Adam Z. Blatt; Gurpanna Saggu; Koustubh Vivek Kulkarni; Claudio Cortes; Joshua M. Thurman; Daniel Ricklin; John D. Lambris; Jesus G. Valenzuela; Viviana P. Ferreira

Enhanced levels of platelet/granulocyte aggregates (PGAs) are found in patients suffering from many different inflammatory vascular diseases, and their formation in animal models of vascular disease is associated with increased thromboinflammation and worsened outcomes. The complement system, a part of the innate immune system, influences PGA formation, but the mechanisms for its effects are unknown. In this study, we have defined complement-mediated mechanisms that enhance PGA formation in human whole blood stimulated with thrombin receptor–activating peptide (TRAP) using ex vivo flow cytometry assays. We demonstrate that physiological properdin, a positive regulator of complement alternative pathway activity, increases PGA formation when added to TRAP-stimulated blood. All physiological properdin forms increase PGA formation, but properdin tetramers are the most efficient at increasing complement activity and PGA formation. Inhibition of endogenous properdin, either circulating in the blood or produced locally by leukocytes, impairs TRAP-mediated PGA formation to the same level as specific inhibition of either the alternative or classical pathway. Additionally, blocking the interaction of C5a with its cellular receptor prevents properdin-mediated increases in PGA formation. Adding either properdin tetramers or C5a to whole blood increases CD11b expression on granulocytes, and this increase is prevented by blockade of the C5a–C5a receptor axis. Finally, we demonstrate that the effects of properdin on PGA formation are tightly regulated by Factor H. Cumulatively, our data indicate that properdin enhances PGA formation via increased production of C5a, and that inhibition of properdin function has therapeutic potential to limit thromboinflammation in diseases characterized by increased PGA formation.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2017

Neutrophil FcγRIIA promotes IgG-mediated glomerular neutrophil capture via Abl/Src kinases

Hiroshi Nishi; Kazuhiro Furuhashi; Xavier Cullere; Gurpanna Saggu; Mark J. Miller; Yunfeng Chen; Florencia Rosetti; Samantha L. Hamilton; Lihua Yang; Spencer P. Pittman; Jiexi Liao; Jan M. Herter; Jeffrey C. Berry; Daniel J. DeAngelo; Cheng Zhu; George C. Tsokos; Tanya N. Mayadas

The kidney glomerular capillaries are frequent sites of immune complex deposition and subsequent neutrophil accumulation in post-infectious and rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis. However, the mechanisms of neutrophil recruitment remain enigmatic, and there is no targeted therapeutic to avert this proximal event in glomerular inflammation. The uniquely human activating Fc receptor FcγRIIA promotes glomerular neutrophil accumulation and damage in anti-glomerular basement membrane-induced (anti-GBM-induced) glomerulonephritis when expressed on murine neutrophils. Here, we found that neutrophils are directly captured by immobilized IgG antibodies under physiological flow conditions in vitro through FcγRIIA-dependent, Abl/Src tyrosine kinase-mediated F-actin polymerization. Biophysical measurements showed that the lifetime of FcγRIIA-IgG bonds increased under mechanical force in an F-actin-dependent manner, which could enable the capture of neutrophils under physiological flow. Kidney intravital microscopy revealed that circulating neutrophils, which were similar in diameter to glomerular capillaries, abruptly arrested following anti-GBM antibody deposition via neutrophil FcγRIIA and Abl/Src kinases. Accordingly, inhibition of Abl/Src with bosutinib reduced FcγRIIA-mediated glomerular neutrophil accumulation and renal injury in experimental, crescentic anti-GBM nephritis. These data identify a pathway of neutrophil recruitment within glomerular capillaries following IgG deposition that may be targeted by bosutinib to avert glomerular injury.


Frontiers in Immunology | 2017

Factor H C-Terminal Domains Are Critical for Regulation of Platelet/Granulocyte Aggregate Formation

Adam Z. Blatt; Gurpanna Saggu; Claudio Cortes; Andrew P. Herbert; David J. Kavanagh; Daniel Ricklin; John D. Lambris; Viviana P. Ferreira

Platelet/granulocyte aggregates (PGAs) increase thromboinflammation in the vasculature, and PGA formation is tightly controlled by the complement alternative pathway (AP) negative regulator, Factor H (FH). Mutations in FH are associated with the prothrombotic disease atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS), yet it is unknown whether increased PGA formation contributes to the thrombosis seen in patients with aHUS. Here, flow cytometry assays were used to evaluate the effects of aHUS-related mutations on FH regulation of PGA formation and characterize the mechanism. Utilizing recombinant fragments of FH spanning the entire length of the protein, we mapped the regions of FH most critical for limiting AP activity on the surface of isolated human platelets and neutrophils, as well as the regions most critical for regulating PGA formation in human whole blood stimulated with thrombin receptor-activating peptide (TRAP). FH domains 19–20 were the most critical for limiting AP activity on platelets, neutrophils, and at the platelet/granulocyte interface. The role of FH in PGA formation was attributed to its ability to regulate AP-mediated C5a generation. AHUS-related mutations in domains 19–20 caused differential effects on control of PGA formation and AP activity on platelets and neutrophils. Our data indicate FH C-terminal domains are key for regulating PGA formation, thus increased FH protection may have a beneficial impact on diseases characterized by increased PGA formation, such as cardiovascular disease. Additionally, aHUS-related mutations in domains 19–20 have varying effects on control of TRAP-mediated PGA formation, suggesting that some, but not all, aHUS-related mutations may cause increased PGA formation that contributes to excessive thrombosis in patients with aHUS.


Immunobiology | 2012

Identification of a novel mode of complement activation on stimulated platelets mediated by properdin

Gurpanna Saggu; Claudio Cortes; Heather N. Emch; Galia Ramírez; Randall G. Worth; Viviana P. Ferreira


Archive | 2014

Role of Complement Regulatory Protein Properdin in Complement Activation on Platelets and in the Formation of Platelet-Leukocyte Aggregates

Gurpanna Saggu


Journal of Immunology | 2014

Essential regulatory role for factor H and properdin in the formation of platelet/granulocyte aggregates in human whole blood (HUM1P.301)

Adam Z. Blatt; Gurpanna Saggu; Claudio Cortes; Viviana P. Ferreira

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Claudio Cortes

Medical University of the Americas – Nevis

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Daniel Ricklin

University of Pennsylvania

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Jesus G. Valenzuela

National Institutes of Health

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John D. Lambris

University of Pennsylvania

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Tanya N. Mayadas

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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