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Dive into the research topics where Peter Panizzi is active.

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Featured researches published by Peter Panizzi.


Science | 2009

Identification of Splenic Reservoir Monocytes and Their Deployment to Inflammatory Sites

Filip K. Swirski; Matthias Nahrendorf; Martin Etzrodt; Moritz Wildgruber; Virna Cortez-Retamozo; Peter Panizzi; Jose-Luiz Figueiredo; Rainer H. Kohler; Aleksey Chudnovskiy; Peter Waterman; Elena Aikawa; Thorsten R. Mempel; Peter Libby; Ralph Weissleder; Mikael J. Pittet

Monitoring Monocyte Reservoirs Monocytes are cells of the immune system that are recruited to sites of tissue injury and inflammation where they help to resolve the infection and are important for tissue repair. The bone marrow and blood are believed to be the primary reservoirs from which monocytes are mobilized after injury. Swirski et al. (p. 612; see the Perspective by Jia and Pamer) now demonstrate that the spleen also serves as a critical reservoir of monocytes that are recruited during ischemic myocardial injury. Monocytes in the spleen are very similar in phenotype to blood-derived monocytes and are mobilized to the injured heart, where they represent a large fraction of the total monocytes that are recruited. The chemoattractant, angiotensin II, is required for optimal monocyte mobilization from the spleen and emigration into injured tissue. A rapid deployment force of immune cells is identified in the spleen that is important for resolving inflammation. A current paradigm states that monocytes circulate freely and patrol blood vessels but differentiate irreversibly into dendritic cells (DCs) or macrophages upon tissue entry. Here we show that bona fide undifferentiated monocytes reside in the spleen and outnumber their equivalents in circulation. The reservoir monocytes assemble in clusters in the cords of the subcapsular red pulp and are distinct from macrophages and DCs. In response to ischemic myocardial injury, splenic monocytes increase their motility, exit the spleen en masse, accumulate in injured tissue, and participate in wound healing. These observations uncover a role for the spleen as a site for storage and rapid deployment of monocytes and identify splenic monocytes as a resource that the body exploits to regulate inflammation.


Nature Biotechnology | 2011

Therapeutic siRNA silencing in inflammatory monocytes in mice

Florian Leuschner; Partha Dutta; Rostic Gorbatov; Tatiana Novobrantseva; Jessica S. Donahoe; Gabriel Courties; Kang Mi Lee; James I. Kim; James F. Markmann; Brett Marinelli; Peter Panizzi; Won Woo Lee; Yoshiko Iwamoto; Hila Epstein-Barash; William Cantley; Jamie Wong; Virna Cortez-Retamozo; Andita Newton; Kevin Love; Peter Libby; Mikael J. Pittet; Filip K. Swirski; Victor Koteliansky; Robert Langer; Ralph Weissleder; Daniel G. Anderson; Matthias Nahrendorf

Excessive and prolonged activity of inflammatory monocytes is a hallmark of many diseases with an inflammatory component. In such conditions, precise targeting of these cells could be therapeutically beneficial while sparing many essential functions of the innate immune system, thus limiting unwanted effects. Inflammatory monocytes—but not the noninflammatory subset—depend on the chemokine receptor CCR2 for localization to injured tissue. Here we present an optimized lipid nanoparticle and a CCR2-silencing short interfering RNA that, when administered systemically in mice, show rapid blood clearance, accumulate in spleen and bone marrow, and localize to monocytes. Efficient degradation of CCR2 mRNA in monocytes prevents their accumulation in sites of inflammation. Specifically, the treatment attenuates their number in atherosclerotic plaques, reduces infarct size after coronary artery occlusion, prolongs normoglycemia in diabetic mice after pancreatic islet transplantation, and results in reduced tumor volumes and lower numbers of tumor-associated macrophages.


Circulation | 2008

Nanoparticle PET-CT Imaging of Macrophages in Inflammatory Atherosclerosis

Matthias Nahrendorf; Hanwen Zhang; Sheena Hembrador; Peter Panizzi; David E. Sosnovik; Elena Aikawa; Peter Libby; Filip K. Swirski; Ralph Weissleder

Background— Macrophages participate centrally in atherosclerosis, and macrophage markers (eg, CD68, MAC-3) correlate well with lesion severity and therapeutic modulation. On the basis of the avidity of lesional macrophages for polysaccharide-containing supramolecular structures such as nanoparticles, we have developed a new positron emission tomography (PET) agent with optimized pharmacokinetics to allow in vivo imaging at tracer concentrations. Methods and Results— A dextranated and DTPA-modified magnetofluorescent 20-nm nanoparticle was labeled with the PET tracer 64Cu (1 mCi/0.1 mg nanoparticles) to yield a PET, magnetic resonance, and optically detectable imaging agent. Peak PET activity 24 hours after intravenous injection into mice deficient in apolipoprotein E with experimental atherosclerosis mapped to areas of high plaque load identified by computed tomography such as the aortic root and arch and correlated with magnetic resonance and optical imaging. Accumulated dose in apolipoprotein E-deficient aortas determined by gamma counting was 260% and in carotids 392% of respective wild-type organs (P<0.05 both). Autoradiography of aortas demonstrated uptake of the agent into macrophage-rich atheromata identified by Oil Red O staining of lipid deposits. The novel nanoagent accumulated predominantly in macrophages as determined by fluorescence microscopy and flow cytometry of cells dissociated from aortas. Conclusions— This report establishes the capability of a novel trimodality nanoparticle to directly detect macrophages in atherosclerotic plaques. Advantages include improved sensitivity; direct correlation of PET signal with an established biomarker (CD68); ability to readily quantify the PET signal, perform whole-body vascular surveys, and spatially localize and follow the trireporter by microscopy; and clinical translatability of the agent given similarities to magnetic resonance imaging probes in clinical trials.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2012

Rapid monocyte kinetics in acute myocardial infarction are sustained by extramedullary monocytopoiesis

Florian Leuschner; Philipp J. Rauch; Takuya Ueno; Rostic Gorbatov; Brett Marinelli; Won Woo Lee; Partha Dutta; Ying Wei; Clinton S. Robbins; Yoshiko Iwamoto; Brena Sena; Aleksey Chudnovskiy; Peter Panizzi; Edmund J. Keliher; John M. Higgins; Peter Libby; Michael A. Moskowitz; Mikael J. Pittet; Filip K. Swirski; Ralph Weissleder; Matthias Nahrendorf

IL-1b signaling augments continued splenic monocyte supply during acute inflammation.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2010

Impaired infarct healing in atherosclerotic mice with Ly-6C hi monocytosis

Peter Panizzi; Filip K. Swirski; Jose-Luiz Figueiredo; Peter Waterman; David E. Sosnovik; Elena Aikawa; Peter Libby; Mikael J. Pittet; Ralph Weissleder; Matthias Nahrendorf

OBJECTIVES The aim of this study was to test whether blood monocytosis in mice with atherosclerosis affects infarct healing. BACKGROUND Monocytes are cellular protagonists of tissue repair, and their specific subtypes regulate the healing program after myocardial infarction (MI). Inflammatory Ly-6C(hi) monocytes dominate on Day 1 to Day 4 and digest damaged tissue; reparative Ly-6C(lo) monocytes dominate on Day 5 to Day 10 and promote angiogenesis and scar formation. However, the monocyte repertoire is disturbed in atherosclerotic mice: Ly-6C(hi) monocytes expand selectively, which might disrupt the resolution of inflammation. METHODS Ex vivo analysis of infarcts included flow cytometric monocyte enumeration, immunoactive staining, and quantitative polymerase chain reaction. To relate inflammatory activity to left ventricular remodeling, we used a combination of noninvasive fluorescence molecular tomography (FMT-CT) and physiologic imaging (magnetic resonance imaging). RESULTS Five-day-old infarcts showed >10x more Ly-6C(hi) monocytes in atherosclerotic (apoE(-/-)) mice compared with wild-type mice. The injured tissue in apoE(-/-) mice also showed a more pronounced inflammatory gene expression profile (e.g., increased tumor necrosis factor-alpha and myeloperoxidase and decreased transforming growth factor-beta) and a higher abundance of proteases, which are associated with the activity of Ly-6C(hi) monocytes. The FMT-CT on Day 5 after MI showed higher proteolysis and phagocytosis in infarcts of atherosclerotic mice. Serial magnetic resonance imaging showed accelerated deterioration of ejection fraction between Day 1 and Day 21 after MI in apoE(-/-). Finally, we could recapitulate these features in wild-type mice with artificially induced Ly-6C(hi) monocytosis. CONCLUSIONS Ly-6C(hi) monocytosis disturbs resolution of inflammation in murine infarcts and consequently enhances left ventricular remodeling. These findings position monocyte subsets as potential therapeutic targets to augment tissue repair after infarction and to prevent post-MI heart failure.


Jacc-cardiovascular Imaging | 2009

18F-4V for PET-CT imaging of VCAM-1 expression in atherosclerosis.

Matthias Nahrendorf; Edmund J. Keliher; Peter Panizzi; Hanwen Zhang; Sheena Hembrador; Jose-Luiz Figueiredo; Elena Aikawa; Kimberly A. Kelly; Peter Libby; Ralph Weissleder

OBJECTIVES The aim of this study was to iteratively develop and validate an (18)F-labeled small vascular cell adhesion molecule (VCAM)-1 affinity ligand and demonstrate the feasibility of imaging VCAM-1 expression by positron emission tomography-computed tomography (PET-CT) in murine atherosclerotic arteries. BACKGROUND Hybrid PET-CT imaging allows simultaneous assessment of atherosclerotic lesion morphology (CT) and may facilitate early risk assessment in individual patients. The early induction, confinement of expression to atherosclerotic lesions, and accessible position in proximity to the blood pool render the adhesion molecule VCAM-1 an attractive imaging biomarker for inflamed atheroma prone to complication. METHODS A cyclic, a linear, and an oligomer affinity peptide, internalized into endothelial cells by VCAM-1-mediated binding, were initially derivatized with DOTA to determine their binding profiles and pharmacokinetics. The lead compound was then (18)F-labeled and tested in atherosclerotic apoE(-/-) mice receiving a high-cholesterol diet as well as wild type murine models of myocardial infarction and heart transplant rejection. RESULTS The tetrameric peptide had the highest affinity and specificity for VCAM-1 (97% inhibition with soluble VCAM-1 in vitro). In vivo PET-CT imaging using (18)F-4V showed 0.31 +/- 0.02 SUV in murine atheroma (ex vivo %IDGT 5.9 +/- 1.5). (18)F-4V uptake colocalized with atherosclerotic plaques on Oil Red O staining and correlated to mRNA levels of VCAM-1 measured by quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (R = 0.79, p = 0.03). Atherosclerotic mice receiving an atorvastatin-enriched diet had significantly lower lesional uptake (p < 0.05). Furthermore, (18)F-4V imaging in myocardial ischemia after coronary ligation and in transplanted cardiac allografts undergoing rejection showed high in vivo PET signal in inflamed myocardium and good correlation with ex vivo measurement of VCAM-1 mRNA by quantitative polymerase chain reaction. CONCLUSIONS (18)F-4V allows noninvasive PET-CT imaging of VCAM-1 in inflammatory atherosclerosis, has the dynamic range to quantify treatment effects, and correlates with inflammatory gene expression.


Nature | 2003

Staphylocoagulase is a prototype for the mechanism of cofactor-induced zymogen activation

Rainer W. Friedrich; Peter Panizzi; Pablo Fuentes-Prior; Klaus Richter; Ingrid M. Verhamme; Patricia J. Anderson; Shun-ichiro Kawabata; Robert Huber; Wolfram Bode; Paul E. Bock

Many bacterial pathogens secrete proteins that activate host trypsinogen-like enzyme precursors, most notably the proenzymes of the blood coagulation and fibrinolysis systems. Staphylococcus aureus, an important human pathogen implicated in sepsis and endocarditis, secretes the cofactor staphylocoagulase, which activates prothrombin, without the usual proteolytic cleavages, to directly initiate blood clotting. Here we present the 2.2 Å crystal structures of human α-thrombin and prethrombin-2 bound to a fully active staphylocoagulase variant. The cofactor consists of two domains, each with three-helix bundles; this is a novel fold that is distinct from known serine proteinase activators, particularly the streptococcal plasminogen activator streptokinase. The staphylocoagulase fold is conserved in other bacterial plasma-protein-binding factors and extracellular-matrix-binding factors. Kinetic studies confirm the importance of isoleucine 1 and valine 2 at the amino terminus of staphylocoagulase for zymogen activation. In addition to making contacts with the 148 loop and (pro)exosite I of prethrombin-2, staphylocoagulase inserts its N-terminal peptide into the activation pocket of bound prethrombin-2, allosterically inducing functional catalytic machinery. These investigations demonstrate unambiguously the validity of the zymogen-activation mechanism known as ‘molecular sexuality’.


Circulation | 2008

Activatable Magnetic Resonance Imaging Agent Reports Myeloperoxidase Activity in Healing Infarcts and Noninvasively Detects the Antiinflammatory Effects of Atorvastatin on Ischemia-Reperfusion Injury

Matthias Nahrendorf; David E. Sosnovik; John W. Chen; Peter Panizzi; Jose-Luiz Figueiredo; Elena Aikawa; Peter Libby; Filip K. Swirski; Ralph Weissleder

Background— Ischemic injury of the myocardium causes timed recruitment of neutrophils and monocytes/macrophages, which produce substantial amounts of local myeloperoxidase (MPO). MPO forms reactive chlorinating species capable of inflicting oxidative stress and altering protein function by covalent modification. We have used a small-molecule, gadolinium-based activatable sensor for magnetic resonance imaging of MPO activity (MPO-Gd). MPO-Gd is first radicalized by MPO and then either spontaneously oligomerizes or binds to matrix proteins, all leading to enhanced spin-lattice relaxivity and delayed washout kinetics. We hypothesized that MPO imaging could be used to measure inflammatory responses after myocardial ischemia locally and noninvasively in a murine model. Methods and Results— We injected 0.3 mmol/kg MPO-Gd (or Gd-DTPA as control) and performed magnetic resonance imaging up to 120 minutes later in mice 2 days after myocardial infarction. The contrast-to-noise ratio (infarct versus septum) after Gd-DTPA injection peaked at 10 minutes and returned to preinjection values at 60 minutes. After injection of MPO-Gd, the contrast-to-noise ratio peaked later and was higher than Gd-DTPA (40.8±10.4 versus 10.5±0.2; P<0.05). MPO imaging was validated by magnetic resonance imaging of MPO−/− mice and correlated well with immunoreactive staining (r2=0.92, P<0.05), tissue activity by guaiacol assay (r2=0.65, P<0.001), and immunoblotting. In time course imaging, activity peaked 2 days after coronary ligation. Flow cytometry of digested infarcts detected MPO in neutrophils and monocytes/macrophages. Furthermore, serial MPO imaging accurately tracked the antiinflammatory effects of atorvastatin therapy after ischemia-reperfusion injury. Conclusions— MPO-Gd enables in vivo assessment of MPO activity in injured myocardium. This approach allows noninvasive evaluation of the inflammatory response to ischemia and has the potential to guide the development of novel cardioprotective therapies.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2009

Hybrid In Vivo FMT-CT Imaging of Protease Activity in Atherosclerosis With Customized Nanosensors

Matthias Nahrendorf; Peter Waterman; Kevin Groves; Milind Rajopadhye; Peter Panizzi; Brett Marinelli; Elena Aikawa; Mikael J. Pittet; Filip K. Swirski; Ralph Weissleder

Objective—Proteases are emerging biomarkers of inflammatory diseases. In atherosclerosis, these enzymes are often secreted by inflammatory macrophages, digest the extracellular matrix of the fibrous cap, and destabilize atheromata. Protease function can be monitored with protease activatable imaging probes and quantitated in vivo by fluorescence molecular tomography (FMT). To address 2 major constraints currently associated with imaging of murine atherosclerosis (lack of highly sensitive probes and absence of anatomic information), we compared protease sensors (PS) of variable size and pharmacokinetics and coregistered FMT datasets with computed tomography (FMT-CT). Methods and Results—Coregistration of FMT and CT was achieved with a multimodal imaging cartridge containing fiducial markers detectable by both modalities. A high-resolution CT angiography protocol accurately localized fluorescence to the aortic root of atherosclerotic apoE−/− mice. To identify suitable sensors, we first modeled signal kinetics in-silico and then compared 3 probes with oligo-l-lysine cleavage sequences: PS-5, 5 nm in diameter containing 2 fluorochromes, PS-25, a 25-nm version with an elongated lysine chain and PS-40, a polymeric nanoparticle. Serial FMT-CT showed fastest kinetics for PS-5 but, surprisingly, highest fluorescence in lesions of the aortic root for PS-40. PS-40 robustly reported therapeutic effects of atorvastatin, corroborated by ex vivo imaging and qPCR for the model protease cathepsin B. Conclusions—FMT-CT is a robust and observer-independent tool for noninvasive assessment of inflammatory murine atherosclerosis. Reporter-containing nanomaterials may have unique advantages over small molecule agents for in vivo imaging.


Circulation Research | 2014

Differential Contribution of Monocytes to Heart Macrophages in Steady-State and After Myocardial Infarction

Timo Heidt; Gabriel Courties; Partha Dutta; Hendrik B. Sager; Matt Sebas; Yoshiko Iwamoto; Yuan Sun; Nicolas Da Silva; Peter Panizzi; Anja M. van der Laan; Filip K. Swirski; Ralph Weissleder; Matthias Nahrendorf

Rationale: Macrophages populate the steady-state myocardium. Previously, all macrophages were thought to arise from monocytes; however, it emerged that, in several organs, tissue-resident macrophages may self-maintain through local proliferation. Objective: Our aim was to study the contribution of monocytes to cardiac-resident macrophages in steady state, after macrophage depletion in CD11bDTR/+ mice and in myocardial infarction. Methods and Results: Using in vivo fate mapping and flow cytometry, we estimated that during steady state the heart macrophage population turns over in ≈1 month. To explore the source of cardiac-resident macrophages, we joined the circulation of mice using parabiosis. After 6 weeks, we observed blood monocyte chimerism of 35.3±3.4%, whereas heart macrophages showed a much lower chimerism of 2.7±0.5% (P<0.01). Macrophages self-renewed locally through proliferation: 2.1±0.3% incorporated bromodeoxyuridine 2 hours after a single injection, and 13.7±1.4% heart macrophages stained positive for the cell cycle marker Ki-67. The cells likely participate in defense against infection, because we found them to ingest fluorescently labeled bacteria. In ischemic myocardium, we observed that tissue-resident macrophages died locally, whereas some also migrated to hematopoietic organs. If the steady state was perturbed by coronary ligation or diphtheria toxin–induced macrophage depletion in CD11bDTR/+ mice, blood monocytes replenished heart macrophages. However, in the chronic phase after myocardial infarction, macrophages residing in the infarct were again independent from the blood monocyte pool, returning to the steady-state situation. Conclusions: In this study, we show differential contribution of monocytes to heart macrophages during steady state, after macrophage depletion or in the acute and chronic phase after myocardial infarction. We found that macrophages participate in the immunosurveillance of myocardial tissue. These data correspond with previous studies on tissue-resident macrophages and raise important questions on the fate and function of macrophages during the development of heart failure.

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Elena Aikawa

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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