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Dive into the research topics where María C. Sasiain is active.

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Featured researches published by María C. Sasiain.


Infection and Immunity | 2004

Mycobacterium tuberculosis Triggers Apoptosis in Peripheral Neutrophils Involving Toll-Like Receptor 2 and p38 Mitogen Protein Kinase in Tuberculosis Patients

Mercedes Alemán; Pablo Schierloh; Silvia de la Barrera; Rosa M. Musella; María A. Saab; Matías Baldini; Eduardo Abbate; María C. Sasiain

ABSTRACT Polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMN) exposed to Mycobacterium tuberculosis display bactericidal responses and produce inflammatory proteins. This PMN-mediated inflammatory response is regulated by an activation of the apoptotic program, which collaborates to avoid tissue injury. In vitro, circulating PMN from patients with tuberculosis (TB) show an increased spontaneous apoptosis, and M. tuberculosis-induced activation accelerates the PMN apoptosis. In this study, we evaluated the mechanisms involved in spontaneous and M. tuberculosis-induced apoptosis. We demonstrate that apoptosis of PMN is not induced by lipoarabinomannan or by a whole-cell lysate of M. tuberculosis and that neither tumor necrosis factor alpha nor CD11b, CD14, and Fcγ receptors are involved. Apoptosis of PMN from patients with active TB (TB-PMN) is induced by the interaction with the whole M. tuberculosis via Toll-like receptor 2 (TLR2), and, in contrast to spontaneous apoptosis, it involves the p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway. These results correlate with a high expression of phosphorylated p38 (p-p38) in circulating TB-PMN and with the ability of M. tuberculosis to induce in vitro the expression of p-p38 in PMN. Therefore, when the bacterial burden is low, TB-PMN could be detecting nonopsonized M. tuberculosis via TLR2, leading to the activation of the p38 MAPK pathway, which in turn would induce PMN activation and apoptosis. This mechanism needs further confirmation at the site of infection.


Journal of Immunology | 2005

Increased Susceptibility to Apoptosis of CD56dimCD16+ NK Cells Induces the Enrichment of IFN-γ-Producing CD56bright Cells in Tuberculous Pleurisy

Pablo Schierloh; Noemí Yokobori; Mercedes Alemán; Rosa M. Musella; Macarena Beigier-Bompadre; María A. Saab; Leandro Alves; Eduardo Abbate; Silvia de la Barrera; María C. Sasiain

Tuberculous pleuritis is a good model for the study of specific cells at the site of active Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) infection. We investigated the frequency and phenotype of NK cells in paired samples of peripheral blood and pleural fluid (PF) from patients with tuberculosis (TB) or parapneumonic infection. We demonstrated for the first time a reduction of NK cells in PF from TB with an enrichment in the CD56brightCD16− subset. In agreement, in PF NK cells we observed an increased expression of CD94, NKG2A, CD62L, and CCR7 molecules and lower expression of Bcl-2 and perforin. The activation markers CD69 and HLA-DR were also increased. The enrichment in the CD56bright subset was due to an increased susceptibility to apoptosis of CD56+CD16+ NK cells mediated by heat-labile and stable soluble factors present in tuberculous effusions and not in PF from other etiologies. Furthermore, in TB patients, Mtb-induced IFN-γ production by PF NK cells was not dependent on the presence of CD3+, CD19+, and CD14+ cells, suggesting a direct interaction of CD56bright cells with Mtb and/or the involvement of other accessory cells present at the site of Mtb infection.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2011

Outbreaks of mycobacterium tuberculosis MDR strains induce high IL-17 T-cell response in patients with MDR tuberculosis that is closely associated with high antigen load.

Juan Ignacio Basile; Laura Geffner; María M. Romero; Luciana Balboa; Carmen Sabio y García; Viviana Ritacco; Ana García; Mónica Cuffré; Eduardo Abbate; Lucía Barrera; Marta Ambroggi; Mercedes Alemán; María C. Sasiain; Silvia de la Barrera

BACKGROUND The proinflammatory cytokine interleukin 17 (IL-17) plays an important role in immune responses but it is also associated with tissue-damaging inflammation. So, we evaluated the ability of Mycobacterium tuberculosis clinical isolates to induce IL-17 in tuberculosis (TB) patients and in healthy human tuberculin reactors (PPD(+)HD). METHODS IL-17, interferon γ (IFN-γ), and interleukin 23 (IL-23) receptor expression were evaluated ex vivo and cultured peripheral blood mononuclear cells from TB and PPD(+)HD stimulated with irradiated clinical isolates from multidrug resistant (MDR) outbreaks M (Haarlem family) and Ra (Latin American-Mediterranean family), as well as drug-susceptible isolates belonging to the same families and laboratory strain H37Rv for 48 hours in T-cell subsets by flow cytometry. RESULTS We observed that: (1) MDR strains M and Ra are stronger IL-17 inducers than drug-susceptible Mtb strains of the Haarlem and Latin American-Mediterranean families, (2) MDR-TB patients show the highest IL-17 expression that is independent on the strain, (3) IL-17 expression is dependent on CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells associates with persistently high antigen load. CONCLUSIONS IL-17--producing T cells could play an immunopathological role in MDR-TB promoting severe tissue damage, which may be associated with the low effectiveness of the second-line drugs employed in the treatment.


Infection and Immunity | 2007

Mycobacterium tuberculosis-Induced Gamma Interferon Production by Natural Killer Cells Requires Cross Talk with Antigen-Presenting Cells Involving Toll-Like Receptors 2 and 4 and the Mannose Receptor in Tuberculous Pleurisy

Pablo Schierloh; Noemí Yokobori; Mercedes Alemán; Verónica I. Landoni; Laura Geffner; Rosa M. Musella; Jorge Castagnino; Matías Baldini; Eduardo Abbate; Silvia de la Barrera; María C. Sasiain

ABSTRACT Tuberculous pleurisy allows the study of human cells at the site of active Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection. In this study, we found that among pleural fluid (PF) lymphocytes, natural killer (NK) cells are a major source of early gamma interferon (IFN-γ) upon M. tuberculosis stimulation, leading us to investigate the mechanisms and molecules involved in this process. We show that the whole bacterium is the best inducer of IFN-γ, although a high-molecular-weight fraction of culture filtrate proteins from M. tuberculosis H37Rv and the whole-cell lysate also induce its expression. The mannose receptor seems to mediate the inhibitory effect of mannosylated lipoarabinomannan, and Toll-like receptor 2 and 4 agonists activate NK cells but do not induce IFN-γ like M. tuberculosis does. Antigen-presenting cells (APC) and NK cells bind M. tuberculosis, and although interleukin-12 is required, it is not sufficient to induce IFN-γ expression, indicating that NK cell-APC contact takes place. Indeed, major histocompatibility complex class I, adhesion, and costimulatory molecules as well as NK receptors regulate IFN-γ induction. The signaling pathway is partially inhibited by dexamethasone and sensitive to Ca2+ flux and cyclosporine. Inhibition of p38 and extracellular-regulated kinase mitogen-activated protein kinase pathways reduces the number of IFN-γ+ NK cells. Phosphorylated p38 (p-p38) is detected in ex vivo PF-NK cells, and M. tuberculosis triggers p-p38 in PF-NK cells at the same time that binding between NK and M. tuberculosis reaches its maximum value. Thus, interplay between M. tuberculosis and NK cells/APC triggering IFN-γ would be expected to play a beneficial role in tuberculous pleurisy by helping to maintain a type 1 profile.


Infection and Immunity | 2009

Patients with Multidrug-Resistant Tuberculosis Display Impaired Th1 Responses and Enhanced Regulatory T-Cell Levels in Response to an Outbreak of Multidrug-Resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis M and Ra Strains

Laura Geffner; Noemí Yokobori; Juan Ignacio Basile; Pablo Schierloh; Luciana Balboa; María M. Romero; Viviana Ritacco; Marisa Vescovo; Pablo González Montaner; Lucía Barrera; Mercedes Alemán; Eduardo Abatte; María C. Sasiain; Silvia de la Barrera

ABSTRACT In Argentina, multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) outbreaks emerged among hospitalized patients with AIDS in the early 1990s and thereafter disseminated to the immunocompetent community. Epidemiological, bacteriological, and genotyping data allowed the identification of certain MDR Mycobacterium tuberculosis outbreak strains, such as the so-called strain M of the Haarlem lineage and strain Ra of the Latin America and Mediterranean lineage. In the current study, we evaluated the immune responses induced by strains M and Ra in peripheral blood mononuclear cells from patients with active MDR-TB or fully drug-susceptible tuberculosis (S-TB) and in purified protein derivative-positive healthy controls (group N). Our results demonstrated that strain M was a weaker gamma interferon (IFN-γ) inducer than H37Rv for group N. Strain M induced the highest interleukin-4 expression in CD4+ and CD8+ T cells from MDR- and S-TB patients, along with the lowest cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) activity in patients and controls. Hence, impairment of CTL activity is a hallmark of strain M and could be an evasion mechanism employed by this strain to avoid the killing of macrophages by M-specific CTL effectors. In addition, MDR-TB patients had an increased proportion of circulating regulatory T cells (Treg cells), and these cells were further expanded upon in vitro M. tuberculosis stimulation. Experimental Treg cell depletion increased IFN-γ expression and CTL activity in TB patients, with M- and Ra-induced CTL responses remaining low in MDR-TB patients. Altogether, these results suggest that immunity to MDR strains might depend upon a balance between the individual host response and the ability of different M. tuberculosis genotypes to drive Th1 or Th2 profiles.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2005

In tuberculous pleural effusions, activated neutrophils undergo apoptosis and acquire a dendritic cell-like phenotype

Mercedes Alemán; Silvia de la Barrera; Pablo Schierloh; Leandro Alves; Noemí Yokobori; Matías Baldini; Eduardo Abbate; María C. Sasiain

Tuberculous pleuritis usually shows lymphocytic preponderance, but neutrophils are also present. Therefore, pleuritis is a good model for the study of neutrophil fate at sites of active Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection. We have previously demonstrated in vitro that M. tuberculosis-induced neutrophil apoptosis involves p38 mitogen protein kinase activation through Toll-like receptor 2. Herein, we demonstrate that, in tuberculous pleuritis, neutrophil apoptosis increases together with the expression of Toll-like receptor 2 and phosphorylated p38 (p-p38) kinase. In addition, receptors associated with activation/apoptotis (CD11b, CD64, tumor necrosis factor receptor, and Fas ligand) are up-regulated, together with a loss of CD16 expression. However, neutrophils express CD86, CD83, and major histocompatibility complex class II antigens, acquiring dendritic cell (DC) characteristics. Therefore, the cytokine milieu in the pleural space may influence signaling pathways on activated neutrophils, thereby inducing apoptosis and inhibiting their proinflammatory capacity, as well as allowing them acquire DC characteristics that influence the immune response.


Immunology | 2005

NK cell activity in tuberculosis is associated with impaired CD11a and ICAM-1 expression: a regulatory role of monocytes in NK activation

Pablo Schierloh; Mercedes Alemán; Noemí Yokobori; Leandro Alves; Nicolás Roldán; Eduardo Abbate; María C. Sasiain; Silvia de la Barrera

Although the role of natural killer (NK) cells in mycobacterial infections is unclear, it has been postulated that they contribute to protective immunity through the production of interferon (IFN)‐γ. In this study, we evaluate the effect of interleukin (IL)‐10, IL‐15 and IL‐18 on NK lytic activity through the expression of CD16, CD11a and CD69 molecules and the induction of IFN‐γ production in patients with tuberculosis (TB) and healthy individuals (N). Our results showed an impairment of NK lytic activity and a gradual down‐regulation of costimulatory and adhesion molecules on NK cells which were dependent on the severity of the disease. NK lytic activity was increased by exogenous IL‐15 and IL‐18 in both TB and N, and by neutralization of endogenous IL‐10 only in TB; IL‐15 and IL‐18 increased CD69 receptor expression, while anti‐IL‐10 up‐regulated CD16 and CD11a expression in TB. Mycobacterium tuberculosis reduced the number of intracellular adhesion molecule (ICAM)‐1+ CD14+ cells, but in the presence of IL‐15, IL‐18 and anti‐IL‐10 its expression was up‐regulated. In cells from TB patients, the observed effects of IL‐15 and IL‐18 on NK function were not dependent on IL‐10 modulation of the surface expression of activator/adhesion molecules. In the absence of monocytes, IL‐10 activated NK cells, suggesting an indirect effect on their function. Furthermore, in TB patients the depletion of monocytes increased the production of IFN‐γ by NK cells. Therefore, monocytes from TB patients regulated the NK function involving IL‐10 which, through an indirect mechanism, led to the down‐regulation of costimulatory/adhesion molecules and/or IFN‐γ production.


European Journal of Immunology | 2007

Spontaneous or Mycobacterium tuberculosis‐induced apoptotic neutrophils exert opposite effects on the dendritic cell‐mediated immune response

Mercedes Alemán; Silvia de la Barrera; Pablo Schierloh; Noemí Yokobori; Matías Baldini; Rosa M. Musella; Eduardo Abbate; María C. Sasiain

Polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMN) modulate the adaptive immune response through interactions with immature dendritic cells (iDC) while spontaneous apoptotic neutrophils PMNapo (PMNapo) may have an inhibitory effect on DC functions. We investigate the effect exerted by PMNapo in DC maturation and the role of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb)‐induced PMNapo in the cross‐presentation of mycobacterial antigens. We demonstrate that Mtb triggers the maturation of iDC while it is impaired by the presence of PMNapo, which abrogate Mtb‐induced expression of costimulatory and HLA class II molecules, reducing IL‐12 and IFN‐γ release by DC and partially inhibiting Mtb‐driven lymphocyte proliferation. This inhibitory effect is not observed in already Mtb‐matured DC, and it involves a direct interaction between DC and PMNapo, as supernatants from PMNapo cultures do not reveal this effect. Although PMNapo do not alter Mtb/DC‐SIGN interaction, they affect the intracellular signals leading to DC maturation without requiring their entry into DC. Phagocytosis of Mtb‐induced PMNapo by iDC leads to lymphoproliferation, which is significantly reduced by blocking CD36 and not DC‐SIGN on iDC. Therefore, cross‐presentation of Mtb antigens is taking place. Our findings suggest that the inflammatory milieu is subjected to a fine balance between non‐infected and Mtb‐induced PMNapo: non‐infected PMNapo limiting inflammation and Mtb‐induced PMNapo generating a specific immune activity.


Immunology and Cell Biology | 2010

Mycobacterium tuberculosis impairs dendritic cell response by altering CD1b, DC-SIGN and MR profile

Luciana Balboa; María M. Romero; Noemí Yokobori; Pablo Schierloh; Laura Geffner; Juan Ignacio Basile; Rosa M. Musella; Eduardo Abbate; Silvia de la Barrera; María C. Sasiain; Mercedes Alemán

During a chronic infection such as tuberculosis, the pool of tissue dendritic cells (DC) must be renewed by recruitment of both circulating DC progenitors and monocytes (Mo). However, the microenvironment of the inflammatory site affects Mo differentiation. As DC are critical for initiating a Mycobacterium tuberculosis‐specific T‐cell response, we argue that interference of M. tuberculosis with a correct DC generation would signify a mechanism of immune evasion. In this study, we showed that early interaction of γ‐irradiated M. tuberculosis with Mo subverts DC differentiation in vitro. We found that irradiated M. tuberculosis effect involves (1) the loss of a significant fraction of monocyte population and (2) an altered differentiation process of the surviving monocyte subpopulation. Moreover, in the absence of irradiated M. tuberculosis, DC consist in a major DC‐specific intercellular adhesion molecule 3‐grabbing non‐integrin receptor (DC‐SIGNhigh)/CD86low and minor DC‐SIGNlow/CD86high subpopulations, whereas in the presence of bacteria, there is an enrichment of DC‐SIGNlow/CD86high population. Besides, this population enlarged by irradiated M. tuberculosis, which is characterized by a reduced CD1b expression, correlates with a reduced induction of specific T‐lymphocyte proliferation. The loss of CD1molecules partially involves toll‐like receptors (TLR‐2)/p38 MAPK activation. Finally, several features of Mo, which have been differentiated into DC in the presence of irradiated M. tuberculosis, resemble the features of DC obtained from patients with active tuberculosis. In conclusion, we suggest that M. tuberculosis escapes from acquired immune response in tuberculosis may be caused by an altered differentiation into DC leading to a poor M. tuberculosis‐specific T‐cell response.


Cell Research | 2015

Tuberculosis is associated with expansion of a motile, permissive and immunomodulatory CD16(+) monocyte population via the IL-10/STAT3 axis.

Claire Lastrucci; Alan Bénard; Luciana Balboa; Karine Pingris; Shanti Souriant; Renaud Poincloux; Talal Al Saati; Voahangy Rasolofo; Pablo González-Montaner; Sandra Inwentarz; Eduardo Moraña; Ivanela Kondova; Frank A. W. Verreck; María C. Sasiain; Olivier Neyrolles; Isabelle Maridonneau-Parini; Geanncarlo Lugo-Villarino; Céline Cougoule

The human CD14+ monocyte compartment is composed by two subsets based on CD16 expression. We previously reported that this compartment is perturbed in tuberculosis (TB) patients, as reflected by the expansion of CD16+ monocytes along with disease severity. Whether this unbalance is beneficial or detrimental to host defense remains to be elucidated. Here in the context of active TB, we demonstrate that human monocytes are predisposed to differentiate towards an anti-inflammatory (M2-like) macrophage activation program characterized by the CD16+CD163+MerTK+pSTAT3+ phenotype and functional properties such as enhanced protease-dependent motility, pathogen permissivity and immunomodulation. This process is dependent on STAT3 activation, and loss-of-function experiments point towards a detrimental role in host defense against TB. Importantly, we provide a critical correlation between the abundance of the CD16+CD163+MerTK+pSTAT3+ cells and the progression of the disease either at the local level in a non-human primate tuberculous granuloma context, or at the systemic level through the detection of the soluble form of CD163 in human sera. Collectively, this study argues for the pathogenic role of the CD16+CD163+MerTK+pSTAT3+ monocyte-to-macrophage differentiation program and its potential as a target for TB therapy, and promotes the detection of circulating CD163 as a potential biomarker for disease progression and monitoring of treatment efficacy.

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Silvia de la Barrera

Academia Nacional de Medicina

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Luciana Balboa

Academia Nacional de Medicina

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Pablo Schierloh

Academia Nacional de Medicina

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Mercedes Alemán

Academia Nacional de Medicina

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Noemí Yokobori

Academia Nacional de Medicina

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Eduardo Abbate

Academia Nacional de Medicina

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Juan Ignacio Basile

Academia Nacional de Medicina

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Laura Geffner

Academia Nacional de Medicina

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Viviana Ritacco

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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María M. Romero

Academia Nacional de Medicina

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