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Dive into the research topics where Magali Noval Rivas is active.

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Featured researches published by Magali Noval Rivas.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2013

A microbiota signature associated with experimental food allergy promotes allergic sensitization and anaphylaxis

Magali Noval Rivas; Oliver T. Burton; Petra Wise; Yu-qian Zhang; Suejy A. Hobson; Maria Garcia Lloret; Christel Chehoud; Justin Kuczynski; Todd Z. DeSantis; Janet Warrington; Embriette R. Hyde; Joseph F. Petrosino; Georg K. Gerber; Lynn Bry; Hans C. Oettgen; Sarkis K. Mazmanian; Talal A. Chatila

BACKGROUND Commensal microbiota play a critical role in maintaining oral tolerance. The effect of food allergy on the gut microbial ecology remains unknown. OBJECTIVE We sought to establish the composition of the gut microbiota in experimental food allergy and its role in disease pathogenesis. METHODS Food allergy-prone mice with a gain-of-function mutation in the IL-4 receptor α chain (Il4raF709) and wild-type (WT) control animals were subjected to oral sensitization with chicken egg ovalbumin (OVA). Enforced tolerance was achieved by using allergen-specific regulatory T (Treg) cells. Community structure analysis of gut microbiota was performed by using a high-density 16S rDNA oligonucleotide microarrays (PhyloChip) and massively parallel pyrosequencing of 16S rDNA amplicons. RESULTS OVA-sensitized Il4raF709 mice exhibited a specific microbiota signature characterized by coordinate changes in the abundance of taxa of several bacterial families, including the Lachnospiraceae, Lactobacillaceae, Rikenellaceae, and Porphyromonadaceae. This signature was not shared by similarly sensitized WT mice, which did not exhibit an OVA-induced allergic response. Treatment of OVA-sensitized Il4raF709 mice with OVA-specific Treg cells led to a distinct tolerance-associated signature coincident with the suppression of the allergic response. The microbiota of allergen-sensitized Il4raF709 mice differentially promoted OVA-specific IgE responses and anaphylaxis when reconstituted in WT germ-free mice. CONCLUSION Mice with food allergy exhibit a specific gut microbiota signature capable of transmitting disease susceptibility and subject to reprogramming by enforced tolerance. Disease-associated microbiota may thus play a pathogenic role in food allergy.


Immunity | 2015

Regulatory T Cell Reprogramming toward a Th2-Cell-like Lineage Impairs Oral Tolerance and Promotes Food Allergy

Magali Noval Rivas; Oliver T. Burton; Petra Wise; Louis-Marie Charbonnier; Peter Georgiev; Hans C. Oettgen; Rima Rachid; Talal A. Chatila

Oral immunotherapy has had limited success in establishing tolerance in food allergy, reflecting failure to elicit an effective regulatory T (Treg) cell response. We show that disease-susceptible (Il4ra(F709)) mice with enhanced interleukin-4 receptor (IL-4R) signaling exhibited STAT6-dependent impaired generation and function of mucosal allergen-specific Treg cells. This failure was associated with the acquisition by Treg cells of a T helper 2 (Th2)-cell-like phenotype, also found in peripheral-blood allergen-specific Treg cells of food-allergic children. Selective augmentation of IL-4R signaling in Treg cells induced their reprogramming into Th2-like cells and disease susceptibility, whereas Treg-cell-lineage-specific deletion of Il4 and Il13 was protective. IL-4R signaling impaired the capacity of Treg cells to suppress mast cell activation and expansion, which in turn drove Th2 cell reprogramming of Treg cells. Interruption of Th2 cell reprogramming of Treg cells might thus provide candidate therapeutic strategies in food allergy.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2014

Oral immunotherapy induces IgG antibodies that act through FcγRIIb to suppress IgE-mediated hypersensitivity.

Oliver T. Burton; Stephanie L. Logsdon; Joseph S. Zhou; Jaciel Medina-Tamayo; Azza Abdel-Gadir; Magali Noval Rivas; Kyle J. Koleoglou; Talal A. Chatila; Lynda C. Schneider; Rima Rachid; Dale T. Umetsu; Hans C. Oettgen

BACKGROUND Food-induced anaphylaxis is triggered by specific IgE antibodies. Paradoxically, some subjects with significant IgE levels can ingest allergenic foods without incident. Similarly, subjects completing oral immunotherapy (OIT) tolerate food challenges despite persistent high-titer food-specific IgE. OBJECTIVE We sought to test whether IgG antibodies induced by food immunotherapy prevent food-induced anaphylaxis and whether this occurs through the inhibitory receptor FcγRIIb. METHODS Food allergy-susceptible Il4raF709 mice were enterally sensitized to ovalbumin (OVA). Similarly sensitized IgE-deficient (IgE(-/-)) Il4raF709 mice, which can ingest OVA without anaphylaxis, were subjected to a high-dose enteral OVA desensitization protocol (OIT). Sera from both groups were tested for the ability to activate or inhibit bone marrow mast cells (BMMCs) exposed to allergen or to passively transfer allergy to naive hosts. In parallel experiments sera obtained from patients with peanut allergy before and after undergoing OIT were interrogated for their ability to enhance or suppress peanut-induced activation in an indirect assay by using basophils from nonallergic donors. RESULTS Il4raF709 mice exhibited strong OVA-specific IgE responses. Their sera efficiently sensitized BMMCs for activation by antigen challenge. Sera from Il4raF709/IgE(-/-) mice subjected to OVA OIT suppressed BMMC responses. This inhibition was IgG mediated and FcγRIIb dependent. Similarly, pre-OIT but not post-OIT sera from patients efficiently sensitized basophils for peanut-induced activation. IgG antibodies in post-OIT sera suppressed basophil activation by pre-OIT sera. This inhibition was blocked by antibodies against FcγRII. CONCLUSION Food-specific IgG antibodies, such as those induced during OIT, inhibit IgE-mediated reactions. Strategies that favor IgG responses might prove useful in the management of food allergy.


Immunity | 2014

Immunoglobulin E signal inhibition during allergen ingestion leads to reversal of established food allergy and induction of regulatory T cells.

Oliver T. Burton; Magali Noval Rivas; Joseph S. Zhou; Stephanie L. Logsdon; Alanna R. Darling; Kyle J. Koleoglou; Axel Roers; Hani Houshyar; Michael A. Crackower; Talal A. Chatila; Hans C. Oettgen

Immunoglobulin E (IgE) antibodies are known for triggering immediate hypersensitivity reactions such as food anaphylaxis. In this study, we tested whether they might additionally function to amplify nascent antibody and T helper 2 (Th2) cell-mediated responses to ingested proteins and whether blocking IgE would modify sensitization. By using mice harboring a disinhibited form of the IL-4 receptor, we developed an adjuvant-free model of peanut allergy. Mast cells and IgE were required for induction of antibody and Th2-cell-mediated responses to peanut ingestion and they impaired regulatory T (Treg) cell induction. Mast-cell-targeted genetic deletion of the FcεRI signaling kinase Syk or Syk blockade also prevented peanut sensitization. In mice with established allergy, Syk blockade facilitated desensitization and induction of Treg cells, which suppressed allergy when transferred to naive recipients. Our study suggests a key role for IgE in driving Th2 cell and IgE responses while suppressing Treg cells in food allergy.


Immunity | 2015

MyD88 Adaptor-Dependent Microbial Sensing by Regulatory T Cells Promotes Mucosal Tolerance and Enforces Commensalism

Sen Wang; Louis-Marie Charbonnier; Magali Noval Rivas; Peter Georgiev; Ning Li; Georg K. Gerber; Lynn Bry; Talal A. Chatila

Commensal microbiota promote mucosal tolerance in part by engaging regulatory T (Treg) cells via Toll-like receptors (TLRs). We report that Treg-cell-specific deletion of the TLR adaptor MyD88 resulted in deficiency of intestinal Treg cells, a reciprocal increase in T helper 17 (Th17) cells and heightened interleukin-17 (IL-17)-dependent inflammation in experimental colitis. It also precipitated dysbiosis with overgrowth of segmented filamentous bacteria (SFB) and increased microbial loads in deep tissues. The Th17 cell dysregulation and bacterial dysbiosis were linked to impaired anti-microbial intestinal IgA responses, related to defective MyD88 adaptor- and Stat3 transcription factor-dependent T follicular regulatory and helper cell differentiation in the Peyers patches. These findings establish an essential role for MyD88-dependent microbial sensing by Treg cells in enforcing mucosal tolerance and maintaining commensalism by promoting intestinal Treg cell formation and anti-commensal IgA responses.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2015

Vehicular exhaust particles promote allergic airway inflammation through an aryl hydrocarbon receptor–notch signaling cascade

Mingcan Xia; Loida Viera-Hutchins; Maria Garcia-Lloret; Magali Noval Rivas; Petra Wise; Sean A. McGhee; Zena K. Chatila; Nancy Daher; Constantinos Sioutas; Talal A. Chatila

BACKGROUND Traffic-related particulate matter (PM) has been linked to a heightened incidence of asthma and allergic diseases. However, the molecular mechanisms by which PM exposure promotes allergic diseases remain elusive. OBJECTIVE We sought to determine the expression, function, and regulation of pathways involved in promotion of allergic airway inflammation by PM. METHODS We used gene expression transcriptional profiling, in vitro culture assays, and in vivo murine models of allergic airway inflammation. RESULTS We identified components of the Notch pathway, most notably Jagged 1 (Jag1), as targets of PM induction in human monocytes and murine dendritic cells. PM, especially ultrafine particles, upregulated TH cytokine levels, IgE production, and allergic airway inflammation in mice in a Jag1- and Notch-dependent manner, especially in the context of the proasthmatic IL-4 receptor allele Il4raR576. PM-induced Jag1 expression was mediated by the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR), which bound to and activated AhR response elements in the Jag1 promoter. Pharmacologic antagonism of AhR or its lineage-specific deletion in CD11c(+) cells abrogated the augmentation of airway inflammation by PM. CONCLUSION PM activates an AhR-Jag1-Notch cascade to promote allergic airway inflammation in concert with proasthmatic alleles.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2012

MyD88 is critically involved in immune tolerance breakdown at environmental interfaces of Foxp3-deficient mice

Magali Noval Rivas; Yi T. Koh; Andrew Chen; Annie Nguyen; Young Ho Lee; Greg Lawson; Talal A. Chatila

Tregs expressing the transcription factor Foxp3 suppress self-reactive T cells, prevent autoimmunity, and help contain immune responses to foreign antigens, thereby limiting the potential for inadvertent tissue damage. Mutations in the FOXP3 gene result in Treg deficiency in mice and humans, which leads to the development of a multisystem autoimmune inflammatory disease. The contribution of dysregulated innate immune responses to the pathogenesis of Foxp3 deficiency disease is unknown. In this study, we examined the role of microbial signals in the pathogenesis of Foxp3 deficiency disease by studying Foxp3 mutant mice that had concurrent deficiencies in TLR signaling pathways. Global deficiency of the common TLR adaptor MyD88 offered partial protection from Foxp3 deficiency disease. Specifically, it protected from disease at the environmental interfaces of the skin, lungs, and gut. In contrast, systemic disease, in the form of unrestrained lymphoproliferation, continued unabated. The effect of MyD88 deficiency at environmental interfaces involved the disruption of chemokine gradients that recruit effector T cells and DCs, resulting in their entrapment in secondary lymphoid tissues. These results suggests that Tregs have a key role in maintaining tolerance at host-microbial interfaces by restraining tonic MyD88-dependent proinflammatory signals. Moreover, microbial factors may play a substantial role in the pathogenesis of human autoimmune disease resulting from Treg deficiency.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2016

Role of Interleukin-1 Signaling in a Mouse Model of Kawasaki Disease–Associated Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm

Daiko Wakita; Yosuke Kurashima; Timothy R. Crother; Magali Noval Rivas; Youngho Lee; Shuang Chen; Wen Fury; Yu Bai; Shawn Wagner; Debiao Li; Thomas Lehman; Michael C. Fishbein; Hal M. Hoffman; Prediman K. Shah; Kenichi Shimada; Moshe Arditi

Objective—Kawasaki disease (KD) is the most common cause of acquired cardiac disease in US children. In addition to coronary artery abnormalities and aneurysms, it can be associated with systemic arterial aneurysms. We evaluated the development of systemic arterial dilatation and aneurysms, including abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) in the Lactobacillus casei cell-wall extract (LCWE)–induced KD vasculitis mouse model. Methods and Results—We discovered that in addition to aortitis, coronary arteritis and myocarditis, the LCWE-induced KD mouse model is also associated with abdominal aorta dilatation and AAA, as well as renal and iliac artery aneurysms. AAA induced in KD mice was exclusively infrarenal, both fusiform and saccular, with intimal proliferation, myofibroblastic proliferation, break in the elastin layer, vascular smooth muscle cell loss, and inflammatory cell accumulation in the media and adventitia. Il1r−/−, Il1a−/−, and Il1b−/− mice were protected from KD associated AAA. Infiltrating CD11c+ macrophages produced active caspase-1, and caspase-1 or NLRP3 deficiency inhibited AAA formation. Treatment with interleukin (IL)-1R antagonist (Anakinra), anti–IL-1&agr;, or anti–IL-1&bgr; mAb blocked LCWE-induced AAA formation. Conclusions—Similar to clinical KD, the LCWE-induced KD vasculitis mouse model can also be accompanied by AAA formation. Both IL-1&agr; and IL-1&bgr; play a key role, and use of an IL-1R blocking agent that inhibits both pathways may be a promising therapeutic target not only for KD coronary arteritis, but also for the other systemic arterial aneurysms including AAA that maybe seen in severe cases of KD. The LCWE-induced vasculitis model may also represent an alternative model for AAA disease.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2017

CD8+ T cells contribute to the development of coronary arteritis in the Lactobacillus casei extract-induced murine model of Kawasaki Disease

Magali Noval Rivas; Youngho Lee; Daiko Wakita; Norika Chiba; Jargalsaikhan Dagvadorj; Kenichi Shimada; Shuang Chen; Michael C. Fishbein; Thomas J. A. Lehman; Timothy R. Crother; Moshe Arditi

Kawasaki disease (KD) is the leading cause of acquired heart disease among children in developed countries. Coronary lesions in KD in humans are characterized by an increased presence of infiltrating CD3+ T cells; however, the specific contributions of the different T cell subpopulations in coronary arteritis development remain unknown. Therefore, we sought to investigate the function of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, Treg cells, and natural killer (NK) T cells in the pathogenesis of KD.


Immunity | 2018

T Cell-Intrinsic Receptor Interacting Protein 2 Regulates Pathogenic T Helper 17 Cell Differentiation

Kenichi Shimada; Rebecca A. Porritt; Janet L. Markman; Jg O’Rourke; Daiko Wakita; Magali Noval Rivas; Chihiro Ogawa; Lina Kozhaya; Gislâine A. Martins; Derya Unutmaz; Robert H. Baloh; Timothy R. Crother; Shuang Chen; Moshe Arditi

&NA; Receptor interacting protein 2 (RIP2) plays a role in sensing intracellular pathogens, but its function in T cells is unclear. We show that RIP2 deficiency in CD4+ T cells resulted in chronic and severe interleukin‐17A‐mediated inflammation during Chlamydia pneumoniae lung infection, increased T helper 17 (Th17) cell formation in lungs of infected mice, accelerated atherosclerosis, and more severe experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis. While RIP2 deficiency resulted in reduced conventional Th17 cell differentiation, it led to significantly enhanced differentiation of pathogenic (p)Th17 cells, which was dependent on ROR&agr; transcription factor and interleukin‐1 but independent of nucleotide oligomerization domain (NOD) 1 and 2. Overexpression of RIP2 resulted in suppression of pTh17 cell differentiation, an effect mediated by its CARD domain, and phenocopied by a cell‐permeable RIP2 CARD peptide. Our data suggest that RIP2 has a T cell‐intrinsic role in determining the balance between homeostatic and pathogenic Th17 cell responses. Graphical Abstract Figure. No caption available. HighlightsRIP2 deficiency in CD4+ T cells leads to severe IL‐17A‐mediated diseasesRIP2 suppresses pathogenic Th17 cell and supports conventional Th17 cell polarizationRIP2 suppression of pathogenic Th17 cell differentiation is ROR&agr; and IL‐1 dependentRIP2 CARD domain regulates pathogenic Th17 cell differentiation in CD4+ T cells &NA; RIP2 is the key adaptor molecule for NOD1‐ and NOD2‐mediated intracellular signaling to sense pathogens and cell activation in myeloid cells. Shimada, Porritt, and colleagues demonstrate a previously unappreciated role for RIP2 in Th17 cell regulation and differentiation in a T cell‐intrinsic manner.

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Talal A. Chatila

Boston Children's Hospital

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Hans C. Oettgen

Boston Children's Hospital

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Oliver T. Burton

Boston Children's Hospital

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Daiko Wakita

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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Joseph S. Zhou

Boston Children's Hospital

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Kenichi Shimada

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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Kyle J. Koleoglou

Boston Children's Hospital

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Moshe Arditi

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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Petra Wise

University of Southern California

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Rima Rachid

Boston Children's Hospital

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