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Dive into the research topics where Rafael A. Larocca is active.

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Featured researches published by Rafael A. Larocca.


Nature | 2016

Vaccine protection against Zika virus from Brazil

Rafael A. Larocca; Peter Abbink; Jean Pierre Schatzmann Peron; Paolo Marinho de Andrade Zanotto; M. Justin Iampietro; Alexander Badamchi-Zadeh; Michael Boyd; David Ng’ang’a; Marinela Kirilova; Ramya Nityanandam; Noe B. Mercado; Zhenfeng Li; Edward T. Moseley; Christine A. Bricault; Erica N. Borducchi; Patricia B. Giglio; David Jetton; George H. Neubauer; Joseph P. Nkolola; Lori F. Maxfield; Rafael De La Barrera; Richard G. Jarman; Kenneth H. Eckels; Nelson L. Michael; Stephen J. Thomas; Dan H. Barouch

Zika virus (ZIKV) is a flavivirus that is responsible for the current epidemic in Brazil and the Americas. ZIKV has been causally associated with fetal microcephaly, intrauterine growth restriction, and other birth defects in both humans and mice. The rapid development of a safe and effective ZIKV vaccine is a global health priority, but very little is currently known about ZIKV immunology and mechanisms of immune protection. Here we show that a single immunization with a plasmid DNA vaccine or a purified inactivated virus vaccine provides complete protection in susceptible mice against challenge with a strain of ZIKV involved in the outbreak in northeast Brazil. This ZIKV strain has recently been shown to cross the placenta and to induce fetal microcephaly and other congenital malformations in mice. We produced DNA vaccines expressing ZIKV pre-membrane and envelope (prM-Env), as well as a series of deletion mutants. The prM-Env DNA vaccine, but not the deletion mutants, afforded complete protection against ZIKV, as measured by absence of detectable viraemia following challenge, and protective efficacy correlated with Env-specific antibody titers. Adoptive transfer of purified IgG from vaccinated mice conferred passive protection, and depletion of CD4 and CD8 T lymphocytes in vaccinated mice did not abrogate this protection. These data demonstrate that protection against ZIKV challenge can be achieved by single-shot subunit and inactivated virus vaccines in mice and that Env-specific antibody titers represent key immunologic correlates of protection. Our findings suggest that the development of a ZIKV vaccine for humans is likely to be achievable.


Science | 2016

Protective efficacy of multiple vaccine platforms against Zika virus challenge in rhesus monkeys

Peter Abbink; Rafael A. Larocca; Rafael De La Barrera; Christine A. Bricault; Edward T. Moseley; Michael Boyd; Marinela Kirilova; Zhenfeng Li; David Ng’ang’a; Ovini Nanayakkara; Ramya Nityanandam; Noe B. Mercado; Erica N. Borducchi; Arshi Agarwal; Amanda L. Brinkman; Crystal Cabral; Abishek Chandrashekar; Patricia B. Giglio; David Jetton; Jessica Jimenez; Benjamin C. Lee; Shanell Mojta; Katherine Molloy; Mayuri Shetty; George H. Neubauer; Kathryn E. Stephenson; Jean Pierre Schatzmann Peron; Paolo Marinho de Andrade Zanotto; Johnathan Misamore; Brad Finneyfrock

Zika virus (ZIKV) is responsible for a major ongoing epidemic in the Americas and has been causally associated with fetal microcephaly. The development of a safe and effective ZIKV vaccine is therefore an urgent global health priority. Here we demonstrate that three different vaccine platforms protect against ZIKV challenge in rhesus monkeys. A purified inactivated virus vaccine induced ZIKV-specific neutralizing antibodies and completely protected monkeys against ZIKV strains from both Brazil and Puerto Rico. Purified immunoglobulin from vaccinated monkeys also conferred passive protection in adoptive transfer studies. A plasmid DNA vaccine and a single-shot recombinant rhesus adenovirus serotype 52 vector vaccine, both expressing ZIKV premembrane and envelope, also elicited neutralizing antibodies and completely protected monkeys against ZIKV challenge. These data support the rapid clinical development of ZIKV vaccines for humans.


Nature | 2011

In vivo imaging of Treg cells providing immune privilege to the haematopoietic stem-cell niche.

Joji Fujisaki; Wu J; Alicia L. Carlson; Lev Silberstein; Prabhakar Putheti; Rafael A. Larocca; Wenda Gao; Toshiki I. Saito; Lo Celso C; Tsuyuzaki H; Taichi Sato; Daniel Côté; Megan Sykes; Terry B. Strom; David T. Scadden; Charles P. Lin

Stem cells reside in a specialized regulatory microenvironment or niche, where they receive appropriate support for maintaining self-renewal and multi-lineage differentiation capacity. The niche may also protect stem cells from environmental insults including cytotoxic chemotherapy and perhaps pathogenic immunity. The testis, hair follicle and placenta are all sites of residence for stem cells and are immune-suppressive environments, called immune-privileged sites, where multiple mechanisms cooperate to prevent immune attack, even enabling prolonged survival of foreign allografts without immunosuppression. We sought to determine if somatic stem-cell niches more broadly are immune-privileged sites by examining the haematopoietic stem/progenitor cell (HSPC) niche in the bone marrow, a site where immune reactivity exists. We observed persistence of HSPCs from allogeneic donor mice (allo-HSPCs) in non-irradiated recipient mice for 30 days without immunosuppression with the same survival frequency compared to syngeneic HSPCs. These HSPCs were lost after the depletion of FoxP3 regulatory T (Treg) cells. High-resolution in vivo imaging over time demonstrated marked co-localization of HSPCs with Treg cells that accumulated on the endosteal surface in the calvarial and trabecular bone marrow. Treg cells seem to participate in creating a localized zone where HSPCs reside and where Treg cells are necessary for allo-HSPC persistence. In addition to processes supporting stem-cell function, the niche will provide a relative sanctuary from immune attack.


Nature | 2011

In vivo imaging of Treg cells providing immune privilegeto the haematopoietic stem-cell niche

Joji Fujisaki; Juwell Wu; Alicia L. Carlson; Lev Silberstein; Prabhakar Putheti; Rafael A. Larocca; Wenda Gao; Toshiki I. Saito; Cristina Lo Celso; Hitoshi Tsuyuzaki; Tatsuyuki Sato; Daniel Côté; Megan Sykes; Terry B. Strom; David T. Scadden; Charles P. Lin

Stem cells reside in a specialized regulatory microenvironment or niche, where they receive appropriate support for maintaining self-renewal and multi-lineage differentiation capacity. The niche may also protect stem cells from environmental insults including cytotoxic chemotherapy and perhaps pathogenic immunity. The testis, hair follicle and placenta are all sites of residence for stem cells and are immune-suppressive environments, called immune-privileged sites, where multiple mechanisms cooperate to prevent immune attack, even enabling prolonged survival of foreign allografts without immunosuppression. We sought to determine if somatic stem-cell niches more broadly are immune-privileged sites by examining the haematopoietic stem/progenitor cell (HSPC) niche in the bone marrow, a site where immune reactivity exists. We observed persistence of HSPCs from allogeneic donor mice (allo-HSPCs) in non-irradiated recipient mice for 30 days without immunosuppression with the same survival frequency compared to syngeneic HSPCs. These HSPCs were lost after the depletion of FoxP3 regulatory T (Treg) cells. High-resolution in vivo imaging over time demonstrated marked co-localization of HSPCs with Treg cells that accumulated on the endosteal surface in the calvarial and trabecular bone marrow. Treg cells seem to participate in creating a localized zone where HSPCs reside and where Treg cells are necessary for allo-HSPC persistence. In addition to processes supporting stem-cell function, the niche will provide a relative sanctuary from immune attack.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2012

Allograft rejection is restrained by short-lived TIM-3 + PD-1 + Foxp3 + Tregs

Shipra Gupta; Thomas B. Thornley; Wenda Gao; Rafael A. Larocca; Laurence A. Turka; Vijay K. Kuchroo; Terry B. Strom

Tregs play a pivotal role in inducing and maintaining donor-specific transplant tolerance. The T cell immunoglobulin and mucin domain-3 protein (TIM-3) is expressed on many fully activated effector T cells. Along with program death 1 (PD-1), TIM-3 is used as a marker for exhausted effector T cells, and interaction with its ligand, galectin-9, leads to selective death of TIM-3+ cells. We report herein the presence of a galectin-9-sensitive CD4+FoxP3+TIM-3+ population of T cells, which arose from CD4+FoxP3+TIM-3- proliferating T cells in vitro and in vivo and were often PD-1+. These cells became very prominent among graft-infiltrating Tregs during allograft response. The frequency and number of TIM-3+ Tregs peaked at the time of graft rejection and declined thereafter. Moreover, these cells also arise in a tolerance-promoting donor-specific transfusion model, representing a pool of proliferating, donor-specific Tregs. Compared with TIM-3- Tregs, TIM-3+ Tregs, which are often PD-1+ as well, exhibited higher in vitro effector function and more robust expression of CD25, CD39, CD73, CTLA-4, IL-10, and TGF-β but not galectin-9. However, these TIM-3+ Tregs did not flourish when passively transferred to newly transplanted hosts. These data suggest that a heretofore unrecognized graft-infiltrating, short-lived subset of Tregs can restrain rejection.


Cell | 2017

Zika Virus Persistence in the Central Nervous System and Lymph Nodes of Rhesus Monkeys

Malika Aid; Peter Abbink; Rafael A. Larocca; Michael Boyd; Ramya Nityanandam; Ovini Nanayakkara; Amanda J. Martinot; Edward T. Moseley; Eryn Blass; Erica N. Borducchi; Abishek Chandrashekar; Amanda L. Brinkman; Katherine Molloy; David Jetton; Lawrence J. Tartaglia; Jinyan Liu; Katharine Best; Alan S. Perelson; Rafael De La Barrera; Mark G. Lewis; Dan H. Barouch

Zika virus (ZIKV) is associated with severe neuropathology in neonates as well as Guillain-Barré syndrome and other neurologic disorders in adults. Prolonged viral shedding has been reported in semen, suggesting the presence of anatomic viral reservoirs. Here we show that ZIKV can persist in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and lymph nodes (LN) of infected rhesus monkeys for weeks after virus has been cleared from peripheral blood, urine, and mucosal secretions. ZIKV-specific neutralizing antibodies correlated with rapid clearance of virus in peripheral blood but remained undetectable in CSF for the duration of the study. Viral persistence in both CSF and LN correlated with upregulation of mechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR), proinflammatory, and anti-apoptotic signaling pathways, as well as downregulation of extracellular matrix signaling pathways. These data raise the possibility that persistent or occult neurologic and lymphoid disease may occur following clearance of peripheral virus in ZIKV-infected individuals.


European Journal of Immunology | 2014

Leptin deficiency impairs maturation of dendritic cells and enhances induction of regulatory T and Th17 cells

Pedro M. Moraes-Vieira; Rafael A. Larocca; Ênio José Bassi; Jean Pierre Schatzmann Peron; Vinicius Andrade-Oliveira; Frederick Wasinski; Ronaldo C. Araujo; Thomas B. Thornley; Francisco J. Quintana; Alexandre S. Basso; Terry B. Strom; Niels Olsen Saraiva Câmara

Leptin is an adipose‐secreted hormone that plays an important role in both metabolism and immunity. Leptin has been shown to induce Th1‐cell polarization and inhibit Th2‐cell responses. Additionally, leptin induces Th17‐cell responses, inhibits regulatory T (Treg) cells and modulates autoimmune diseases. Here, we investigated whether leptin mediates its activity on T cells by influencing dendritic cells (DCs) to promote Th17 and Treg‐cell immune responses in mice. We observed that leptin deficiency (i) reduced the expression of DC maturation markers, (ii) decreased DC production of IL‐12, TNF‐α, and IL‐6, (iii) increased DC production of TGF‐β, and (iv) limited the capacity of DCs to induce syngeneic CD4+ T‐cell proliferation. As a consequence of this unique phenotype, DCs generated under leptin‐free conditions induced Treg or TH17 cells more efficiently than DCs generated in the presence of leptin. These data indicate important roles for leptin in DC homeostasis and the initiation and maintenance of inflammatory and regulatory immune responses by DCs.


The Lancet | 2017

Preliminary aggregate safety and immunogenicity results from three trials of a purified inactivated Zika virus vaccine candidate: phase 1, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trials

Kayvon Modjarrad; Leyi Lin; Sarah L. George; Kathryn E. Stephenson; Kenneth H. Eckels; Rafael De La Barrera; Richard G. Jarman; Erica Sondergaard; Janice Tennant; Jessica L Ansel; Kristin Mills; Michael Koren; Merlin L. Robb; Jill Barrett; Jason Thompson; Alison E Kosel; Peter Dawson; Andrew J. Hale; C Sabrina Tan; Stephen R. Walsh; Keith Meyer; James D. Brien; Trevor A Crowell; Azra Blazevic; Karla Mosby; Rafael A. Larocca; Peter Abbink; Michael Boyd; Christine A. Bricault; Michael S. Seaman

BACKGROUND A safe, effective, and rapidly scalable vaccine against Zika virus infection is needed. We developed a purified formalin-inactivated Zika virus vaccine (ZPIV) candidate that showed protection in mice and non-human primates against viraemia after Zika virus challenge. Here we present the preliminary results in human beings. METHODS We did three phase 1, placebo-controlled, double-blind trials of ZPIV with aluminium hydroxide adjuvant. In all three studies, healthy adults were randomly assigned by a computer-generated list to receive 5 μg ZPIV or saline placebo, in a ratio of 4:1 at Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Silver Spring, MD, USA, or of 5:1 at Saint Louis University, Saint Louis, MO, USA, and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, MA, USA. Vaccinations were given intramuscularly on days 1 and 29. The primary objective was safety and immunogenicity of the ZPIV candidate. We recorded adverse events and Zika virus envelope microneutralisation titres up to day 57. These trials are registered at ClinicalTrials.gov, numbers NCT02963909, NCT02952833, and NCT02937233. FINDINGS We enrolled 68 participants between Nov 7, 2016, and Jan 25, 2017. One was excluded and 67 participants received two injections of Zika vaccine (n=55) or placebo (n=12). The vaccine caused only mild to moderate adverse events. The most frequent local effects were pain (n=40 [60%]) or tenderness (n=32 [47%]) at the injection site, and the most frequent systemic reactogenic events were fatigue (29 [43%]), headache (26 [39%]), and malaise (15 [22%]). By day 57, 52 (92%) of vaccine recipients had seroconverted (microneutralisation titre ≥1:10), with peak geometric mean titres seen at day 43 and exceeding protective thresholds seen in animal studies. INTERPRETATION The ZPIV candidate was well tolerated and elicited robust neutralising antibody titres in healthy adults. FUNDING Departments of the Army and Defense and National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.


Science | 2015

Vaccine-elicited CD4 T cells induce immunopathology after chronic LCMV infection.

Pablo Penaloza-MacMaster; Daniel L. Barber; E. John Wherry; Nicholas M. Provine; Jeffrey E. Teigler; Lily Parenteau; Stephen Blackmore; Erica N. Borducchi; Rafael A. Larocca; Kathleen Yates; Hao Shen; W. Nicholas Haining; Rami Sommerstein; Daniel D. Pinschewer; Rafi Ahmed; Dan H. Barouch

For vaccines, CD4+ T cells can spell trouble The ideal vaccine elicits immune memory—either antibodies or memory T cells—to protect the host from subsequent infections. T cell–mediated immunity requires both helper CD4+ T cells and cytotoxic CD8+ T cells to kill virus-infected cells. But what happens when a vaccine only elicits CD4+ memory T cells? Penaloza-MacMaster et al. probed this question by giving mice a vaccine that generated only memory CD4+ T cells against lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV). Instead of protecting mice against chronic LCMV, vaccinated mice developed massive inflammation and died. Virus-specific CD8+ T cells or antibodies protected mice from the pathology. These results may have implications for vaccines against chronic viruses such as HIV. Science, this issue p. 278 Severe immunopathology kills virally infected mice that received vaccines targeting only CD4+ T cells. CD4 T cells promote innate and adaptive immune responses, but how vaccine-elicited CD4 T cells contribute to immune protection remains unclear. We evaluated whether induction of virus-specific CD4 T cells by vaccination would protect mice against infection with chronic lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV). Immunization with vaccines that selectively induced CD4 T cell responses resulted in catastrophic inflammation and mortality after challenge with a persistent strain of LCMV. Immunopathology required antigen-specific CD4 T cells and was associated with a cytokine storm, generalized inflammation, and multi-organ system failure. Virus-specific CD8 T cells or antibodies abrogated the pathology. These data demonstrate that vaccine-elicited CD4 T cells in the absence of effective antiviral immune responses can trigger lethal immunopathology.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Adipose tissue-derived mesenchymal stem cells increase skin allograft survival and inhibit Th-17 immune response.

Rafael A. Larocca; Pedro M. Moraes-Vieira; Ênio José Bassi; Patricia Semedo; Danilo Candido de Almeida; Marina Burgos da Silva; Thomas B. Thornley; Alvaro Pacheco-Silva; Niels Olsen Saraiva Câmara

Adipose tissue-derived mesenchymal stem cells (ADSC) exhibit immunosuppressive capabilities both in vitro and in vivo. Their use for therapy in the transplant field is attractive as they could render the use of immunosuppressive drugs unnecessary. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of ADSC therapy on prolonging skin allograft survival. Animals that were treated with a single injection of donor allogeneic ADSC one day after transplantation showed an increase in donor skin graft survival by approximately one week. This improvement was associated with preserved histological morphology, an expansion of CD4+ regulatory T cells (Treg) in draining lymph nodes, as well as heightened IL-10 expression and down-regulated IL-17 expression. In vitro, ADSC inhibit naïve CD4+ T cell proliferation and constrain Th-1 and Th-17 polarization. In summary, infusion of ADSC one day post-transplantation dramatically increases skin allograft survival by inhibiting the Th-17 pathogenic immune response and enhancing the protective Treg immune response. Finally, these data suggest that ADSC therapy will open new opportunities for promoting drug-free allograft survival in clinical transplantation.

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Dan H. Barouch

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Erica N. Borducchi

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Peter Abbink

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Nicholas M. Provine

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Pablo Penaloza-MacMaster

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Alexander Badamchi-Zadeh

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Christine A. Bricault

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Terry B. Strom

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Michael Boyd

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Eryn Blass

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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