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Dive into the research topics where Nancy C. Fiore is active.

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Featured researches published by Nancy C. Fiore.


Journal of Immunology | 2003

Cell proliferation arrest within intrathymic lymphocyte progenitor cells causes thymic atrophy mediated by the aryl hydrocarbon receptor.

Michael D. Laiosa; Amber Wyman; Francis G. Murante; Nancy C. Fiore; J. Erin Staples; Thomas A. Gasiewicz; Allen E. Silverstone

Activation of the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR), a basic helix-loop-helix transcription factor, in lymphocytes by the immunosuppressive environmental contaminant 2,3,7,8,-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) has been shown to cause thymic atrophy in every species studied. We set out to identify the specific hemopoietic cellular populations in which the AHR was activated to lead to thymic atrophy and to determine the effect of AHR activation in those cellular populations. Initially, we examined whether AHR activation in intrathymic dendritic cells could mediate TCDD-induced thymic atrophy. It was found that thymic atrophy occurred only when the AHR could be activated in the thymocytes but not hemopoietic-derived dendritic cells or other APCs. We next analyzed the effect of TCDD on the proliferation of thymocytes in vivo. There was a significant increase in the percentage of thymocytes in the G1 phase of the cell cycle and a significant decrease in the percentage of S plus G2/M thymocytes, especially in the CD4−CD8−CD3− triple-negative intrathymic progenitor cell population 24 h after exposure to 30 μg/kg TCDD. Furthermore, by 12 h after exposure to TCDD, we observed ∼60% reduction of 5-bromo-2′-deoxyuridine incorporation in specific intrathymic progenitor cell populations. This reduction persisted for at least 6 days. These data indicate that intrathymic progenitor cells are direct targets of TCDD in the thymus and suggest that TCDD causes thymic atrophy by reducing entrance into cell cycle in these populations.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2012

Early Age at Time of Primary Epstein–Barr Virus Infection Results in Poorly Controlled Viral Infection in Infants From Western Kenya: Clues to the Etiology of Endemic Burkitt Lymphoma

Erwan Piriou; Amolo S. Asito; Peter Odada Sumba; Nancy C. Fiore; Jaap M. Middeldorp; Ann M. Moormann; Robert Ploutz-Snyder; Rosemary Rochford

BACKGROUND Infection with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) early in life and repeated malaria exposure have been proposed as risk factors for endemic Burkitt lymphoma (eBL). METHODS Infants were enrolled from 2 rural sites in Kenya: the Kisumu District, where malaria transmission is holoendemic and risk for eBL is high, and the Nandi District, where malaria transmission is limited and the risk for eBL is low. Blood samples were taken from infants through 2 years of age to measure EBV viral load, EBV antibodies, and malaria parasitemia. RESULTS We observed a significantly younger age at time of primary EBV infection in children from Kisumu compared with children from Nandi (mean age, 7.28 months [±0.33 SEM] in Kisumu vs 8.39 months [±0.26 SEM] in Nandi), with 35.3% of children in Kisumu infected before 6 months of age. To analyze how different predictors affected EBV viral load over time, we performed multilevel mixed modeling. This modeling revealed that residence in Kisumu and younger age at first EBV infection were significant predictors for having a higher EBV viral load throughout the period of observation. CONCLUSIONS Children from a region at high risk for eBL were infected very early in life with EBV, resulting in higher viral loads throughout infancy.


Infectious Agents and Cancer | 2010

Elevated anti-Zta IgG levels and EBV viral load are associated with site of tumor presentation in endemic Burkitt's lymphoma patients: a case control study.

Amolo S. Asito; Erwan Piriou; Peter Sumba Odada; Nancy C. Fiore; Jaap M. Middeldorp; Carole A. Long; Sheetij Dutta; David E. Lanar; Walter G. Z. O. Jura; Collins Ouma; Juliana A. Otieno; Ann M. Moormann; Rosemary Rochford

BackgroundEndemic Burkitts lymphoma (BL) is an extranodal tumor appearing predominantly in the jaw in younger children while abdominal tumors predominate with increasing age. Previous studies have identified elevated levels of antibodies to Plasmodium falciparum schizont extracts and Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) viral capsid antigens (VCA) in endemic BL relative to malaria exposed controls. However, these studies have neither determined if there were any differences based on the site of clinical presentation of the tumor nor examined a broader panel of EBV and P. falciparum antigens.MethodsWe used a suspension bead Luminex assay to measure the IgG levels against EBV antigens, VCA, EAd, EBNA-1 and Zta as well as P. falciparum MSP-1, LSA-1, and AMA-1 antigens in children with BL (n = 32) and in population-based age-and sex-matched controls (n = 25) from a malaria endemic region in Western Kenya with high incidence of BL. EBV viral load in plasma was determined by quantitative PCR.ResultsRelative to healthy controls, BL patients had significantly increased anti-Zta (p = 0.0017) and VCA IgG levels (p < 0.0001) and plasma EBV viral loads (p < 0.0001). In contrast, comparable IgG levels to all P. falciparum antigens tested were observed in BL patients compared to controls. Interestingly, when we grouped BL patients into those presenting with abdominal tumors or with jaw tumors, we observed significantly higher levels of anti-Zta IgG levels (p < 0.0065) and plasma EBV viral loads (p < 0.033) in patients with abdominal tumors compared to patients with jaw tumors.ConclusionElevated antibodies to Zta and elevated plasma EBV viral load could be relevant biomarkers for BL and could also be used to confirm BL presenting in the abdominal region.


British Journal of Cancer | 2010

Microgeographic variations in Burkitt's lymphoma incidence correlate with differences in malnutrition, malaria and Epstein–Barr virus

Peter Odada Sumba; E. W. Kabiru; E. Namuyenga; Nancy C. Fiore; R. O. Otieno; Ann M. Moormann; A. S. Orago; Paula F. Rosenbaum; Rosemary Rochford

Background:Endemic Burkitts lymphoma (eBL) has been associated with Epstein–Barr virus (EBV) and holoendemic Plasmodium falciparum malaria. But recent evidence suggests that other risk factors are involved.Methods:We hypothesised that selenoprotein glutathione peroxidase (GPx), a surrogate of nutritional status, is an important biomarker for eBL risk. We measured plasma GPx, anthropometric markers of malnutrition, EBV viral loads and malaria parasitaemia in children aged 1–9 years (n=258) from two locations in Nyanza Province, Kenya, with higher-than-expected and lower-than-expected incidence of eBL. The study participants were malaria asymptomatic children from the community.Results:Children from eBL high-incidence areas had significantly lower GPx levels, high EBV viral load and more evidence of chronic malnutrition than children from eBL low-incidence areas (all P<0.001). Additionally, GPx levels were significantly lower in children with the highest EBV viral load and for those with P. falciparum infections (P=0.035 and P=0.004, respectively).Conclusions:These results suggest that selenium deficiency may be a risk factor for eBL.


Malaria Journal | 2011

Suppression of circulating IgD+CD27+ memory B cells in infants living in a malaria-endemic region of Kenya

Amolo S. Asito; Erwan Piriou; Walter G. Z. O. Jura; Collins Ouma; Peter Sumba Odada; Sidney Ogola; Nancy C. Fiore; Rosemary Rochford

BackgroundPlasmodium falciparum infection leads to alterations in B cell subset distribution. During infancy, development of peripheral B cell subsets is also occurring. However, it is unknown if infants living a malaria endemic region have alterations in B cell subsets that is independent of an age effect.MethodsTo evaluate the impact of exposure to P. falciparum on B cell development in infants, flow cytometry was used to analyse the distribution and phenotypic characteristic of B cell subsets in infant cohorts prospectively followed at 12, 18 and 24 months from two geographically proximate regions in western Kenya with divergent malaria exposure i.e. Kisumu (malaria-endemic, n = 24) and Nandi (unstable malaria transmission, n = 21).ResultsThere was significantly higher frequency and absolute cell numbers of CD19+ B cells in Kisumu relative to Nandi at 12(p = 0.0440), 18(p = 0.0210) and 24 months (p = 0.0493). No differences were observed between the infants from the two sites in frequencies of naïve B cells (IgD+CD27-) or classical memory B cells (IgD-CD27+). However, immature transitional B cells (CD19+CD10+CD34-) were higher in Kisumu relative to Nandi at all three ages. In contrast, the levels of non-class switched memory B cells (CD19+IgD+CD27+) were significantly lower overall in Kisumu relative to Nandi at significantly at 12 (p = 0.0144), 18 (p = 0.0013) and 24 months (p = 0.0129).ConclusionsThese data suggest that infants living in malaria endemic regions have altered B cell subset distribution. Further studies are needed to understand the functional significance of these changes and long-term impact on ability of these infants to develop antibody responses to P. falciparum and heterologous infections.


Radiation Research | 2003

Bcl2-Independent Chromatin Cleavage is a Very Early Event during Induction of Apoptosis in Mouse Thymocytes after Treatment with Either Dexamethasone or Ionizing Radiation

Peter J. Hahn; Zhi-Wei Lai; Barbara Nevaldine; Ninel Schiff; Nancy C. Fiore; Allen E. Silverstone

Abstract Hahn, P. J., Lai, Z-W., Nevaldine, B., Schiff, N., Fiore, N. C. and Silverstone, A. E. Bcl2-Independent Chromatin Cleavage is a Very Early Event during Induction of Apoptosis in Mouse Thymocytes after Treatment with Either Dexamethasone or Ionizing Radiation. Radiat. Res. 160, 559–567 (2003). We have quantified the emergence of early chromatin breaks during the signal transduction phase of apoptosis in mouse thymocytes after treatment with either ionizing radiation or dexamethasone. Dexamethasone at 1 μM can induce significant levels of DNA breaks (equivalent to the amount induced directly by 7.5 Gy ionizing radiation) within 0.5 h of treatment. The execution phase of apoptosis was not observed until 4–6 h after the same treatment. The presence of the Bcl2 transgene under the control of the p56lck promoter almost completely inhibited apoptosis up to 24 h after treatment, but it had virtually no effect on the early chromatin cleavage occurring in the first 6 h. Ionizing radiation induced chromatin cleavage both directly by damaging DNA and indirectly with kinetics similar to the induction of chromatin cleavage by dexamethasone. The presence of the Bcl2 transgene had no effect on the direct or indirect radiation-induced cleavage in the first 6 h, but after the first 6 h, the Bcl2 gene inhibited further radiation-induced chromatin cleavage. These results suggest that endonucleases are activated within minutes of treatment with either dexamethasone or ionizing radiation as part of the very early signal transduction phase of apoptosis, and prior to the irreversible commitment to cell death.


Viral Immunology | 2010

In Vivo Activation of Toll-Like Receptor-9 Induces an Age-Dependent Abortive Lytic Cycle Reactivation of Murine Gammaherpesvirus-68

Catherine Ptaschinski; Joel R. Wilmore; Nancy C. Fiore; Rosemary Rochford

Infection of mice with murine gammaherpesvirus-68 (γHV-68) serves as a model to understand the pathogenesis of persistent viral infections, including the potential for co-infections to modulate viral latency. We have previously found that infection of neonates (8-day-old mice) with γHV-68 resulted in a high level of persistence of the virus in the lungs as well as the spleen, in contrast to infection of adult mice, for which long-term latency was only readily detected in the spleen. In this study we investigated whether stimulation of toll-like receptor (TLR)9 would modulate viral latency in mice infected with γHV-68 in an age-dependent manner. Pups and adult mice were injected with the synthetic TLR9 ligand CpG ODN at 30 dpi, at which time long-term latency has been established. Three days after CpG injection, the lungs and spleens were removed, and a limiting dilution assay was done to determine the frequency of latently infected cells. RNA was extracted to measure viral transcripts using a ribonuclease protection assay. We observed that CpG injection resulted in an increase in the frequency of latently-infected cells in both the lungs and spleens of infected pups, but only in the spleens of infected adult mice. No preformed virus was detected, suggesting that TLR9 stimulation did not trigger complete viral reactivation. When we examined viral gene expression in these same tissues, we observed expression only of the immediate early lytic genes, rta and K3, but not the early DNA polymerase gene or late gB transcript indicative of an abortive reactivation in the spleen. Additionally, mice infected as pups had greater numbers of germinal center B cells in the spleen following CpG injection, whereas CpG stimulated the expansion of follicular zone B cells in adult mice. These data suggest that stimulation of TLR9 differentially modulates gammaherpesvirus latency via an age-dependent mechanism.


Journal of Immunology | 1999

ESTROGEN RECEPTOR ALPHA IS NECESSARY IN THYMIC DEVELOPMENT AND ESTRADIOL-INDUCED THYMIC ALTERATIONS

Staples Je; Thomas A. Gasiewicz; Nancy C. Fiore; Lubahn Db; Kenneth S. Korach; Allen E. Silverstone


Journal of Immunology | 1998

Thymic Alterations Induced by 2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzo- p -Dioxin Are Strictly Dependent on Aryl Hydrocarbon Receptor Activation in Hemopoietic Cells

Staples Je; Francis G. Murante; Nancy C. Fiore; Thomas A. Gasiewicz; Allen E. Silverstone


Blood | 2006

KSHV/HHV-8 infection of human hematopoietic progenitor (CD34+) cells: persistence of infection during hematopoiesis in vitro and in vivo

William Wu; Jeffrey Vieira; Nancy C. Fiore; Prabal Banerjee; Michelle Sieburg; Rosemary Rochford; William Harrington; Gerold Feuer

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Allen E. Silverstone

State University of New York Upstate Medical University

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Rosemary Rochford

University of Colorado Denver

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Zhi-Wei Lai

State University of New York Upstate Medical University

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Ann M. Moormann

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Staples Je

State University of New York System

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Amolo S. Asito

Kenya Medical Research Institute

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Erwan Piriou

Médecins Sans Frontières

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