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Featured researches published by Marina Botto.


Nature Immunology | 2007

Dectin-1 is required for beta-glucan recognition and control of fungal infection.

Philip R. Taylor; S. Vicky Tsoni; Janet A. Willment; Kevin M. Dennehy; Marcela Rosas; Helen Findon; Ken Haynes; Chad Steele; Marina Botto; Siamon Gordon; Gordon D. Brown

β-Glucan is one of the most abundant polysaccharides in fungal pathogens, yet its importance in antifungal immunity is unclear. Here we show that deficiency of dectin-1, the myeloid receptor for β-glucan, rendered mice susceptible to infection with Candida albicans. Dectin-1-deficient leukocytes demonstrated significantly impaired responses to fungi even in the presence of opsonins. Impaired leukocyte responses were manifested in vivo by reduced inflammatory cell recruitment after fungal infection, resulting in substantially increased fungal burdens and enhanced fungal dissemination. Our results establish a fundamental function for β-glucan recognition by dectin-1 in antifungal immunity and demonstrate a signaling non–Toll-like pattern-recognition receptor required for the induction of protective immune responses.


Nature | 2002

Non-redundant role of the long pentraxin PTX3 in anti-fungal innate immune response

Cecilia Garlanda; Emilio Hirsch; Silvia Bozza; Antonietta Salustri; Marika De Acetis; Rachele Nota; Alessia Maccagno; Federica Riva; Barbara Bottazzi; Giuseppe Peri; Andrea Doni; Luca Vago; Marina Botto; Rita De Santis; Paolo Carminati; Gregorio Siracusa; Fiorella Altruda; Annunciata Vecchi; Luigina Romani; Alberto Mantovani

Pentraxins are a superfamily of conserved proteins that are characterized by a cyclic multimeric structure. The classical short pentraxins, C-reactive protein (CRP) and serum amyloid P component (SAP), are acute-phase proteins produced in the liver in response to inflammatory mediators. Short pentraxins regulate innate resistance to microbes and the scavenging of cellular debris and extracellular matrix components. In contrast, long pentraxins have an unrelated, long amino-terminal domain coupled to the carboxy-terminal pentraxin domain, and differ, with respect to short pentraxins, in their gene organization, chromosomal localization, cellular source, and in their stimuli-inducing and ligand-recognition ability. To investigate the in vivo function of the long pentraxin PTX3, we generated mice deficient in Ptx3 by homologous recombination. Ptx3-null mice were susceptible to invasive pulmonary aspergillosis. Ptx3 binds selected microbial agents, including conidia of Aspergillus fumigatus, and we found that susceptibility of Ptx3-null mice was associated with defective recognition of conidia by alveolar macrophages and dendritic cells, as well as inappropriate induction of an adaptive type 2 response. Thus, the long pentraxin Ptx3 is a secreted pattern-recognition receptor that has a non-redundant role in resistance to selected microbial agents, in particular to the opportunistic fungal pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus.


Nature Medicine | 1999

Serum amyloid P component controls chromatin degradation and prevents antinuclear autoimmunity

M.C.M. Bickerstaff; Marina Botto; Winston L. Hutchinson; J. Herbert; G.A. Tennent; A. Bybee; Da Mitchell; H.T. Cook; P.J.G. Butler; Mark Walport; Mark B. Pepys

Serum amyloid P component (SAP), a highly conserved plasma protein named for its universal presence in amyloid deposits, is the single normal circulating protein that shows specific calcium-dependent binding to DNA and chromatin in physiological conditions. The avid binding of SAP displaces H1-type histones and thereby solubilizes native long chromatin, which is otherwise profoundly insoluble at the physiological ionic strength of extracellular fluids. Furthermore, SAP binds in vivo both to apoptotic cells, the surface blebs of which bear chromatin fragments, and to nuclear debris released by necrosis. SAP may therefore participate in handling of chromatin exposed by cell death. Here we show that mice with targeted deletion of the SAP gene spontaneously develop antinuclear autoimmunity and severe glomerulonephritis, a phenotype resembling human systemic lupus erythematosus, a serious autoimmune disease. The SAP–/– mice also have enhanced anti-DNA responses to immunization with extrinsic chromatin, and we demonstrate that degradation of long chromatin is retarded in the presence of SAP both in vitro and in vivo. These findings indicate that SAP has an important physiological role, inhibiting the formation of pathogenic autoantibodies against chromatin and DNA, probably by binding to chromatin and regulating its degradation.


Journal of Immunology | 2003

Complement Activation Determines the Therapeutic Activity of Rituximab In Vivo

Nicola Di Gaetano; Elena Cittera; Rachele Nota; Annunciata Vecchi; V. Grieco; Eugenio Scanziani; Marina Botto; Martino Introna; Josée Golay

Rituximab is an anti-CD20 chimeric mAb effective for the treatment of B-NHL. It can lyse lymphoma cells in vitro through both C- and Ab-dependent cellular cytotoxicity. The mechanism of action of rituximab in vivo is however still unclear. We have set up a new in vivo model in nonimmunodeficient mice by stable transduction of the human CD20 cDNA in the murine lymphoma line EL4. Animals injected i.v. with the EL4-CD20+ lymphoma cells died within 30 days with evident liver, spleen, and bone marrow involvement, confirmed by immunohistochemistry and PCR analysis. A single injection of rituximab or the murine anti-CD20 Ab 1F5, given i.p. 1 day after the tumor, cured 100% of the animals. Indeed, at week 4 after tumor cell inoculation, CD20+ cells were undetectable in all organs analyzed in rituximab-treated animals, as determined by immunohistochemistry and PCR. Rituximab had no direct effect on tumor growth in vitro. Depletion of either NK cells or neutrophils or both in tumor-injected animals did not affect the therapeutic activity of the drug. Similarly, rituximab was able to eradicate tumor cells in athymic nude mice, suggesting that its activity is T cell independent. In contrast, the protective activity of rituximab or the 1F5 Ab was completely abolished in syngeneic knockout animals lacking C1q, the first component of the classical pathway of C (C1qa−/−). These data demonstrate that C activation is fundamental for rituximab therapeutic activity in vivo.


Journal of Immunology | 2002

Role of Surfactant Proteins A, D, and C1q in the Clearance of Apoptotic Cells In Vivo and In Vitro: Calreticulin and CD91 as a Common Collectin Receptor Complex

R. William Vandivier; Carol Anne Ogden; Valerie A. Fadok; Peter R. Hoffmann; Kevin K. Brown; Marina Botto; Mark Walport; James H. Fisher; Peter M. Henson; Kelly E. Greene

Removal of cells dying by apoptosis is essential to normal development, maintenance of tissue homeostasis, and resolution of inflammation. Surfactant protein A (SP-A) and surfactant protein D (SP-D) are high abundance pulmonary collectins recently implicated in apoptotic cell clearance in vitro. Other collectins, such as mannose-binding lectin and the collectin-like C1q, have been shown to bind to apoptotic cells and drive ingestion through interaction with calreticulin and CD91 on the phagocyte in vitro. However, only C1q has been shown to enhance apoptotic cell uptake in vivo. We sought to determine the relative importance of SP-A, SP-D, and C1q in pulmonary clearance of apoptotic cells using knockout and overexpressing mice, and to determine the role of calreticulin and CD91 in this process. SP-A, SP-D, and C1q all enhanced apoptotic cell ingestion by resident murine and human alveolar macrophages in vitro. However, only SP-D altered apoptotic cell clearance from the naive murine lung, suggesting that SP-D plays a particularly important role in vivo. Similar to C1q and mannose-binding lectin, SP-A and SP-D bound to apoptotic cells in a localized, patchy pattern and drove apoptotic cell ingestion by phagocytes through a mechanism dependent on calreticulin and CD91. These results suggest that the entire collectin family of innate immune proteins (including C1q) works through a common receptor complex to enhance removal of apoptotic cells, and that collectins are integral, organ-specific components of the clearance machinery.


Nature Medicine | 2001

Complement facilitates early prion pathogenesis

Michael A. Klein; Pascal S. Kaeser; Petra Schwarz; Heiko Weyd; Ioannis Xenarios; Rolf M. Zinkernagel; Michael C. Carroll; J. Sjef Verbeek; Marina Botto; Mark Walport; Hector Molina; Ulrich Kalinke; Hans Acha-Orbea; Adriano Aguzzi

New-variant Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease and scrapie are typically initiated by extracerebral exposure to the causative agent, and exhibit early prion replication in lymphoid organs. In mouse scrapie, depletion of B-lymphocytes prevents neuropathogenesis after intraperitoneal inoculation, probably due to impaired lymphotoxin-dependent maturation of follicular dendritic cells (FDCs), which are a major extracerebral prion reservoir. FDCs trap immune complexes with Fc-γ receptors and C3d/C4b-opsonized antigens with CD21/CD35 complement receptors. We examined whether these mechanisms participate in peripheral prion pathogenesis. Depletion of circulating immunoglobulins or of individual Fc-γ receptors had no effect on scrapie pathogenesis if B-cell maturation was unaffected. However, mice deficient in C3, C1q, Bf/C2, combinations thereof or complement receptors were partially or fully protected against spongiform encephalopathy upon intraperitoneal exposure to limiting amounts of prions. Splenic accumulation of prion infectivity and PrPSc was delayed, indicating that activation of specific complement components is involved in the initial trapping of prions in lymphoreticular organs early after infection.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

The classical pathway is the dominant complement pathway required for innate immunity to Streptococcus pneumoniae infection in mice

Jeremy S. Brown; Tracy Hussell; Sarah M. Gilliland; David W. Holden; James C. Paton; Michael R. Ehrenstein; Mark Walport; Marina Botto

The complement system is an important component of the innate immune response to bacterial pathogens, including Streptococcus pneumoniae. The classical complement pathway is activated by antibody–antigen complexes on the bacterial surface and has been considered predominately to be an effector of the adaptive immune response, whereas the alternative and mannose-binding lectin pathways are activated directly by bacterial cell surface components and are considered effectors of the innate immune response. Recently, a role has been suggested for the classical pathway during innate immunity that is activated by natural IgM or components of the acute-phase response bound to bacterial pathogens. However, the functional importance of the classical pathway for innate immunity to S. pneumoniae and other bacterial pathogens, and its relative contribution compared with the alternative and mannose-binding lectin pathways has not been defined. By using strains of mice with genetic deficiencies of complement components and secretory IgM we have investigated the role of each complement pathway and natural IgM for innate immunity to S. pneumoniae. Our results show that the proportion of a population of S. pneumoniae bound by C3 depends mainly on the classical pathway, whereas the intensity of C3 binding depends on the alternative pathway. Furthermore, the classical pathway, partially targeted by the binding of natural IgM to bacteria, is the dominant pathway for activation of the complement system during innate immunity to S. pneumoniae, loss of which results in rapidly progressing septicemia and impaired macrophage activation. These data demonstrate the vital role of the classical pathway for innate immunity to a bacterial pathogen.


Nature | 2010

Antibodies to human serum amyloid P component eliminate visceral amyloid deposits

Karl Bodin; Stephan Ellmerich; Melvyn C. Kahan; Glenys A. Tennent; Andrzej Loesch; Janet A. Gilbertson; Winston L. Hutchinson; Palma Mangione; J. Ruth Gallimore; David J. Millar; Shane Minogue; Amar P. Dhillon; Graham W. Taylor; Arthur R. Bradwell; Aviva Petrie; Julian D. Gillmore; Vittorio Bellotti; Marina Botto; Philip N. Hawkins; Mark B. Pepys

Accumulation of amyloid fibrils in the viscera and connective tissues causes systemic amyloidosis, which is responsible for about one in a thousand deaths in developed countries. Localized amyloid can also have serious consequences; for example, cerebral amyloid angiopathy is an important cause of haemorrhagic stroke. The clinical presentations of amyloidosis are extremely diverse and the diagnosis is rarely made before significant organ damage is present. There is therefore a major unmet need for therapy that safely promotes the clearance of established amyloid deposits. Over 20 different amyloid fibril proteins are responsible for different forms of clinically significant amyloidosis and treatments that substantially reduce the abundance of the respective amyloid fibril precursor proteins can arrest amyloid accumulation. Unfortunately, control of fibril-protein production is not possible in some forms of amyloidosis and in others it is often slow and hazardous. There is no therapy that directly targets amyloid deposits for enhanced clearance. However, all amyloid deposits contain the normal, non-fibrillar plasma glycoprotein, serum amyloid P component (SAP). Here we show that administration of anti-human-SAP antibodies to mice with amyloid deposits containing human SAP triggers a potent, complement-dependent, macrophage-derived giant cell reaction that swiftly removes massive visceral amyloid deposits without adverse effects. Anti-SAP-antibody treatment is clinically feasible because circulating human SAP can be depleted in patients by the bis-d-proline compound CPHPC, thereby enabling injected anti-SAP antibodies to reach residual SAP in the amyloid deposits. The unprecedented capacity of this novel combined therapy to eliminate amyloid deposits should be applicable to all forms of systemic and local amyloidosis.


Immunobiology | 2002

C1q, autoimmunity and apoptosis.

Marina Botto; Mark Walport

Deficiency of classical pathway complement components displays a hierarchical association with the development of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Individuals with deficiency of C1q, the first component of the classical pathway of activation, have the highest prevalence of SLE and the most severe manifestations of the disease. However, complement is also implicated in the effector inflammatory phase of the autoimmune response that characterizes SLE. Complement proteins are deposited in inflamed tissues causing consumption of complement. In addition, autoantibodies to C1q develop as part of the autoantibody response. Understanding how C1q deficiency results in the autoimmune phenotype of SLE may provide valuable clues to the role of the complement system in the maintenance of immune tolerance. In this review firstly we discuss the relationship between C1q deficiency and/or consumption and lupus. Secondly, we consider the links between apoptosis and complement. Finally we review the lessons we have learned from a murine model of C1q deficiency discussing the experimental evidence in support of the hypothesis that C1q may critically influence the immune response to self-antigens contained within the surface blebs generated by apoptotic cells.


Nature Medicine | 2001

Temporary depletion of complement component C3 or genetic deficiency of C1q significantly delays onset of scrapie.

Neil A. Mabbott; Moira E. Bruce; Marina Botto; Mark Walport; Mark B. Pepys

Following peripheral exposure to transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs), infectivity usually accumulates in lymphoid tissues before neuroinvasion. The host prion protein (PrPc) is critical for TSE agent replication and accumulates as an abnormal, detergent insoluble, relatively proteinase-resistant isoform (PrPSc) in diseased tissues. Early PrPSc accumulation takes place on follicular dendritic cells (FDCs) within germinal centers in lymphoid tissues of patients with variant Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease (vCJD), sheep with natural scrapie or rodents following experimental peripheral infection with scrapie. In mouse scrapie models, the absence of FDCs blocks scrapie replication and PrPSc accumulation in the spleen, and neuroinvasion is significantly impaired. The mechanisms by which the TSE agent initially localizes to lymphoid follicles and interacts with FDCs are unknown. Antigens are trapped and retained on the surface of FDCs through interactions between complement and cellular complement receptors. Here we show that in mice, both temporary depletion of complement component C3 or genetic deficiency of C1q significantly delays the onset of disease following peripheral infection, and reduces the early accumulation of PrPSc in the spleen. Thus, in the early stages of infection, C3 and perhaps C1q contribute to the localization of TSE infectivity in lymphoid tissue and may be therapeutic targets.

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Dorian O. Haskard

National Institutes of Health

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H.T. Cook

Imperial College London

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