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Dive into the research topics where Pervinder Sagoo is active.

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Featured researches published by Pervinder Sagoo.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2010

Development of a cross-platform biomarker signature to detect renal transplant tolerance in humans.

Pervinder Sagoo; Esperanza Perucha; Birgit Sawitzki; Stefan Tomiuk; David A. Stephens; Patrick Miqueu; Stephanie Chapman; Ligia Craciun; Ruhena Sergeant; Sophie Brouard; Flavia Rovis; Elvira Jimenez; Amany Ballow; Magali Giral; Irene Rebollo-Mesa; Alain Le Moine; Cécile Braudeau; Rachel Hilton; Bernhard Gerstmayer; Katarzyna Bourcier; Adnan Sharif; Magdalena Krajewska; Graham M. Lord; Ian S.D. Roberts; Michel Goldman; Kathryn J. Wood; Kenneth A. Newell; Vicki Seyfert-Margolis; Anthony N. Warrens; Uwe Janssen

Identifying transplant recipients in whom immunological tolerance is established or is developing would allow an individually tailored approach to their posttransplantation management. In this study, we aimed to develop reliable and reproducible in vitro assays capable of detecting tolerance in renal transplant recipients. Several biomarkers and bioassays were screened on a training set that included 11 operationally tolerant renal transplant recipients, recipient groups following different immunosuppressive regimes, recipients undergoing chronic rejection, and healthy controls. Highly predictive assays were repeated on an independent test set that included 24 tolerant renal transplant recipients. Tolerant patients displayed an expansion of peripheral blood B and NK lymphocytes, fewer activated CD4+ T cells, a lack of donor-specific antibodies, donor-specific hyporesponsiveness of CD4+ T cells, and a high ratio of forkhead box P3 to alpha-1,2-mannosidase gene expression. Microarray analysis further revealed in tolerant recipients a bias toward differential expression of B cell-related genes and their associated molecular pathways. By combining these indices of tolerance as a cross-platform biomarker signature, we were able to identify tolerant recipients in both the training set and the test set. This study provides an immunological profile of the tolerant state that, with further validation, should inform and shape drug-weaning protocols in renal transplant recipients.


Science Translational Medicine | 2011

Human Regulatory T Cells with Alloantigen Specificity Are More Potent Inhibitors of Alloimmune Skin Graft Damage than Polyclonal Regulatory T Cells

Pervinder Sagoo; Niwa Ali; Garima Garg; Frank O. Nestle; Robert I. Lechler; Giovanna Lombardi

Alloantigen-specific human regulatory T cells may improve immunosuppressive therapy after transplantation. Slip Me Some Skin It’s never easy being the new kid on the block. You have to both look and act correctly to fit in. Skin grafts have similar problems—if they don’t express the same molecules as the surrounding host tissue, they will be rejected by the recipient’s own immune system. In the clinic, the standard way to combat this rejection is through the use of immunosuppressive drugs that broadly stem the immune response. However, general immune suppression has its own problems, including increased susceptibility to infection and cancer. In an ideal clinical scenario, only those immune cells responsible for attacking the transplant would be suppressed. Now, Sagoo et al. have established a way to do just that. Regulatory T cells (Tregs) can suppress specific types of immune activation; however, it is difficult to isolate Tregs restricted to particular antigens and then purify these cells in sufficient numbers to transfer into transplant recipients for targeted immune suppression. Sagoo et al. described a method to isolate such activated alloreactive Tregs, which specifically suppress effector immune cells that target antigens on donor tissue and cause rejection. These Tregs were sorted and expanded if they expressed two activation markers, CD69 and CD71, after allospecific activation in vitro. Transfer of these customized Tregs into a humanized mouse transplant model prevented transplant rejection and skin damage with higher efficacy than that associated with the transfer of nonspecific, polyclonal Tregs. This relatively simple isolation protocol should be translatable to the clinic and, thus, help skin transplants to “fit in.” Graft rejection by the immune system is a major cause of transplant failure. Lifelong immunosuppression decreases the incidence of graft rejection; however, nonspecific immunosuppression results in increased susceptibly to infection and cancer. Regulatory T cells (Tregs), which suppress the activation of the immune system and induce tolerance, are currently under evaluation for use in clinical transplantation. Ex vivo expanded polyclonal Tregs that are introduced into transplant recipients alter the balance of T effector cells to Tregs; however, experimental data suggest that alloantigen-specific Tregs would be more effective at preventing graft rejection. We have developed a method to enrich alloantigen-specific human Tregs based on the coexpression of activation markers, CD69 and CD71. These Tregs could be readily expanded in vitro and demonstrated potent antigen-specific suppression. In a humanized mouse model of alloimmune-mediated injury of human skin grafts, alloantigen-specific Tregs resulted in a significant reduction in clinically relevant indicators of dermal tissue injury when compared with polyclonal Tregs, restoring a histology comparable to healthy skin. This method of human allospecific Treg selection should be scalable to the clinic. The improved in vivo efficacy of alloantigen-specific Tregs over polyclonal Tregs shown here suggests that generating “customized” Tregs with defined anti-donor allospecificities may improve current practice in clinical immunotherapy.


Journal of Immunology | 2005

Inhibition of NF-κB and Oxidative Pathways in Human Dendritic Cells by Antioxidative Vitamins Generates Regulatory T Cells

Peng H. Tan; Pervinder Sagoo; Cliburn Chan; John B. Yates; Jamie Campbell; Sven C. Beutelspacher; Brian M. J. Foxwell; Giovanna Lombardi; Andrew J. T. George

Dendritic cells (DCs) are central to T cell immunity, and many strategies have been used to manipulate DCs to modify immune responses. We investigated the effects of antioxidants ascorbate (vitamin C) and α-tocopherol (vitamin E) on DC phenotype and function. Vitamins C and E are both antioxidants, and concurrent use results in a nonadditive activity. We have demonstrated that DC treated with these antioxidants are resistant to phenotypic and functional changes following stimulation with proinflammatory cytokines. Following treatment, the levels of intracellular oxygen radical species were reduced, and the protein kinase RNA-regulated, eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2α, NF-κB, protein kinase C, and p38 MAPK pathways could not be activated following inflammatory agent stimulation. We went on to show that allogeneic T cells (including CD4+CD45RO, CD4+CD45RA, and CD4+CD25− subsets) were anergized following exposure to vitamin-treated DCs, and secreted higher levels of Th2 cytokines and IL-10 than cells incubated with control DCs. These anergic T cells act as regulatory T cells in a contact-dependent manner that is not dependent on IL-4, IL-5, IL-10, IL-13, and TGF-β. These data indicate that vitamin C- and E-treated DC might be useful for the induction of tolerance to allo- or autoantigens.


Haematologica | 2013

Differential effects of rapamycin and retinoic acid on expansion, stability and suppressive qualities of human CD4+CD25+FOXP3+ T regulatory cell subpopulations

Cristiano Scottà; Marianna Esposito; Henrieta Fazekasova; Giorgia Fanelli; Francis C. Edozie; Niwa Ali; Fang Xiao; Mark Peakman; Behdad Afzali; Pervinder Sagoo; Robert I. Lechler; Giovanna Lombardi

Adoptive transfer of ex vivo expanded CD4+CD25+FOXP3+ regulatory T cells is a successful therapy for autoimmune diseases and transplant rejection in experimental models. In man, equivalent manipulations in bone marrow transplant recipients appear safe, but questions regarding the stability of the transferred regulatory T cells during inflammation remain unresolved. In this study, protocols for the expansion of clinically useful numbers of functionally suppressive and stable human regulatory T cells were investigated. Regulatory T cells were expanded in vitro with rapamycin and/or all-trans retinoic acid and then characterized under inflammatory conditions in vitro and in vivo in a humanized mouse model of graft-versus-host disease. Addition of rapamycin to regulatory T-cell cultures confirms the generation of high numbers of suppressive regulatory T cells. Their stability was demonstrated in vitro and substantiated in vivo. In contrast, all-trans retinoic acid treatment generates regulatory T cells that retain the capacity to secrete IL-17. However, combined use of rapamycin and all-trans retinoic acid abolishes IL-17 production and confers a specific chemokine receptor homing profile upon regulatory T cells. The use of purified regulatory T-cell subpopulations provided direct evidence that rapamycin can confer an early selective advantage to CD45RA+ regulatory T cells, while all-trans retinoic acid favors CD45RA− regulatory T-cell subset. Expansion of regulatory T cells using rapamycin and all-trans retinoic acid drug combinations provides a new and refined approach for large-scale generation of functionally potent and phenotypically stable human regulatory T cells, rendering them safe for clinical use in settings associated with inflammation.


Molecular Immunology | 2011

Expression of complement components, receptors and regulators by human dendritic cells.

Ke Li; Henrieta Fazekasova; Naiyin Wang; Pervinder Sagoo; Qi Peng; Wafa Khamri; Chantelle Gomes; Steven H. Sacks; Giovanna Lombardi; Wuding Zhou

Integration of innate and adaptive arms of the immune response at a cellular and molecular level appears to be fundamental to the development of powerful effector functions in host defence and aberrant immune responses. Here we provide evidence that the functions of human complement activation and antigen presentation converge on dendritic cells (DCs). We show that several subsets of human DCs [i.e., monocyte derived (CD1a+CD14−), dermal (CD1a+DC-SIGN+), Langerhans (CD1a+Langerin+), myeloid (CD1c+CD19−), plamacytoid (CD45RA+CD123+)] express many of the components of the classical and alternative and terminal pathways of complement. Moreover human DCs have receptors known to detect the biologically active peptides C3a and C5a (C3aR, C5aR) and the covalently bound fragments C3b and metabolites iC3b and C3d which serve in immune adhesion (i.e., CR3, CR4, CRIg). We also show that the human DC surface is characterised by membrane bound regulators of complement activation, which are also known to participate in intracellular signalling (i.e., CD46, CD55, CD59). This work provides an extensive description of complement components relevant to the integrated actions of complement and DC, illuminated by animal studies. It acts as a resource that allows further understanding and exploitation of role of complement in human health and immune mediated diseases.


Current Opinion in Organ Transplantation | 2008

Regulatory T cells as therapeutic cells

Pervinder Sagoo; Giovanna Lombardi; Robert I. Lechler

Purpose of reviewAlthough a plethora of data indicate the importance of regulatory T cells (Tregs) in experimental and clinical transplantation, are we any closer to seeing these cells as therapeutic tools in the clinic? This review discusses the functional and practical aspects of using CD4+CD25hiFoxp3+ Tregs as cellular therapeutic products in clinical transplantation, focusing on the requirements in terms of phenotype, antigen specificity and preparation of Tregs. Recent findingsFollowing the emergence of new phenotypic markers of Tregs as well as improved isolation methods, a few milestone clinical trials employing the adoptive transfer of Tregs are now underway. Although mounting data suggest that alloantigen-specific Tregs may provide higher therapeutic benefits in solid organ transplantation compared with polyclonal Tregs, it seems that the specificty of Treg selected for use will need to be tailored to each clinical transplantation setting. In addition, recent findings imply that immunosuppressive regimes will also need to be reevaluated in order to complement this therapeutic strategy. SummaryAlthough many key questions about Tregs remain, we are undoubtedly entering an exciting era of Treg research in clinical transplantation. As renewed efforts focus on translational medical research, it seems as though, whether ready or not, Tregs are finally crossing from bench to bedside.


Frontiers in Immunology | 2012

Relevance of regulatory T cell promotion of donor-specific tolerance in solid organ transplantation

Pervinder Sagoo; Giovanna Lombardi; Robert I. Lechler

Current clinical strategies to control the alloimmune response after transplantation do not fully prevent induction of the immunological processes which lead to acute and chronic immune-mediated graft rejection, and as such the survival of a solid organ allograft is limited. Experimental research on naturally occurring CD4+CD25highFoxP3+ Regulatory T cells (Tregs) has indicated their potential to establish stable long-term graft acceptance, with the promise of providing a more effective therapy for transplant recipients. Current approaches for clinical use are based on the infusion of freshly isolated or ex vivo polyclonally expanded Tregs into graft recipients with an aim to redress the in vivo balance of T effector cells to Tregs. However mounting evidence suggests that regulation of donor-specific immunity may be central to achieving immunological tolerance. Therefore, the next stages in optimizing translation of Tregs to organ transplantation will be through the refinement and development of donor alloantigen-specific Treg therapy. The altering kinetics and intensity of alloantigen presentation pathways and alloimmune priming following transplantation may indeed influence the specificity of the Treg required and the timing or frequency at which it needs to be administered. Here we review and discuss the relevance of antigen-specific regulation of alloreactivity by Tregs in experimental and clinical studies of tolerance and explore the concept of delivering an optimal Treg for the induction and maintenance phases of achieving transplantation tolerance.


Current Opinion in Organ Transplantation | 2010

Adoptive regulatory T cell therapy: challenges in clinical transplantation

Niloufar Safinia; Pervinder Sagoo; Robert I. Lechler; Giovanna Lombardi

Purpose of reviewThe identification and characterisation of regulatory T cells (Tregs) has recently opened up exciting opportunities for Treg cell therapy in transplantation. In this review, we outline the basic biology of Tregs and discuss recent advances and challenges for the identification, isolation and expansion of these cells for cell therapy. Recent findingsTregs of thymic origin have been shown to be key regulators of immune responses in mice and humans, preventing autoimmunity, graft-versus-host disease and organ graft rejection in the transplantation setting. To date, a variety of different methods to isolate and expand Tregs ex vivo have been advocated. Although promising, relatively few clinical trials of human Treg cell infusion have been initiated. SummaryMany key questions about Treg cell therapy still remain and here we provide an in-depth analysis and highlight the challenges and opportunities for immune intervention with Treg-based therapeutics in clinical transplantation.


Journal of Immunology | 2013

Tolerogenic Donor-Derived Dendritic Cells Risk Sensitization In Vivo owing to Processing and Presentation by Recipient APCs

Lesley A. Smyth; Kulachelvy Ratnasothy; Aurélie Moreau; Sally Alcock; Pervinder Sagoo; Lucy Meader; Yakup Tanriver; Matthew Buckland; Robert I. Lechler; Giovanna Lombardi

Modification of allogeneic dendritic cells (DCs) through drug treatment results in DCs with in vitro hallmarks of tolerogenicity. Despite these observations, using murine MHC-mismatched skin and heart transplant models, donor-derived drug-modified DCs not only failed to induce tolerance but also accelerated graft rejection. The latter was inhibited by injecting the recipient with anti-CD8 Ab, which removed both CD8+ T cells and CD8+ DCs. The discrepancy between in vitro and in vivo data could be explained, partly, by the presentation of drug-modified donor DC MHC alloantigens by recipient APCs and activation of recipient T cells with indirect allospecificity, leading to the induction of alloantibodies. Furthermore, allogeneic MHC molecules expressed by drug-treated DCs were rapidly processed and presented in peptide form by recipient APCs in vivo within hours of DC injection. Using TCR-transgenic T cells, Ag presentation of injected OVA-pulsed DCs was detectable for ≤ 3 d, whereas indirect presentation of MHC alloantigen by recipient APCs led to activation of T cells within 14 h and was partially inhibited by reducing the numbers of CD8+ DCs in vivo. In support of this observation when mice lacking CD8+ DCs were pretreated with drug-modified DCs prior to transplantation, skin graft rejection kinetics were similar to those in non–DC-treated controls. Of interest, when the same mice were treated with anti-CD40L blockade plus drug-modified DCs, skin graft survival was prolonged, suggesting endogenous DCs were responsible for T cell priming. Altogether, these findings highlight the risks and limitations of negative vaccination using alloantigen-bearing “tolerogenic” DCs.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Monitoring of In Vivo Function of Superparamagnetic Iron Oxide Labelled Murine Dendritic Cells during Anti- Tumour Vaccination

Richard Tavaré; Pervinder Sagoo; Gopal Varama; Yakup Tanriver; Alice Warely; Sandra S. Diebold; Richard Southworth; Tobias Schaeffter; Robert I. Lechler; Reza Razavi; Giovanna Lombardi; Gregory Mullen

Dendritic cells (DCs) generated in vitro to present tumour antigens have been injected in cancer patients to boost in vivo anti-tumour immune responses. This approach to cancer immunotherapy has had limited success. For anti-tumour therapy, delivery and subsequent migration of DCs to lymph nodes leading to effective stimulation of effector T cells is thought to be essential. The ability to non-invasively monitor the fate of adoptively transferred DCs in vivo using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is an important clinical tool to correlate their in vivo behavior with response to treatment. Previous reports of superparamagnetic iron oxides (SPIOs) labelling of different cell types, including DCs, have indicated varying detrimental effects on cell viability, migration, differentiation and immune function. Here we describe an optimised labelling procedure using a short incubation time and low concentration of clinically used SPIO Endorem to successfully track murine DC migration in vivo using MRI in a mouse tumour model. First, intracellular labelling of bone marrow derived DCs was monitored in vitro using electron microscopy and MRI relaxometry. Second, the in vitro characterisation of SPIO labelled DCs demonstrated that viability, phenotype and functions were comparable to unlabelled DCs. Third, ex vivo SPIO labelled DCs, when injected subcutaneously, allowed for the longitudinal monitoring by MR imaging of their migration in vivo. Fourth, the SPIO DCs induced the proliferation of adoptively transferred CD4+ T cells but, most importantly, they primed cytotoxic CD8+ T cell responses to protect against a B16-Ova tumour challenge. Finally, using anatomical information from the MR images, the immigration of DCs was confirmed by the increase in lymph node size post-DC injection. These results demonstrate that the SPIO labelling protocol developed in this study is not detrimental for DC function in vitro and in vivo has potential clinical application in monitoring therapeutic DCs in patients with cancer.

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