Michael Serralha
Telethon Institute for Child Health Research
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Featured researches published by Michael Serralha.
The Lancet | 2005
Tricia Heaton; Julie Rowe; Steve Turner; Rc Aalberse; N. De Klerk; Devinda Suriyaarachchi; Michael Serralha; Barbara J. Holt; Elysia M. Hollams; Stephanie T. Yerkovich; Kathryn E. Holt; Peter D. Sly; Jack Goldblatt; PLe Souef; Patrick G. Holt
BACKGROUND Increasing evidence suggests that patterns of T-cell immunity to inhalant allergens in genetically diverse human populations are more heterogeneous than previously assumed, and that covert differences in expression patterns might underlie variations in airway disease phenotypes. We tested this proposition in a community sample of children. METHODS We analysed data from 172 individuals who had been recruited antenatally to a longitudinal birth cohort study. Of the 194 birth cohort participants, data from the 147 probands (age range 8.6-13.5 years) who consented to blood collection were included along with data from 25 consenting siblings (mean age 11 years [range 7.4-17.4]). We ascertained clinical phenotypes related to asthma and allergy. We measured T-cell responses to allergens and mitogens, together with blood eosinophils and IgE/IgG antibodies, and assessed associations between these indices and clinical phenotypes. FINDINGS Atopy was associated with allergen-specific T-helper (Th)2 responses dominated by interleukin 4, interleukin 5, interleukin 9, interleukin 13, whereas interleukin 10, tumour necrosis factor alpha, and interferon gamma responses were common to both atopics and non-atopics. The wheal size from skin prick with allergen was positively associated with in-vitro interleukin 5 and interferon gamma responses, and negatively associated with interleukin 10. Asthma, especially in atopics, was strongly associated with eosinophilia/interleukin 5, and bronchial hyper-responsiveness (BHR) was associated with eosinophilia plus polyclonal interferon gamma production. BHR in non-atopics was associated with elevated allergen-specific and polyclonal interleukin 10 production. INTERPRETATION Parallel immunological and clinical profiling of children identified distinctive immune response patterns related to asthma and wheeze compared with BHR, in atopics non-atopics. Immunological hyper-responsiveness, including within the Th1 cytokine compartment, is identified as a hallmark of BHR. RELEVANCE TO PRACTICE These findings highlight the heterogeneity of immune response patterns in asthmatic children, including those with seemingly homogeneous Th2-driven atopic asthma. Further elucidation of the covert relationships between wheezing phenotypes and underlying immunophenotypes in this age group will potentially lead to more effective treatments for what is an unexpectedly heterogeneous collection of disease subtypes.
Cell Host & Microbe | 2015
Shu Mei Teo; Danny Mok; Kym Pham; Merci Kusel; Michael Serralha; Niamh Troy; Barbara J. Holt; Belinda J. Hales; Michael L. Walker; Elysia M. Hollams; Yury A. Bochkov; Kristine Grindle; Sebastian L. Johnston; James E. Gern; Peter D. Sly; Patrick G. Holt; Kathryn E. Holt; Michael Inouye
Summary The nasopharynx (NP) is a reservoir for microbes associated with acute respiratory infections (ARIs). Lung inflammation resulting from ARIs during infancy is linked to asthma development. We examined the NP microbiome during the critical first year of life in a prospective cohort of 234 children, capturing both the viral and bacterial communities and documenting all incidents of ARIs. Most infants were initially colonized with Staphylococcus or Corynebacterium before stable colonization with Alloiococcus or Moraxella. Transient incursions of Streptococcus, Moraxella, or Haemophilus marked virus-associated ARIs. Our data identify the NP microbiome as a determinant for infection spread to the lower airways, severity of accompanying inflammatory symptoms, and risk for future asthma development. Early asymptomatic colonization with Streptococcus was a strong asthma predictor, and antibiotic usage disrupted asymptomatic colonization patterns. In the absence of effective anti-viral therapies, targeting pathogenic bacteria within the NP microbiome could represent a prophylactic approach to asthma.
European Respiratory Journal | 2011
Elysia M. Hollams; Prudence Hart; Barbara J. Holt; Michael Serralha; Faith Parsons; N. De Klerk; Guicheng Zhang; Peter D. Sly; Patrick G. Holt
Vitamin D has been linked in some studies with atopy- and asthma-associated phenotypes in children with established disease, but its role in disease inception at the community level is less clear. The aim of the present study was to investigate associations between vitamin D status and biological signatures indicative of allergy and asthma development in children aged 6 and 14 years in Perth, WA, Australia (latitude 32° S). Serum vitamin D was assayed in 989 6-yr-olds and 1,380 14-yr-olds from an unselected community birth cohort; 689 subjects were assessed at both ages. Vitamin D levels were assessed as a risk modifier for respiratory and allergic outcomes at both ages, using previously ascertained phenotypic data. The predictive value of vitamin D levels at age 6 yrs for development of clinical phenotypes at age 14 yrs was also examined. Serum vitamin D levels in children of both ages were negatively associated with concurrent allergic phenotypes; sex stratification revealed that this association was restricted mainly to males. Furthermore, vitamin D levels at age 6 yrs were significant predictors of subsequent atopy/asthma-associated phenotypes at age 14 yrs. In an unselected community setting, children (particularly males) with inadequate vitamin D are at increased risk of developing atopy, and subsequently bronchial hyperresponsiveness (BHR) and asthma. In a large unselected cohort, males with inadequate vitamin D at 6 and 14 yrs of age had increased atopy and BHR. Low vitamin D at age 6 yrs was a predictor of atopy and asthma at 14 yrs of age.
Pediatrics | 2012
Andrew J. O. Whitehouse; Barbara J. Holt; Michael Serralha; Patrick G. Holt; Merci Kusel; Prue H. Hart
OBJECTIVES: To determine the association between maternal serum 25(OH)-vitamin D concentrations during a critical window of fetal neurodevelopment and behavioral, emotional, and language outcomes of offspring. METHODS: Serum 25(OH)-vitamin D concentrations of 743 Caucasian women in Perth, Western Australia (32°S) were measured at 18 weeks pregnancy and grouped into quartiles. Offspring behavior was measured with the Child Behavior Checklist at 2, 5, 8, 10, 14, and 17 years of age (n range = 412–652). Receptive language was assessed with the Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test—Revised at ages 5 (n = 534) and 10 (n = 474) years. Raw scores were converted to standardized scores, incorporating cutoffs for clinically significant levels of difficulty. RESULTS: χ2 analyses revealed no significant associations between maternal 25(OH)-vitamin D serum quartiles and offspring behavioral/emotional problems at any age. In contrast, there were significant linear trends between quartiles of maternal vitamin D levels and language impairment at 5 and 10 years of age. Multivariate regression analyses, incorporating a range of confounding variables, found that the risk of women with vitamin D insufficiency (≤46 nmol/L) during pregnancy having a child with clinically significant language difficulties was increased close to twofold compared with women with vitamin D levels >70 nmol/L. CONCLUSIONS: Maternal vitamin D insufficiency during pregnancy is significantly associated with offspring language impairment. Maternal vitamin D supplementation during pregnancy may reduce the risk of developmental language difficulties among their children.
The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2010
Patrick G. Holt; Julie Rowe; Merci Kusel; Faith Parsons; Elysia M. Hollams; Anthony Bosco; Kathy L. McKenna; Lily S. Subrata; Nicholas de Klerk; Michael Serralha; Barbara J. Holt; Guicheng Zhang; Richard Loh; Staffan Ahlstedt; Peter D. Sly
BACKGROUND Atopy and asthma are commonly initiated during early life, and there is increasing interest in the development of preventive treatments for at-risk children. However, effective methods for assessing the level of risk in individual children are lacking. OBJECTIVE We sought to identify clinical and laboratory biomarkers in 2-year-olds that are predictive of the risk for persistent atopy and wheeze at age 5 years. METHODS We prospectively studied 198 atopic family history-positive children to age 5 years. Clinical and laboratory assessments related to asthma history and atopy status were undertaken annually; episodes of acute respiratory illness were assessed and classified throughout and graded by severity. RESULTS Aeroallergen-specific IgE titers cycled continuously within the low range in nonatopic subjects. Atopic subjects displayed similar cycling in infancy but eventually locked into a stable pattern of upwardly trending antibody production and T(H)2-polarized cellular immunity. The latter was associated with stable expression of IL-4 receptor in allergen-specific T(H)2 memory responses, which was absent from responses during infancy. Risk for persistent wheeze was strongly linked to early sensitization and in turn to early infection. Integration of these data by means of logistic regression revealed that attaining mite-specific IgE titers of greater than 0.20 kU/L by age 2 years was associated with a 12.7% risk of persistent wheeze, increasing progressively to an 87.2% risk with increasing numbers of severe lower respiratory tract illnesses experienced. CONCLUSION The risk for development of persistent wheeze in children can be quantified by means of integration of measures related to early sensitization and early infections. Follow-up studies along similar lines in larger unselected populations to refine this approach are warranted.
The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2009
Elysia M. Hollams; Marie Deverell; Michael Serralha; Devinda Suriyaarachchi; Faith Parsons; Guicheng Zhang; Nicholas de Klerk; Barbara J. Holt; Claire Ladyman; Agata Sadowska; Julie Rowe; Richard Loh; Peter D. Sly; Patrick G. Holt
BACKGROUND Current treatment strategies for asthma in teenagers derive primarily from information on chronic disease in adults. More detailed understanding of risk factors related to teenage asthma might aid in the development of improved preventive and treatment strategies for this age group. OBJECTIVE We sought to identify biomarkers associated with asthma phenotypes in teenagers, particularly atopic asthma, and to identify markers that aid in discriminating between atopic subjects at high versus low risk of asthma. METHODS We studied 1380 unselected 14-year-olds and collected data on clinical history, allergic sensitization, and respiratory and immunoinflammatory function. The latter comprised measurements of circulating inflammatory markers and in vitro innate and adaptive immune functions, including house dust mite T-cell responses. We integrated the data into regression models to identify variables most strongly associated with asthma risk and severity among atopic subjects. RESULTS Eight hundred twenty-seven subjects were atopic, 140 subjects were asthmatic, and 81% of asthmatic subjects were also atopic. We identified asthma risk variables related to atopy intensity, including specific IgE and eosinophil levels, plus an additional series external to the T(H)2 cascade but that modified risk only in atopic subjects, including IFN-gamma, IL-10, and IL-12 responses and neutrophil numbers in blood. Moreover, bronchial hyperresponsiveness was associated strongly with atopic but not nonatopic asthma, and the bronchial hyperresponsiveness risk profile was itself dominated by atopy-associated variables. CONCLUSIONS Asthma in teenagers is predominantly driven by atopy acting in concert with a second tier of T(H)2-independent immunoinflammatory mechanisms, which contribute to pathogenesis only against the background of pre-existing inhalant allergy.
Clinical & Experimental Allergy | 2012
Nina D'Vaz; Suzanne Meldrum; Janet Dunstan; Tracey Lee-Pullen; Jessica Metcalfe; Barbara J. Holt; Michael Serralha; Meri K. Tulic; Trevor A. Mori; Susan L. Prescott
Maternal fish oil supplementation during pregnancy has been associated with altered infant immune responses and a reduced risk of infant sensitization and eczema.
European Respiratory Journal | 2010
Elysia M. Hollams; Belinda J. Hales; Claus Bachert; Wouter Huvenne; Faith Parsons; N. De Klerk; Michael Serralha; Barbara J. Holt; Staffan Ahlstedt; Wayne R. Thomas; Peter D. Sly; Patrick G. Holt
Bacterial colonisation of the airways is associated with increased risk of childhood asthma. Immunoglobulin (Ig)E against bacterial antigens has been reported in some asthmatics, suggesting a role for bacterial-specific type-2 immunity in disease pathogenesis. We aimed to investigate relationships between bacterial-specific IgE amongst teenagers and asthma susceptibility. We measured titres of IgE against Haemophilus influenzae, Streptococcus pneumoniae and Staphylococcus aureus in 1,380 teenagers, and related these to asthma symptomatology and immunophenotypes. IgE titres against S. aureus-derived enterotoxins were highest amongst atopics and were associated with asthma risk. Surprisingly, IgE titres against H. influenzae and S. pneumoniae surface antigens were higher, not stratified by atopy and independently associated with decreased asthma risk. The positive association between type-2 immunity to S. aureus and asthma phenotypes probably reflects IgE-mediated effector cell activation via enterotoxin super antigens which are secreted in soluble form. The contrasting benign nature of type-2 immunity to H. influenzae and S. pneumoniae antigens may reflect their lower availability in soluble forms that can crosslink IgE receptors. We theorise that instead they may be processed by antigen presenting cells and presented to type-2 memory cells leading to mucosal secretion of interleukin (IL)-4/IL-13, a mechanism widely recognised in other tissues to attenuate T-helper-1 associated bacterial-induced inflammation.
Clinical & Experimental Allergy | 2007
Steve Turner; Tricia Heaton; Julie Rowe; Devinda Suriyaarachchi; Michael Serralha; Barbara J. Holt; Peter Franklin; Stephen M. Stick; Jack Goldblatt; Peter D. Sly; P. N. Le Souëf; Patrick G. Holt
Background Early age at onset of atopy is associated with more severe asthma and increased airway responsiveness (AR); the underlying mechanism is unclear but may involve T cell responses.
bioRxiv | 2017
Shu Mei Teo; Howard Hf Tang; Danny Mok; Louise M. Judd; Stephen C Watts; Kym Pham; Barbara J. Holt; Merci Kusel; Michael Serralha; Niamh Troy; Yury A. Bochkov; Kristine Grindle; Robert F. Lemanske; Sebastian L. Johnston; James E. Gern; Peter D. Sly; Patrick G. Holt; Kathryn E. Holt; Michael Inouye
Repeated cycles of infection-associated lower airway inflammation drives the pathogenesis of persistent wheezing disease in children. Tracking these events across a birth cohort during their first five years, we demonstrate that >80% of infectious events indeed involve viral pathogens, but are accompanied by a shift in the nasopharyngeal microbiome (NPM) towards dominance by a small range of pathogenic bacterial genera. Unexpectedly, this change in NPM frequently precedes the appearance of viral pathogens and acute symptoms. In non-sensitized children these events are associated only with “transient wheeze” that resolves after age three. In contrast, in children developing early allergic sensitization, they are associated with ensuing development of persistent wheeze, which is the hallmark of the asthma phenotype. This suggests underlying pathogenic interactions between allergic sensitization and antibacterial mechanisms.