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Dive into the research topics where Patricia Valdez is active.

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Featured researches published by Patricia Valdez.


Nature | 2007

Interleukin-22, a T H 17 cytokine, mediates IL-23-induced dermal inflammation and acanthosis

Yan Zheng; Dimitry M. Danilenko; Patricia Valdez; Ian Kasman; Jeffrey Eastham-Anderson; Jianfeng Wu; Wenjun Ouyang

Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory skin disease characterized by hyperplasia of the epidermis (acanthosis), infiltration of leukocytes into both the dermis and epidermis, and dilation and growth of blood vessels. The underlying cause of the epidermal acanthosis in psoriasis is still largely unknown. Recently, interleukin (IL)-23, a cytokine involved in the development of IL-17-producing T helper cells (TH17 cells), was found to have a potential function in the pathogenesis of psoriasis. Here we show that IL-22 is preferentially produced by TH17 cells and mediates the acanthosis induced by IL-23. We found that IL-23 or IL-6 can directly induce the production of IL-22 from both murine and human naive T cells. However, the production of IL-22 and IL-17 from TH17 cells is differentially regulated. Transforming growth factor-β, although crucial for IL-17 production, actually inhibits IL-22 production. Furthermore, IL-22 mediates IL-23-induced acanthosis and dermal inflammation through the activation of Stat3 (signal transduction and activators of transcription 3) in vivo. Our results suggest that TH17 cells, through the production of both IL-22 and IL-17, might have essential functions in host defence and in the pathogenesis of autoimmune diseases such as psoriasis. IL-22, as an effector cytokine produced by T cells, mediates the crosstalk between the immune system and epithelial cells.


Nature Medicine | 2008

Interleukin-22 mediates early host defense against attaching and effacing bacterial pathogens

Yan Zheng; Patricia Valdez; Dimitry M. Danilenko; Yan Hu; Susan M. Sa; Qian Gong; Alexander R. Abbas; Zora Modrusan; Nico Ghilardi; Frederic J. de Sauvage; Wenjun Ouyang

Infections by attaching and effacing (A/E) bacterial pathogens, such as Escherichia coli O157:H7, pose a serious threat to public health. Using a mouse A/E pathogen, Citrobacter rodentium, we show that interleukin-22 (IL-22) has a crucial role in the early phase of host defense against C. rodentium. Infection of IL-22 knockout mice results in increased intestinal epithelial damage, systemic bacterial burden and mortality. We also find that IL-23 is required for the early induction of IL-22 during C. rodentium infection, and adaptive immunity is not essential for the protective role of IL-22 in this model. Instead, IL-22 is required for the direct induction of the Reg family of antimicrobial proteins, including RegIIIβ and RegIIIγ, in colonic epithelial cells. Exogenous mouse or human RegIIIγ substantially improves survival of IL-22 knockout mice after C. rodentium infection. Together, our data identify a new innate immune function for IL-22 in regulating early defense mechanisms against A/E bacterial pathogens.


Journal of Immunology | 2007

The Effects of IL-20 Subfamily Cytokines on Reconstituted Human Epidermis Suggest Potential Roles in Cutaneous Innate Defense and Pathogenic Adaptive Immunity in Psoriasis

Susan M. Sa; Patricia Valdez; Jianfeng Wu; Kenneth Jung; Fiona Zhong; Linda Hall; Ian Kasman; Jane Winer; Zora Modrusan; Dimitry M. Danilenko; Wenjun Ouyang

IL-19, IL-20, IL-22, IL-24, and IL-26 are members of the IL-10 family of cytokines that have been shown to be up-regulated in psoriatic skin. Contrary to IL-10, these cytokines signal using receptor complex R1 subunits that are preferentially expressed on cells of epithelial origin; thus, we henceforth refer to them as the IL-20 subfamily cytokines. In this study, we show that primary human keratinocytes (KCs) express receptors for these cytokines and that IL-19, IL-20, IL-22, and IL-24 induce acanthosis in reconstituted human epidermis (RHE) in a dose-dependent manner. These cytokines also induce expression of the psoriasis-associated protein S100A7 and keratin 16 in RHE and cause persistent activation of Stat3 with nuclear localization. IL-22 had the most pronounced effects on KC proliferation and on the differentiation of KCs in RHE, inducing a decrease in the granular cell layer (hypogranulosis). Furthermore, gene expression analysis performed on cultured RHE treated with these cytokines showed that IL-19, IL-20, IL-22, and IL-24 regulate many of these same genes to variable degrees, inducing a gene expression profile consistent with inflammatory responses, wound healing re-epithelialization, and altered differentiation. Many of these genes have also been found to be up-regulated in psoriatic skin, including several chemokines, β-defensins, S100 family proteins, and kallikreins. These results confirm that IL-20 subfamily cytokines are important regulators of epidermal KC biology with potentially pivotal roles in the immunopathology of psoriasis.


Immunity | 2003

Loss of TACI Causes Fatal Lymphoproliferation and Autoimmunity, Establishing TACI as an Inhibitory BLyS Receptor

Dhaya Seshasayee; Patricia Valdez; Minhong Yan; Vishva M. Dixit; Daniel Tumas; Iqbal S. Grewal

BLys , a key cytokine that sustains B cell maturation and tolerance, binds three receptors: BR3, BCMA, and TACI. Results from knockout mice implicate a major functional role for BR3 and a redundant one for BCMA in B cell function. TACIs role is controversial based on defects in TI antibody responses accompanied by B cell hyperplasia in knockout mice. We have presently characterized a precise role for TACI in vivo. TACI(-/-) mice develop fatal autoimmune glomerulonephritis, proteinurea, and elevated levels of circulating autoantibodies. Treatment of B cells with TACI agonistic antibodies inhibits proliferation in vitro and activation of a chimeric receptor containing the TACI intracellular domain induces apoptosis. These results demonstrate the critical requirement for TACI in regulating B cell homeostasis.


Cancer Research | 2005

Preclinical antilymphoma activity of a humanized anti-CD40 monoclonal antibody, SGN-40

Che-Leung Law; Kristine A. Gordon; John P. Collier; Kerry Klussman; Julie A. McEarchern; Charles G. Cerveny; Bruce Mixan; Wyne P. Lee; Zhonghau Lin; Patricia Valdez; Alan F. Wahl; Iqbal S. Grewal

SGN-40 is a humanized IgG1 antihuman CD40 that is currently in a phase I clinical trial for the treatment of multiple myeloma. As surface CD40 expression on B-lineage cells is maintained from pro-B cells to plasma cells, SGN-40 may be applicable to treatment of other B-cell neoplasias, including non-Hodgkins lymphoma. In this study, we examined potential in vitro and in vivo anti-B-lineage lymphoma activity of SGN-40. Recombinant SGN-40 was expressed and purified from Chinese hamster ovary cells and characterized based on binding affinity, specificity, and normal B-cell stimulation. The ability of SGN-40 to target neoplastic B cells was examined in vitro by proliferation inhibition, cytotoxicity, and antibody-dependent cell cytotoxicity assays and in vivo by human lymphoma xenograft models. Recombinant SGN-40 showed high affinity, Kd of approximately 1 nmol/L, and specific binding to CD40. Whereas SGN-40 was a weak agonist in stimulating normal B-cell proliferation in the absence of IL-4 and CD40L, it delivered potent proliferation inhibitory and apoptotic signals to, and mediated antibody-dependent cytotoxicity against, a panel of high-grade B-lymphoma lines. These in vitro antilymphoma effects were extended to disseminated and s.c. xenograft CD40 tumor models. In these xenograft models, the antitumor activity of SGN-40 was comparable with that of rituximab. The preclinical in vitro and in vivo antilymphoma activity of SGN-40 observed in this study provides a rationale for the clinical testing of SGN-40 in the treatment of CD40+ B-lineage lymphomas.


Nature | 2014

NRROS negatively regulates reactive oxygen species during host defence and autoimmunity.

Rajkumar Noubade; Kit Wong; Naruhisa Ota; Sascha Rutz; Céline Eidenschenk; Patricia Valdez; Jiabing Ding; Ivan Peng; Andrew Sebrell; Patrick Caplazi; Jason DeVoss; Robert Soriano; Tao Sai; Rongze Lu; Zora Modrusan; Jason A. Hackney; Wenjun Ouyang

Reactive oxygen species (ROS) produced by phagocytes are essential for host defence against bacterial and fungal infections. Individuals with defective ROS production machinery develop chronic granulomatous disease. Conversely, excessive ROS can cause collateral tissue damage during inflammatory processes and therefore needs to be tightly regulated. Here we describe a protein, we termed negative regulator of ROS (NRROS), which limits ROS generation by phagocytes during inflammatory responses. NRROS expression in phagocytes can be repressed by inflammatory signals. NRROS-deficient phagocytes produce increased ROS upon inflammatory challenges, and mice lacking NRROS in their phagocytes show enhanced bactericidal activity against Escherichia coli and Listeria monocytogenes. Conversely, these mice develop severe experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis owing to oxidative tissue damage in the central nervous system. Mechanistically, NRROS is localized to the endoplasmic reticulum, where it directly interacts with nascent NOX2 (also known as gp91phox and encoded by Cybb) monomer, one of the membrane-bound subunits of the NADPH oxidase complex, and facilitates the degradation of NOX2 through the endoplasmic-reticulum-associated degradation pathway. Thus, NRROS provides a hitherto undefined mechanism for regulating ROS prodution—one that enables phagocytes to produce higher amounts of ROS, if required to control invading pathogens, while minimizing unwanted collateral tissue damage.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

NTB-A, a New Activating Receptor in T Cells That Regulates Autoimmune Disease

Patricia Valdez; Hua Wang; Dhaya Seshasayee; Menno van Lookeren Campagne; Austin L. Gurney; Wyne P. Lee; Iqbal S. Grewal


Archive | 2008

Compositions and methods for treatment of microbial disorders

Alexander R. Abbas; Nico Ghilardi; Zora Modrusan; Dimitry M. Danilenko; Frederic J. de Sauvage; Wenjun Ouyang; Patricia Valdez; Yan Zheng


Archive | 2006

COMPOSITIONS AND METHODS FOR THE TREATMENT OF DISEASES AND DISORDERS ASSOCIATED WITH CYTOKINE SIGNALING

Yvonne Chen; Anan Chuntharapai; Dimitry M. Danilenko; Wenjun Ouyang; Susan Sa; Patricia Valdez; Terence Wong; Jianfeng Wu; Yan Zheng


Archive | 2011

METHODS FOR TREATMENT OF MICROBIAL DISORDERS

Alexander R. Abbas; Nico Ghilardi; Zora Modrusan; Dimitry M. Danilenko; Frederic J. de Sauvage; Wenjun Ouyang; Patricia Valdez; Yan Zheng

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