Lovisa Dousha
University of Melbourne
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Publication
Featured researches published by Lovisa Dousha.
Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses | 2011
Alexander N. Larcombe; Rachel E. Foong; Elizabeth M. Bozanich; Luke J. Berry; L. Garratt; Rosa C. Gualano; Jessica Cemlyn Jones; Lovisa Dousha; Graeme R. Zosky; Peter D. Sly
Please cite this paper as: Larcombe et al. (2011) Sexual dimorphism in lung function responses to acute influenza A infection. Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses 5(5), 334–342.
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2013
Desiree Anthony; Huei Jiunn Seow; Mohib Uddin; Michelle Thompson; Lovisa Dousha; Ross Vlahos; Louis Irving; Bruce D. Levy; Gary P. Anderson; Steven Bozinovski
RATIONALE Neutrophilic inflammation is an important pathologic feature of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and infectious exacerbations of COPD. Serum amyloid A (SAA) promotes neutrophilic inflammation by its interaction with lung mucosal ALX/FPR2 receptors. However, little is known about how this endogenous mediator regulates IL-17A immunity. OBJECTIVES To determine whether SAA causes neutrophilic inflammation by IL-17A-dependent mechanisms. METHODS The relationship between SAA and neutrophils was investigated in lung sections from patients with COPD and a chronic mouse model of SAA exposure. A neutralizing antibody to IL-17A was used to block SAA responses in vivo, and a cell-sorting strategy was used to identify cellular sources. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS SAA mRNA expression was positively associated with tissue neutrophils in COPD (P < 0.05). SAA predominately promoted expression of the TH17 polarizing cytokine IL-6, which was opposed by 15-epi-lipoxin A4, a counter-regulatory mediator, and ALX/FPR2 ligand. SAA-induced inflammation was markedly reduced by a neutralizing antibody to IL-17A in vivo. Cellular sources of IL-17A induced by SAA include CD4(+) T cells, γδ T cells, and an Epcam(+)CD45(-) population enriched for epithelial cells. SAA promotes expression of IL-17A in γδ T cells and this innate cell proportionally expressed higher levels of IL-17A transcript than CD4(+) T cells or epithelial cells. CONCLUSIONS The SAA-IL-17A axis represents an important innate defense network that may underlie persistent neutrophilic airway inflammation in COPD and modulating the ALX/FPR2 receptor represents a novel approach to targeting aberrant IL-17A-mediated lung immunity.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Andrew Lilja; Clare E. Weeden; Kate McArthur; Thao Kim Nu Nguyen; Alastair Donald; Zi Xin Wong; Lovisa Dousha; Steve Bozinovski; Ross Vlahos; Christopher J. Burns; Marie-Liesse Asselin-Labat; Gary P. Anderson
Inflammation is an important component of cancer diathesis and treatment-refractory inflammation is a feature of many chronic degenerative lung diseases. HSP90 is a 90kDa protein which functions as an ATP-dependent molecular chaperone that regulates the signalling conformation and expression of multiple protein client proteins especially oncogenic mediators. HSP90 inhibitors are in clinical development as cancer therapies but the myeleosuppressive and neutropenic effect of first generation geldanamycin-class inhibitors has confounded studies on the effects on HSP90 inhibitors on inflammation. To address this we assessed the ability of Ganetespib, a non-geldanamycin HSP90 blocker, to suppress lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced cellular infiltrates, proteases and inflammatory mediator and transcriptional profiles. Ganetespib (10–100mg/kg, i.v.) did not directly cause myelosuppression, as assessed by video micrography and basal blood cell count, but it strongly and dose-dependently suppressed LPS-induced neutrophil mobilization into blood and neutrophil- and mononuclear cell-rich steroid-refractory lung inflammation. Ganetespib also suppressed B cell and NK cell accumulation, inflammatory cytokine and chemokine induction and MMP9 levels. These data identify non-myelosuppresssive HSP90 inhibitors as potential therapies for inflammatory diseases refractory to conventional therapy, in particular those of the lung.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Michelle J. Hansen; Sheau Pyng J. Chan; Shenna Langenbach; Lovisa Dousha; Jessica Jones; Selcuk Yatmaz; Huei Jiunn Seow; Ross Vlahos; Gary P. Anderson; Steven Bozinovski
While global success in cessation advocacy has seen smoking rates fall in many developed countries, persistent lung inflammation in ex-smokers is an increasingly important clinical problem whose mechanistic basis remains poorly understood. In this study, candidate effector mechanisms were assessed in mice exposed to cigarette smoke (CS) for 4 months following cessation from long term CS exposure. BALF neutrophils, CD4+ and CD8+ T cells and lung innate NK cells remained significantly elevated following smoking cessation. Analysis of neutrophil mobilization markers showed a transition from acute mediators (MIP-2α, KC and G-CSF) to sustained drivers of neutrophil and macrophage recruitment and activation (IL-17A and Serum Amyoid A (SAA)). Follicle-like lymphoid aggregates formed with CS exposure and persisted with cessation, where they were in close anatomical proximity to pigmented macrophages, whose number actually increased 3-fold following CS cessation. This was associated with the elastolytic protease, MMP-12 (macrophage metallo-elastase) which remained significantly elevated post-cessation. Both GM-CSF and CSF-1 were significantly increased in the CS cessation group relative to the control group. In conclusion, we show that smoking cessation mediates a transition to accumulation of pigmented macrophages, which may contribute to the expanded macrophage population observed in COPD. These macrophages together with IL-17A, SAA and innate NK cells are identified here as candidate persistence determinants and, we suggest, may represent specific targets for therapies directed towards the amelioration of chronic airway inflammation.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Saleela Ruwanpura; Louise McLeod; Andrew Lilja; Gavin De Carle Brooks; Lovisa Dousha; Huei Jiunn Seow; Steven Bozinovski; Ross Vlahos; Paul J. Hertzog; Gary P. Anderson; Brendan J. Jenkins
Myeloid differentiation factor 88 (MyD88) and MyD88-adaptor like (Mal)/Toll-interleukin 1 receptor domain containing adaptor protein (TIRAP) play a critical role in transducing signals downstream of the Toll-like receptor (TLR) family. While genetic ablation of the TLR4/MyD88 signaling axis in mice leads to pulmonary cell death and oxidative stress culminating in emphysema, the involvement of Mal, as well as TLR2 which like TLR4 also signals via MyD88 and Mal, in the pathogenesis of emphysema has not been studied. By employing an in vivo genetic approach, we reveal here that unlike the spontaneous pulmonary emphysema which developed in Tlr4−/− mice by 6 months of age, the lungs of Tlr2−/− mice showed no physiological or morphological signs of emphysema. A more detailed comparative analysis of the lungs from these mice confirmed that elevated oxidative protein carbonylation levels and increased numbers of alveolar cell apoptosis were only detected in Tlr4−/− mice, along with up-regulation of NADPH oxidase 3 (Nox3) mRNA expression. With respect to Mal, the architecture of the lungs of Mal−/− mice was normal. However, despite normal oxidative protein carbonylation levels in the lungs of emphysema-free Mal−/− mice, these mice displayed increased levels of apoptosis comparable to those observed in emphysematous Tlr4−/− mice. In conclusion, our data provide in vivo evidence for the non-essential role for TLR2, unlike the related TLR4, in maintaining the normal architecture of the lung. In addition, we reveal that Mal differentially facilitates the anti-apoptotic, but not oxidant suppressive, activities of TLR4 in the lung, both of which appear to be essential for TLR4 to prevent the onset of emphysema.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Paul Thomas King; Roleen Sharma; Kim M. O'Sullivan; Judy M. Callaghan; Lovisa Dousha; Belinda J. Thomas; Saleela Ruwanpura; Steven Lim; Michael Farmer; Barton R. Jennings; Michaela Finsterbusch; Gavin De Carle Brooks; Stavros Selemidis; Gary P. Anderson; Stephen R. Holdsworth; Philip G. Bardin
Our aim was to investigate if deoxyribonuclease (DNase) 1 is a potential therapeutic agent to reduce pathogenic effects of cigarette smoke exposure in the lung. Cigarette smoke causes protease imbalance with excess production of proteases, which is a key process in the pathogenesis of emphysema. The mechanisms responsible for this effect are not well-defined. Our studies demonstrate both in vitro and in vivo that cigarette smoke significantly increases the expression of neutrophil and macrophage extracellular traps with coexpression of the pathogenic proteases, neutrophil elastase and matrix metalloproteinases 9 and 12. This response to cigarette smoke was significantly reduced by the addition of DNase 1, which also significantly decreased macrophage numbers and lung proteolysis. DNase 1, a treatment currently in clinical use, can diminish the pathogenic effects of cigarette smoke.
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2016
Saleela Ruwanpura; Louise McLeod; Lovisa Dousha; Huei Jiunn Seow; Sultan Alhayyani; Michelle D. Tate; Virginie Deswaerte; Gavin De Carle Brooks; Steven Bozinovski; Martin MacDonald; Christoph Garbers; Paul Thomas King; Philip G. Bardin; Ross Vlahos; Stefan Rose-John; Gary P. Anderson; Brendan J. Jenkins
american thoracic society international conference | 2011
Shenna Langenbach; Lovisa Dousha; Rosa C. Gualano; Zi X. Wong; Oliver Ferdinando; Jessica Jones; Andrew Lilja; Michelle J. Hansen; Lindsey Cass; Kazuhiro Ito; Gary P. Anderson
american thoracic society international conference | 2009
Michelle J. Hansen; Shenna Langenbach; Lovisa Dousha; Oliver Ferdinando; D Allan; L Kosack; Huei Jiunn Seow; J Chan; Jessica Jones; Gary P. Anderson
american thoracic society international conference | 2011
Shenna Langenbach; Lovisa Dousha; Rosa C. Gualano; Zi X. Wong; Oliver Ferdinando; Jessica Jones; Michelle J. Hansen; Huei J. Seow; Andrew Lilja; Lindsey Cass; Kazuhiro Ito; Gary P. Anderson