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Dive into the research topics where Rui M. M. Victorino is active.

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Featured researches published by Rui M. M. Victorino.


Journal of Immunology | 2002

CD4 T Cell Depletion Is Linked Directly to Immune Activation in the Pathogenesis of HIV-1 and HIV-2 but Only Indirectly to the Viral Load

Ana E. Sousa; Jorge Carneiro; Martin Meier-Schellersheim; Zvi Grossman; Rui M. M. Victorino

The causal relationships among CD4 cell depletion, HIV replication, and immune activation are not well understood. HIV-2 infection, “nature’s experiment” with inherently attenuated HIV disease, provides additional insights into this issue. We report the finding that in HIV-2 and HIV-1 patients with a comparable degree of CD4 depletion the imbalance in the relative sizes of the naive and memory T cell populations and the up-regulation of CD4 and CD8 cell activation markers (HLA-DR, CD38, CD69, Fas molecules) are similar, even though the viral load in the plasma of HIV-2-infected patients is two orders of magnitude lower than in HIV-1 patients and HIV-2 patients are known to have slower rates of CD4 T cell decline and a better clinical prognosis. Moreover, we found a similar increase in the frequency of cycling CD4 T cells (Ki67+), which was in strong correlation with the expression of activation markers. Finally, the level of T cell anergy, as assessed by the proliferative responses to CD3 stimulation and to a panel of microbial Ags, proved to be comparable in HIV-1 and HIV-2 patients with a similar degree of CD4 depletion despite large differences in viral load. Our data are consistent with a direct causal relationship between immune activation and CD4 cell depletion in HIV disease and an only indirect relation of these parameters to the virus replication rate. Invoking the concept of proximal immune activation and virus transmission, which links efficient transmission of virus to local cell activation and proliferation in response to Ags and inflammation, we propose an integrative interpretation of the data and suggest that strongly elevated immune activation induces CD4 cell depletion and not vice versa, with potential implications for the choice of treatment strategies.


Nature Medicine | 2002

CD4+ T-cell depletion in HIV infection: are we closer to understanding the cause?

Zvi Grossman; Martin Meier-Schellersheim; Ana E. Sousa; Rui M. M. Victorino; William E. Paul

Is CD4+ cell depletion due to rapid elimination by HIV and failure of the immune system to replace these cells at the required rate? Increasing evidence suggests that this is not the case, and that infection-induced immune activation drives both viral replication and CD4+ cell depletion.


Blood | 2009

IL-7 sustains CD31 expression in human naive CD4+ T cells and preferentially expands the CD31+ subset in a PI3K-dependent manner.

Rita I. Azevedo; Maria Vieira D. Soares; João T. Barata; Rita Tendeiro; Ana Serra-Caetano; Rui M. M. Victorino; Ana E. Sousa

The CD31(+) subset of human naive CD4(+) T cells is thought to contain the population of cells that have recently emigrated from the thymus, while their CD31(-) counterparts have been proposed to originate from CD31(+) cells after homeostatic cell division. Naive T-cell maintenance is known to involve homeostatic cytokines such as interleukin-7 (IL-7). It remains to be investigated what role this cytokine has in the homeostasis of naive CD4(+) T-cell subsets defined by CD31 expression. We provide evidence that IL-7 exerts a preferential proliferative effect on CD31(+) naive CD4(+) T cells from adult peripheral blood compared with the CD31(-) subset. IL-7-driven proliferation did not result in loss of CD31 expression, suggesting that CD31(+) naive CD4(+) T cells can undergo cytokine-driven homeostatic proliferation while preserving CD31. Furthermore, IL-7 sustained or increased CD31 expression even in nonproliferating cells. Both proliferation and CD31 maintenance were dependent on the activation of phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) signaling. Taken together, our data suggest that during adulthood CD31(+) naive CD4(+) T cells are maintained by IL-7 and that IL-7-based therapies may exert a preferential effect on this population.


Clinical & Experimental Allergy | 2007

Expansion of circulating Foxp3+CD25bright CD4+ T cells during specific venom immunotherapy

M. C. Pereira-Santos; António P. Baptista; Alcinda Campos Melo; R. R. Alves; Rui S. Soares; Elisa Pedro; M. Pereira-Barbosa; Rui M. M. Victorino; Ana E. Sousa

Background Venom immunotherapy (VIT) induces long‐lasting immune tolerance to hymenoptera venom antigens, but the underlying mechanisms are not yet clarified. Regulatory T cells are thought to play an important role in allergic diseases and tolerance induction during specific immunotherapy.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2001

Comparison of the Frequency of Interleukin (IL)-2-, Interferon-γ-, and IL-4-Producing T Cells in 2 Diseases, Human Immunodeficiency Virus Types 1 and 2, with Distinct Clinical Outcomes

Ana E. Sousa; Ana F. Chaves; Ana Loureiro; Rui M. M. Victorino

Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) type 2 infection is associated with a better clinical outcome, slower rates of CD4 T cell decline, and lower viremia than is HIV-1. This study compares HIV-1 and HIV-2 in regard to the percentages of interleukin (IL)-2-, interferon (IFN)-gamma-, and IL-4-producing cells at the single-cell level, as determined by flow cytometry. At a given degree of CD4 T cell depletion, the frequency of T cells able to produce IL-2 is better preserved in HIV-2 than in HIV-1 infection, particularly within the CD4 T cell subset. As described for HIV-1 immunodeficiency, HIV-2-positive patients exhibit a marked expansion of terminally differentiated effector CD8 T cells (CD28(-)CD27(-)IFN-gamma(+)). However, the proportion of CD8 T cells able to simultaneously produce IL-2 and IFN-gamma is higher in HIV-2 disease. Considering the central role of IL-2 as a lymphocyte proliferative and survival factor, these findings provide a possible immunologic basis for the distinct course of HIV-2 immunodeficiency.


Blood | 2011

First use of thymus transplantation therapy for FOXN1 deficiency (nude/SCID): a report of 2 cases.

M. Louise Markert; José G. Marques; Bénédicte Neven; Blythe H. Devlin; Elizabeth A. McCarthy; Ivan K. Chinn; Adriana S. Albuquerque; Susana L. Silva; Claudio Pignata; Geneviève de Saint Basile; Rui M. M. Victorino; Capucine Picard; Marianne Debré; Nizar Mahlaoui; Alain Fischer; Ana E. Sousa

FOXN1 deficiency is a primary immunodeficiency characterized by athymia, alopecia totalis, and nail dystrophy. Two infants with FOXN1 deficiency were transplanted with cultured postnatal thymus tissue. Subject 1 presented with disseminated Bacillus Calmette-Guérin infection and oligoclonal T cells with no naive markers. Subject 2 had respiratory failure, human herpes virus 6 infection, cytopenias, and no circulating T cells. The subjects were given thymus transplants at 14 and 9 months of life, respectively. Subject 1 received immunosuppression before and for 10 months after transplantation. With follow up of 4.9 and 2.9 years, subjects 1 and 2 are well without infectious complications. The pretransplantation mycobacterial disease in subject 1 and cytopenias in subject 2 resolved. Subject 2 developed autoimmune thyroid disease 1.6 years after transplantation. Both subjects developed functional immunity. Subjects 1 and 2 have 1053/mm(3) and 1232/mm(3) CD3(+) cells, 647/mm(3) and 868/mm(3) CD4(+) T cells, 213/mm(3) and 425/mm(3) naive CD4(+) T cells, and 10 200 and 5700 T-cell receptor rearrangement excision circles per 100 000 CD3(+) cells, respectively. They have normal CD4 T-cell receptor β variable repertoires. Both subjects developed antigen-specific proliferative responses and have discontinued immunoglobulin replacement. In summary, thymus transplantation led to T-cell reconstitution and function in these FOXN1 deficient infants.


Journal of Hepatology | 1994

Lymphocyte reactivity to ex-vivo drug antigens in drug-induced hepatitis

Vasco A.J. Maria; Lígia A. Pinto; Rui M. M. Victorino

The diagnosis of drug-induced hepatitis is usually based on clinical criteria, with emphasis on both the temporal relationship between drug intake and liver injury and the exclusion of alternative causes. In vitro tests of lymphocyte sensitization to drugs are considered to have a low sensitivity. We investigated the possibility of detecting lymphocyte reactivity to drugs in drug-induced hepatitis by analyzing the lymphocyte proliferative responses to ex-vivo drug or metabolite antigens to improve the sensitivity of the in vitro test. Lymphocyte proliferative responses to five different concentrations of the drug and to ex-vivo drug antigens (serum collected from normal subjects after the ingestion of the drugs) were analyzed in 25 patients with a clinical diagnosis of drug-induced hepatitis, 27 healthy subjects and 10 individuals with a recent exposure to the same drugs without development of adverse drug reactions. In seven of the 25 patients, lymphocyte reactivity to drugs was detected (28%). The use of sera collected from healthy volunteers after drug intake (ex-vivo drug antigens) and the addition of a prostaglandin inhibitor to the cultures allowed the detection of lymphocyte sensitization in seven additional cases, increasing the detection ability from 28% to 56%. We suggest that the use of ex-vivo drug antigens may represent a significant contribution to the identification of the drug involved in cases of drug-induced hepatitis.


Postgraduate Medical Journal | 1980

Jaundice associated with naproxen.

Rui M. M. Victorino; J. C. B. Silveira; A. Baptista; M. C. De Moura

Hepatic injury in association with naproxen therapy is described and documented by liver biopsy in one patient. Histological findings were consistent with a drug-induced hepatitis, and cessation of therapy led to reversal of the clinical and biochemical changes. Circumstantial evidence is in favour of a hypersensitivity response to the drug rather than direct hepatotoxicity. Increased awareness of clinicians of this probably rare side effect of naproxen may help prompt identification of similar cases.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Primary B-Cell Deficiencies Reveal a Link between Human IL-17-Producing CD4 T-Cell Homeostasis and B-Cell Differentiation

Rita R. Barbosa; Sara Pereira da Silva; Susana L. Silva; Alcinda Campos Melo; Elisa Pedro; Manuel Pereira Barbosa; M. Conceição Pereira-Santos; Rui M. M. Victorino; Ana E. Sousa

IL-17 is a pro-inflammatory cytokine implicated in autoimmune and inflammatory conditions. The development/survival of IL-17-producing CD4 T cells (Th17) share critical cues with B-cell differentiation and the circulating follicular T helper subset was recently shown to be enriched in Th17 cells able to help B-cell differentiation. We investigated a putative link between Th17-cell homeostasis and B cells by studying the Th17-cell compartment in primary B-cell immunodeficiencies. Common Variable Immunodeficiency Disorders (CVID), defined by defects in B-cell differentiation into plasma and memory B cells, are frequently associated with autoimmune and inflammatory manifestations but we found no relationship between these and Th17-cell frequency. In fact, CVID patients showed a decrease in Th17-cell frequency in parallel with the expansion of activated non-differentiated B cells (CD21lowCD38low). Moreover, Congenital Agammaglobulinemia patients, lacking B cells due to impaired early B-cell development, had a severe reduction of circulating Th17 cells. Finally, we found a direct correlation in healthy individuals between circulating Th17-cell frequency and both switched-memory B cells and serum BAFF levels, a crucial cytokine for B-cell survival. Overall, our data support a relationship between Th17-cell homeostasis and B-cell maturation, with implications for the understanding of the pathogenesis of inflammatory/autoimmune diseases and the physiology of B-cell depleting therapies.


Journal of Immunology | 2007

Rate of Increase in Circulating IL-7 and Loss of IL-7Rα Expression Differ in HIV-1 and HIV-2 Infections: Two Lymphopenic Diseases with Similar Hyperimmune Activation but Distinct Outcomes

Adriana S. Albuquerque; Catarina S. Cortesão; Russell B. Foxall; Rui S. Soares; Rui M. M. Victorino; Ana E. Sousa

IL-7 is a nonredundant cytokine for T cell homeostasis. Circulating IL-7 levels increase in lymphopenic clinical settings, including HIV-1 infection. HIV-2 infection is considered a “natural” model of attenuated HIV disease given its much slower rate of CD4 decline than HIV-1 and limited impact on the survival of the majority of infected adults. We compared untreated HIV-1- and HIV-2-infected patients and found that the HIV-2 cohort demonstrated a delayed increase in IL-7 levels during the progressive depletion of circulating CD4 T cells as well as a dissociation between the acquisition of markers of T cell effector differentiation and the loss of IL-7Rα expression. This comparison of two persistent infections associated with progressive CD4 depletion and immune activation demonstrates that a better prognosis is not necessarily associated with higher levels of IL-7. Moreover, the delayed increase in IL-7 coupled with sustained expression of IL-7Rα suggests a maximization of available resources in HIV-2. The observation that increased IL-7 levels early in HIV-1 infection were unable to reduce the rate of CD4 loss and the impaired expression of the IL-7Rα irrespective of the state of cell differentiation raises concerns regarding the use of IL-7 therapy in HIV-1 infection.

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