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Featured researches published by Sarah Fox.


Journal of Innate Immunity | 2010

Neutrophil Apoptosis: Relevance to the Innate Immune Response and Inflammatory Disease

Sarah Fox; Andrew E. Leitch; Rodger Duffin; Christopher Haslett; Adriano G. Rossi

Neutrophils are the most abundant cell type involved in the innate immune response. They are rapidly recruited to sites of injury or infection where they engulf and kill invading microorganisms. Neutrophil apoptosis, the process of programmed cell death that prevents the release of neutrophil histotoxic contents, is tightly regulated and limits the destructive capacity of neutrophil products to surrounding tissue. The subsequent recognition and phagocytosis of apoptotic cells by phagocytic cells such as macrophages is central to the successful resolution of an inflammatory response and it is increasingly apparent that the dying neutrophil itself exerts an anti-inflammatory effect through modulation of surrounding cell responses, particularly macrophage inflammatory cytokine release. Apoptosis may be delayed, induced or enhanced by micro-organisms dependent on their immune evasion strategies and the health of the host they encounter. There is now an established field of research aimed at understanding the regulation of apoptosis and its potential as a target for therapeutic intervention in inflammatory and infective diseases. This review focuses on the physiological regulation of neutrophil apoptosis with respect to the innate immune system and highlights recent advances in mechanistic understanding of apoptotic pathways and their therapeutic manipulation in appropriate and excessive innate immune responses.


Immunological Reviews | 2010

Targeting granulocyte apoptosis: mechanisms, models, and therapies

Rodger Duffin; Andrew E. Leitch; Sarah Fox; Christopher Haslett; Adriano G. Rossi

Summary:  The inflammatory process is a complex series of tightly controlled cellular and biochemical events initiated by the immune system, which has evolved to eliminate or contain infectious agents and to repair damaged tissue. Apoptosis is essential for the clearance of potentially injurious inflammatory cells, such as neutrophils, eosinophils, and basophils, and the subsequent efficient resolution of inflammation. In this review, we aim to cover key features of the granulocyte life‐cycle ranging from their differentiation within the bone marrow to their maturation and ultimate clearance, with a focus on granulocyte apoptosis and macrophage efferocytosis. We further aim to discuss current and emerging models of inflammation and suggest novel ways of terminating or resolving deleterious inflammatory responses with a specific view to the translation of these strategies into fully realized, pro‐resolution therapies.


Acta Biomaterialia | 2010

NO-loaded Zn2+-exchanged zeolite materials: A potential bifunctional anti-bacterial strategy

Sarah Fox; Thomas S. Wilkinson; Paul S. Wheatley; Bo Xiao; Russell E. Morris; Alistair D. Sutherland; A. John Simpson; Peter G. Barlow; Anthony R. Butler; Ian L. Megson; Adriano G. Rossi

Nitric oxide (NO) is important for the regulation of a number of diverse biological processes, including vascular tone, neurotransmission, inflammatory cell responsiveness, defence against invading pathogens and wound healing. Transition metal exchanged zeolites are nanoporous materials with high-capacity storage properties for gases such as NO. The NO stores are liberated upon contact with aqueous environments, thereby making them ideal candidates for use in biological and clinical settings. Here, we demonstrate the NO release capacity and powerful bactericidal properties of a novel NO-storing Zn(2+)-exchanged zeolite material at a 50 wt.% composition in a polytetrafluoroethylene polymer. Further to our published data showing the anti-thrombotic effects of a similar NO-loaded zeolite, this study demonstrates the anti-bacterial properties of NO-releasing zeolites against clinically relevant strains of bacteria, namely Gram-negative Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Gram-positive methicillin-sensitive and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus and Clostridium difficile. Thus our study highlights the potential of NO-loaded zeolites as biocompatible medical device coatings with anti-infective properties.


European Journal of Immunology | 2010

The cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor R-roscovitine down-regulates Mcl-1 to override pro-inflammatory signalling and drive neutrophil apoptosis

Andrew E. Leitch; Nicola A. Riley; Tara A. Sheldrake; Michela Festa; Sarah Fox; Rodger Duffin; Christopher Haslett; Adriano G. Rossi

Successful resolution of inflammation requires inflammatory cells such as neutrophils to undergo apoptosis prior to non‐inflammatory phagocytosis by professional phagocytes. Recently, cyclin‐dependent kinase (CDK) inhibitors (e.g. R‐roscovitine) have been shown to induce neutrophil apoptosis and enhance the resolution of inflammation. Interestingly, NF‐κB and MAPK pathways and key endogenous survival proteins (typified by Mcl‐1) are involved in the regulation of neutrophil apoptosis and, in cancer‐cell lines, have been implicated as possible targets of CDK inhibitors. Here, we demonstrate that R‐roscovitine over‐rides TNF‐α and LPS‐induced survival (determined by morphological examination and binding of fluorescently labelled annexin‐V) of isolated peripheral blood neutrophils. This effect did not appear to be mediated via effects on early markers of neutrophil activation (e.g. surface marker expression, shape change, aggregation and superoxide anion generation), by direct inhibition of NF‐κB activation (assessed by cytoplasmic IκBα proteolysis and NF‐κB p65 subunit translocation) and ERK activation (determined by specific ERK phosphorylation) but due to down‐regulation (at protein and mRNA level) of the survival protein Mcl‐1 but not the pro‐apoptotic bcl‐2 homologue Bim. These findings suggest that key endogenous survival proteins may be the targets of CDK inhibitors and consequently may be of critical importance in the resolution of inflammation.


FEBS Letters | 2009

The CDK inhibitor, R‐roscovitine, promotes eosinophil apoptosis by down‐regulation of Mcl‐1

Rodger Duffin; Andrew E. Leitch; Tara A. Sheldrake; John M. Hallett; Colette Meyer; Sarah Fox; Ana L. Alessandri; Morag C. Martin; Hugh J. M. Brady; Mauro M. Teixeira; Ian Dransfield; Christopher Haslett; Adriano G. Rossi

Eosinophils are major players in inflammatory allergic diseases such as asthma, hay fever and eczema. Here we show that the cyclin‐dependent kinase inhibitor (CDKi) R‐roscovitine efficiently and rapidly induces human eosinophil apoptosis using flow cytometric analysis of annexin‐V/propidium iodide staining, morphological analysis by light microscopy, transmission electron microscopy and Western immunoblotting for caspase‐3 cleavage. We further dissect these observations by demonstrating that eosinophils treated with R‐roscovitine lose mitochondrial membrane potential and the key survival protein Mcl‐1 is down‐regulated. This novel finding of efficacious induction of eosinophil apoptosis by CDKi drugs has potential as a strategy for driving resolution of eosinophilic inflammation.


Mucosal Immunology | 2014

Downregulation of Mcl-1 has anti-inflammatory pro-resolution effects and enhances bacterial clearance from the lung

Christopher D. Lucas; David A. Dorward; M A Tait; Sarah Fox; John A. Marwick; K C Allen; Calum T. Robb; Nikhil Hirani; Christopher Haslett; Rodger Duffin; Adriano G. Rossi

Phagocytes not only coordinate acute inflammation and host defense at mucosal sites, but also contribute to tissue damage. Respiratory infection causes a globally significant disease burden and frequently progresses to acute respiratory distress syndrome, a devastating inflammatory condition characterized by neutrophil recruitment and accumulation of protein-rich edema fluid causing impaired lung function. We hypothesized that targeting the intracellular protein myeloid cell leukemia 1 (Mcl-1) by a cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor (AT7519) or a flavone (wogonin) would accelerate neutrophil apoptosis and resolution of established inflammation, but without detriment to bacterial clearance. Mcl-1 loss induced human neutrophil apoptosis, but did not induce macrophage apoptosis nor impair phagocytosis of apoptotic neutrophils. Neutrophil-dominant inflammation was modelled in mice by either endotoxin or bacteria (Escherichia coli). Downregulating inflammatory cell Mcl-1 had anti-inflammatory, pro-resolution effects, shortening the resolution interval (Ri) from 19 to 7 h and improved organ dysfunction with enhanced alveolar–capillary barrier integrity. Conversely, attenuating drug-induced Mcl-1 downregulation inhibited neutrophil apoptosis and delayed resolution of endotoxin-mediated lung inflammation. Importantly, manipulating lung inflammatory cell Mcl-1 also accelerated resolution of bacterial infection (Ri; 50 to 16 h) concurrent with enhanced bacterial clearance. Therefore, manipulating inflammatory cell Mcl-1 accelerates inflammation resolution without detriment to host defense against bacteria, and represents a target for treating infection-associated inflammation.


Journal of Inflammation | 2008

A novel hybrid aspirin-NO-releasing compound inhibits TNFalpha release from LPS-activated human monocytes and macrophages

Catriona M Turnbull; Paolo Marcarino; Tara A. Sheldrake; Loretta Lazzarato; Clara Cena; Roberta Fruttero; Alberto Gasco; Sarah Fox; Ian L. Megson; Adriano G. Rossi

BackgroundThe cytoprotective nature of nitric oxide (NO) led to development of NO-aspirins in the hope of overcoming the gastric side-effects of aspirin. However, the NO moiety gives these hybrids potential for actions further to their aspirin-mediated anti-platelet and anti-inflammatory effects. Having previously shown that novel NO-aspirin hybrids containing a furoxan NO-releasing group have potent anti-platelet effects, here we investigate their anti-inflammatory properties. Here we examine their effects upon TNFα release from lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-stimulated human monocytes and monocyte-derived macrophages and investigate a potential mechanism of action through effects on LPS-stimulated nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-κB) activation.MethodsPeripheral venous blood was drawn from the antecubital fossa of human volunteers. Mononuclear cells were isolated and cultured. The resultant differentiated macrophages were treated with pharmacologically relevant concentrations of either a furoxan-aspirin (B8, B7; 10 μM), their respective furazan NO-free counterparts (B16, B15; 10 μM), aspirin (10 μM), existing nitroaspirin (NCX4016; 10 μM), an NO donor (DEA/NO; 10 μM) or dexamethasone (1 μM), in the presence and absence of LPS (10 ng/ml; 4 h). Parallel experiments were conducted on undifferentiated fresh monocytes. Supernatants were assessed by specific ELISA for TNFα release and by lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) assay for cell necrosis. To assess NF-κB activation, the effects of the compounds on the loss of cytoplasmic inhibitor of NF-κB, IκBα (assessed by western blotting) and nuclear localisation (assessed by immunofluorescence) of the p65 subunit of NF-κB were determined.ResultsB8 significantly reduced TNFα release from LPS-treated macrophages to 36 ± 10% of the LPS control. B8 and B16 significantly inhibited monocyte TNFα release to 28 ± 5, and 49 ± 9% of control, respectively. The B8 effect was equivalent in magnitude to that of dexamethasone, but was not shared by 10 μM DEA/NO, B7, the furazans, aspirin or NCX4016. LDH assessment revealed none of the treatments caused significant cell lysis. LPS stimulated loss of cytoplasmic IκBα and nuclear translocation of the p65 NF-κB subunit was inhibited by the active NO-furoxans.ConclusionHere we show that furoxan-aspirin, B8, significantly reduces TNFα release from both monocytes and macrophages and suggest that inhibition of NF-κB activation is a likely mechanism for the effect. This anti-inflammatory action highlights a further therapeutic potential of drugs of this class.


Journal of Leukocyte Biology | 2013

Oxygen levels determine the ability of glucocorticoids to influence neutrophil survival in inflammatory environments

John A. Marwick; David A. Dorward; Christopher D. Lucas; Katie O. Jones; Tara A. Sheldrake; Sarah Fox; Carol Ward; Joanna Murray; Mairi Brittan; Nik Hirani; Rodger Duffin; Ian Dransfield; Christopher Haslett; Adriano G. Rossi

GCs are highly effective in treating a wide range of inflammatory diseases but are limited in their ability to control neutrophilic lung inflammation in conditions such as COPD. Neutrophil apoptosis, a central feature of inflammation resolution, is delayed in response to microenvironmental cues, such as hypoxia and inflammatory cytokines, present at inflamed sites. GCs delay neutrophil apoptosis in vitro, and this may therefore limit the ability of GCs to control neutrophilic inflammation. This study assesses the effect GCs have on hypoxia‐ and inflammatory cytokine‐induced neutrophil survival. Human neutrophils were treated with GCs in the presence or absence of GM‐CSF or inflammatory macrophage‐CM at a range of oxygen concentrations (21–1% oxygen). Neutrophil apoptosis and survival were assessed by flow cytometry and morphological analysis and neutrophil function, by stimulus‐induced shape change and respiratory burst. Dexamethasone promoted neutrophil survival at 21%, 10%, and 5% oxygen but not at 1% oxygen. Interestingly, GM‐CSF and inflammatory CM increased neutrophil survival significantly, even at 1% oxygen, with cells remaining functionally active at 96 h. Dexamethasone was able to reduce the prosurvival effect of GM‐CSF and inflammatory CM in a hypoxic environment. In conclusion, we found that GCs do not augment neutrophil survival in the presence of severe hypoxia or proinflammatory mediators. This suggests that GCs would not promote neutrophil survival at sites of inflammation under these conditions.


The FASEB Journal | 2014

Brain angiogenesis inhibitor 1 is expressed by gastric phagocytes during infection with Helicobacter pylori and mediates the recognition and engulfment of human apoptotic gastric epithelial cells

Soumita Das; Arup Sarkar; Kieran A. Ryan; Sarah Fox; Alice H. Berger; Ignacio J. Juncadella; Diane Bimczok; Lesley E. Smythies; Paul R. Harris; Kodi S. Ravichandran; Sheila E. Crowe; Phillip D. Smith; Peter B. Ernst

After Helicobacter pylori infection in humans, gastric epithelial cells (GECs) undergo apoptosis due to stimulation by the bacteria or inflammatory cytokines. In this study, we assessed the expression and function of brain angiogenesis inhibitor 1 (BAI1) in the engulfment of apoptotic GECs using human tissue and cells. After induction of apoptosis by H. pylori or camptothecin, there was a 5‐fold increase in the binding of apoptotic GECs to THP‐1 cells or peripheral blood monocyte‐derived macrophages as assayed by confocal microscopy or conventional and imaging flow cytometry. Binding was impaired 95% by pretreating apoptotic cells with annexin V, underscoring the requirement for phosphatidylserine recognition. The phosphatidylserine receptor BAI1 was expressed in human gastric biopsy specimens and gastric phagocytes. To confirm the role of BAI1 in apoptotic cell clearance, the functional domain of BAI1 was used as a competitive inhibitor or BAI1 expression was inhibited by small interfering RNA. Both approaches decreased binding and engulfment >40%. Exposing THP‐1 cells to apoptotic cells inhibited IL‐6 production from 1340 to <364 pg/ml; however, this decrease was independent of phagocytosis. We conclude that recognition of apoptotic cells by BAI1 contributes to their clearance in the human gastric mucosa and this is associated with anti‐inflammatory effects.—Das, S., Sarkar, A., Ryan, K. A., Fox, S., Berger, A. H., Juncadella, I. J., Bimczok, D., Smythies, L. E., Harris, P. R., Ravichandran, K. S., Crowe, S. E., Smith, P. D., Ernst, P. B. Brain angiogenesis inhibitor 1 is expressed by gastric phagocytes during infection with Helicobacter pylori and mediates the recognition and engulfment of human apoptotic gastric epithelial cells. FASEB J. 28, 2214–2224 (2014). www.fasebj.org


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2011

Differential susceptibility to nitric oxide-evoked apoptosis in human inflammatory cells

Catherine A. Shaw; Emma L. Taylor; Sarah Fox; Ian L. Megson; Adriano G. Rossi

Apoptosis of neutrophils and their subsequent phagocytosis is critical to the successful resolution of inflammation. During inflammation, activated inflammatory cells generate reactive oxygen and nitrogen species, including nitric oxide (NO) and superoxide anion (O(2)(•-)), which rapidly combine to generate peroxynitrite (ONOO(-)). NO and ONOO(-) are proapoptotic in human neutrophils. This study examines the effects of NO and ONOO(-) on caspase activation and mitochondrial permeability in human neutrophils and determines the ability of these species to evoke apoptosis in human monocyte-derived macrophages (MDMs). NO or ONOO(-) release from donor compounds was characterized by electrochemistry and electron paramagnetic resonance. Neutrophils and MDMs isolated from the peripheral blood of healthy volunteers were exposed to NO or ONOO(-) before analysis of apoptosis by caspase activation, mitochondrial permeability, and annexin V binding. Both NO and ONOO(-) induced apoptosis via rapid activation of caspases 2 and 3 in neutrophils. In contrast, only ONOO(-) promoted apoptosis in MDMs, whereas a variety of NO donors were ineffective at inducing apoptosis in this cell type. We propose that human macrophages are refractory to NO-stimulated apoptosis in order that they persist long enough within the inflammatory focus to phagocytose apoptotic neutrophils, thereby ensuring successful resolution of inflammation.

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Bo Xiao

Queen's University Belfast

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Peter B. Ernst

University of California

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Soumita Das

University of California

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