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Dive into the research topics where Patricio L. Acosta is active.

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Featured researches published by Patricio L. Acosta.


Pediatrics | 2012

Human Rhinoviruses in Severe Respiratory Disease in Very Low Birth Weight Infants

E. Kathryn Miller; Jimena Bugna; Romina Libster; Bryan E. Shepherd; Paula M. Scalzo; Patricio L. Acosta; Diego R. Hijano; Natalia Reynoso; Juan P. Batalle; Silvina Coviello; M. Ines Klein; Gabriela Bauer; Alicia Benitez; Steven R. Kleeberger; Fernando P. Polack

Objectives: To assess incidence, burden of illness, and risk factors for human rhinoviruses (HRVs) in a cohort of very low birth weight (VLBW) infants. Methods: A 2-year prospective cohort study was conducted among VLBW premature infants in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Infants were enrolled in the NICU from June 1, 2003, to May 31, 2005, and managed monthly and with every acute respiratory illness (ARI) during the first year of life. Nasal wash samples were obtained during every respiratory episode and tested for HRV, respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), human parainfluenza viruses, influenza viruses, and human metapneumovirus using reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. Results: Of 119 patients, 66 (55%) had HRV-associated ARIs. The incidence of HRV-associated ARI was 123 events per 100 child-years of follow-up. Of those infants experiencing an episode of bronchiolitis, 40% had HRV versus 7% with RSV. The incidence of HRV-associated bronchiolitis was 75 per 100 infant-years of follow-up. HRV was associated with 12 of 36 hospitalizations (33%), and RSV was associated with 9 of 36 hospitalizations (25%). The incidence of HRV-associated hospitalization was 12 per 100 infant-years of follow-up. The risk of HRV-associated hospitalization was higher for infants with bronchopulmonary dysplasia and those who were not breastfed. Conclusions: HRV is an important and frequent pathogen associated with severe respiratory infections in VLBW infants. Bronchopulmonary dysplasia and the absence of breastfeeding are risk factors for hospitalization. The results of our study reveal that HRV is the predominant pathogen of respiratory infections in premature infants.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2015

TLR4 genotype and environmental LPS mediate RSV bronchiolitis through Th2 polarization

Mauricio T. Caballero; M. Elina Serra; Patricio L. Acosta; Jacqui Marzec; Luz Gibbons; Maximiliano Salim; A. M. Rodríguez; Andrea Reynaldi; Alejandro M. Garcia; Daniela Bado; Ursula J. Buchholz; Diego R. Hijano; Silvina Coviello; Dawn C. Newcomb; Miguel Bellabarba; Fausto M. Ferolla; Romina Libster; Ada Berenstein; Susana Siniawaski; Valeria Blumetti; Marcela Echavarria; Leonardo Araújo Pinto; Andrea Lawrence; M. Fabiana Ossorio; Arnoldo Grosman; Cecilia G. Mateu; Carola Bayle; Alejandra Dericco; Mariana Pellegrini; Ignacio Igarza

While 30%-70% of RSV-infected infants develop bronchiolitis, 2% require hospitalization. It is not clear why disease severity differs among healthy, full-term infants; however, virus titers, inflammation, and Th2 bias are proposed explanations. While TLR4 is associated with these disease phenotypes, the role of this receptor in respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) pathogenesis is controversial. Here, we evaluated the interaction between TLR4 and environmental factors in RSV disease and defined the immune mediators associated with severe illness. Two independent populations of infants with RSV bronchiolitis revealed that the severity of RSV infection is determined by the TLR4 genotype of the individual and by environmental exposure to LPS. RSV-infected infants with severe disease exhibited a high GATA3/T-bet ratio, which manifested as a high IL-4/IFN-γ ratio in respiratory secretions. The IL-4/IFN-γ ratio present in infants with severe RSV is indicative of Th2 polarization. Murine models of RSV infection confirmed that LPS exposure, Tlr4 genotype, and Th2 polarization influence disease phenotypes. Together, the results of this study identify environmental and genetic factors that influence RSV pathogenesis and reveal that a high IL-4/IFN-γ ratio is associated with severe disease. Moreover, these molecules should be explored as potential targets for therapeutic intervention.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2013

Macronutrients during Pregnancy and Life-Threatening Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infections in Children

Ferolla Fm; Hijano Dr; Patricio L. Acosta; A. M. Rodríguez; Dueñas K; Sancilio A; Barboza E; Caría A; Gago Gf; Almeida Re; Castro L; Pozzolo C; Martínez Mv; Luciano Alva Grimaldi; Rebec B; Calvo M; Henrichsen J; Nocito C; González M; Barbero G; Losada Jv; Mauricio T. Caballero; Zurankovas; Raggio M; Schavlovsky G; Kobylarz A; Wimmenauer; Bugna J; John V. Williams; Sastre G

RATIONALE Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is an important cause of hospitalization and death in infants worldwide. Most RSV deaths occur in developing countries, where burden and risk factors for life-threatening illness are unclear. OBJECTIVES We defined the burden of life-threatening (O(2) saturation [O(2) sat] ≤ 87%) and fatal RSV infection, and characterized risk factors for life-threatening disease in hospitalized children. Special emphasis was placed on studying the impact of dietary habits during pregnancy. We hypothesized that dietary preferences, differing from those of our remote ancestors, would negatively impact childrens pulmonary health. For instance, a diet rich in carbohydrates is a signature of recent millennia and typical of low-income populations, heavily burdened by life-threatening RSV disease. METHODS Prospective study in a catchment population of 56,560 children under 2 years of age during the RSV season in Argentina. All children with respiratory signs and O(2) sat less than 93% on admission were included. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS Among 1,293 children with respiratory infections, 797(61.6%) were infected with RSV: 106 of these had life-threatening disease; 1.9 per 1,000 children (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.5-2.2/1,000) under 24 months. A total of 22 hospitalized children died (9 RSV(+)), 26 died at home due to acute respiratory infection (14 attributed to RSV); all were under 12 months old. The annual attributable mortality rate for RSV was 0.7 per 1,000 infants (95% CI, 0.4-1.1/1,000). Life-threatening disease was dose-dependently associated with carbohydrate ingestion during pregnancy (adjusted odds ratio from 3.29 [95% CI, 1.15-9.44] to 7.36 [95% CI, 2.41-22.5] versus the lowest quartile). CONCLUSIONS Life-threatening and fatal RSV infections are a heavy burden on infants in the developing world. Diets rich in carbohydrates during pregnancy are associated with these severe outcomes.


Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2016

Brief history and characterization of enhanced respiratory syncytial virus disease

Patricio L. Acosta; Mauricio T. Caballero; Fernando P. Polack

ABSTRACT In 1967, infants and toddlers immunized with a formalin-inactivated vaccine against respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) experienced an enhanced form of RSV disease characterized by high fever, bronchopneumonia, and wheezing when they became infected with wild-type virus in the community. Hospitalizations were frequent, and two immunized toddlers died upon infection with wild-type RSV. The enhanced disease was initially characterized as a “peribronchiolar monocytic infiltration with some excess in eosinophils.” Decades of research defined enhanced RSV disease (ERD) as the result of immunization with antigens not processed in the cytoplasm, resulting in a nonprotective antibody response and CD4+ T helper priming in the absence of cytotoxic T lymphocytes. This response to vaccination led to a pathogenic Th2 memory response with eosinophil and immune complex deposition in the lungs after RSV infection. In recent years, the field of RSV experienced significant changes. Numerous vaccine candidates with novel designs and formulations are approaching clinical trials, defying our previous understanding of favorable parameters for ERD. This review provides a succinct analysis of these parameters and explores criteria for assessing the risk of ERD in new vaccine candidates.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2017

Mortality due to Respiratory Syncytial Virus. Burden and Risk Factors.

Sarah Geoghegan; Anabella Erviti; Mauricio T. Caballero; Fernando Vallone; Stella M. Zanone; Juan Ves Losada; Alejandra M Bianchi; Patricio L. Acosta; Laura B. Talarico; Adrián Ferretti; Luciano Alva Grimaldi; Andrea Sancilio; Karina Dueñas; Gustavo Sastre; A. M. Rodríguez; Fernando Ferrero; Edgar Barboza; Guadalupe Fernández Gago; Celina Nocito; Edgardo Flamenco; Alberto Rodriguez Perez; Beatriz Rebec; F. Martin Ferolla; Romina Libster; Ruth A. Karron; Eduardo Bergel; Fernando P. Polack

Rationale: Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is the most frequent cause of hospitalization and an important cause of death in infants in the developing world. The relative contribution of social, biologic, and clinical risk factors to RSV mortality in low‐income regions is unclear. Objectives: To determine the burden and risk factors for mortality due to RSV in a low‐income population of 84,840 infants. Methods: This was a prospective, population‐based, cross‐sectional, multicenter study conducted between 2011 and 2013. Hospitalizations and deaths due to severe lower respiratory tract illness (LRTI) were recorded during the RSV season. All‐cause hospital deaths and community deaths were monitored. Risk factors for respiratory failure (RF) and mortality due to RSV were assessed using a hierarchical, logistic regression model. Measurements and Main Results: A total of 2,588 (65.5%) infants with severe LRTI were infected with RSV. A total of 157 infants (148 postneonatal) experienced RF or died with RSV. RSV LRTI accounted for 57% fatal LRTI tested for the virus. A diagnosis of sepsis (odds ratio [OR], 17.03; 95% confidence interval [CI], 13.14‐21.16 for RF) (OR, 119.39; 95% CI, 50.98‐273.34 for death) and pneumothorax (OR, 17.15; 95% CI, 13.07‐21.01 for RF) (OR, 65.49; 95% CI, 28.90‐139.17 for death) were the main determinants of poor outcomes. Conclusions: RSV was the most frequent cause of mortality in low‐income postneonatal infants. RF and death due to RSV LRTI, almost exclusively associated with prematurity and cardiopulmonary diseases in industrialized countries, primarily affect term infants in a developing world environment. Poor outcomes at hospitals are frequent and associated with the cooccurrence of bacterial sepsis and clinically significant pneumothoraxes.


Virus Genes | 2011

Conserved cysteine residues within the attachment G glycoprotein of respiratory syncytial virus play a critical role in the enhancement of cytotoxic T-lymphocyte responses

Guillermina A. Melendi; Dowd Bridget; Ana Clara Monsalvo; Federico F. Laham; Patricio L. Acosta; Maria Florencia Delgado; Fernando P. Polack; Pablo M. Irusta

The cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) response plays an important role in the control of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) replication and the establishment of a Th1-CD4+ T cell response against the virus. Despite lacking Major Histocompatibility Complex I (MHC I)-restricted epitopes, the attachment G glycoprotein of RSV enhances CTL activity toward other RSV antigens, and this effect depends on its conserved central region. Here, we report that RSV-G can also improve CTL activity toward antigens from unrelated pathogens such as influenza, and that a mutant form of RSV-G lacking four conserved cysteine residues at positions 173, 176, 182, and 186 fails to enhance CTL responses. Our results indicate that these conserved residues are essential for the wide-spectrum pro-CTL activity displayed by the protein.


Acta Paediatrica | 2015

Alcohol during pregnancy worsens acute respiratory infections in children.

Romina Libster; Fausto M. Ferolla; Diego R. Hijano; Patricio L. Acosta; Anabella Erviti; Fernando P. Polack

This study explored whether alcohol consumption during pregnancy increased the risk of life‐threatening respiratory infections in children.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2013

T helper type 2 bias and type 17 suppression in primary dengue virus infection in infants and young children

Laura B. Talarico; Jimena Bugna; Vera Wimmenauer; Marco Espinoza; Marcelo O. Quipildor; Diego R. Hijano; Martin Beccaria; Victoria Wurster; Luis E. Cavagnaro; Daniel Martinez; Gladys Fattore; Juan P. Batalle; Patricio L. Acosta; Natalia Reynoso; Guillermina A. Melendi; Félix A. Rey; Romina Libster; Fernando P. Polack

BACKGROUND The immune response to dengue virus (DENV) primary infection in infants and young children is not well characterized. In Northern Argentina, >90% of the population was DENV-naïve before the 2009 outbreak, allowing evaluation of age-dependent primary responses to infection. METHODS We conducted a comparative study of the immune response to DENV in 27 infected infants, young children and their mothers. Lymphocyte T helper (Th) 1, Th2, Th17 and inflammatory responses were assayed in blood during the 2009 DENV-1 epidemic. RESULTS The immune response to DENV-1 was significantly biased to Th2 in infected infants and young children, compared to infants with other febrile illnesses (for IL-4 p < 0.001) and to their infected mothers (for IL-4 p < 0.01). In addition, IL-17 suppression was observed in the memory response to DENV-1 in infected infants (p < 0.01 vs placebo). CONCLUSION Age-related differences in the primary response to DENV, characterized by an immature Th2 polarization and Th17 suppression in infants, should be studied further in order to expand our understanding of the mechanism of dengue pathogenesis.


EBioMedicine | 2016

Determinants of host susceptibility to murine respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) disease identify a role for the innate immunity scavenger receptor MARCO gene in human infants

Monica High; Hye Youn Cho; Jacqui Marzec; Tim Wiltshire; Kirsten C. Verhein; Mauricio T. Caballero; Patricio L. Acosta; Zackary R. McCaw; Lester Kobzik; Laura Miller-DeGraff; Wes Gladwell; David B. Peden; M. Elina Serra; Min Shi; Clarice R. Weinberg; Oscar Suzuki; Xuting Wang; Douglas A. Bell; Fernando P. Polack; Steven R. Kleeberger

Background Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is the global leading cause of lower respiratory tract infection in infants. Nearly 30% of all infected infants develop severe disease including bronchiolitis, but susceptibility mechanisms remain unclear. Methods We infected a panel of 30 inbred strains of mice with RSV and measured changes in lung disease parameters 1 and 5 days post-infection and they were used in genome-wide association (GWA) studies to identify quantitative trait loci (QTL) and susceptibility gene candidates. Findings GWA identified QTLs for RSV disease phenotypes, and the innate immunity scavenger receptor Marco was a candidate susceptibility gene; targeted deletion of Marco worsened murine RSV disease. We characterized a human MARCO promoter SNP that caused loss of gene expression, increased in vitro cellular response to RSV infection, and associated with increased risk of disease severity in two independent populations of children infected with RSV. Interpretation Translational integration of a genetic animal model and in vitro human studies identified a role for MARCO in human RSV disease severity. Because no RSV vaccines are approved for clinical use, genetic studies have implications for diagnosing individuals who are at risk for severe RSV disease, and disease prevention strategies (e.g. RSV antibodies).


Experimental Biology and Medicine | 2015

Protective phenotypes of club cells and alveolar macrophages are favored as part of endotoxin-mediated prevention of asthma

Luciana N. García; Carolina Leimgruber; Elisa M. Uribe Echevarría; Patricio L. Acosta; Jorge M. Brahamian; Fernando P. Polack; María Soledad Miró; Amado A. Quintar; Claudia E. Sotomayor; Cristina A. Maldonado

Atopic asthma is a chronic allergic disease that involves T-helper type 2 (Th2)-inflammation and airway remodeling. Bronchiolar club cells (CC) and alveolar macrophages (AM) are sentinel cells of airway barrier against inhaled injuries, where allergy induces mucous metaplasia of CC and the alternative activation of AM, which compromise host defense mechanisms and amplify Th2-inflammation. As there is evidence that high levels of environmental endotoxin modulates asthma, the goal of this study was to evaluate if the activation of local host defenses by Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) previous to allergy development can contribute to preserving CC and AM protective phenotypes. Endotoxin stimulus before allergen exposition reduced hallmarks of allergic inflammation including eosinophil influx, Interleukin-4 and airway hyperreactivity, while the T-helper type 1 related cytokines IL-12 and Interferon-γ were enhanced. This response was accompanied by the preservation of the normal CC phenotype and the anti-allergic proteins Club Cell Secretory Protein (CCSP) and Surfactant-D, thereby leading to lower levels of CC metaplasia and preventing the increase of the pro-Th2 cytokine Thymic stromal lymphopoietin. In addition, classically activated alveolar macrophages expressing nitric oxide were promoted over the alternatively activated ones that expressed arginase-1. We verified that LPS induced a long-term overexpression of CCSP and the innate immune markers Toll-like receptor 4, and Tumor Necrosis Factor-α, changes that were preserved in spite of the allergen challenge. These results demonstrate that LPS pre-exposition modifies the local bronchioalveolar microenvironment by inducing natural anti-allergic mechanisms while reducing local factors that drive Th2 type responses, thus modulating allergic inflammation.

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Diego R. Hijano

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Laura B. Talarico

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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A. M. Rodríguez

National University of La Plata

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Alana B. Byrne

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Fausto M. Ferolla

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Marcela Echavarria

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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