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Dive into the research topics where Sarah Jacca is active.

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Featured researches published by Sarah Jacca.


Biology of Reproduction | 2013

Bovine Endometrial Stromal Cells Support Tumor Necrosis Factor Alpha-Induced Bovine Herpesvirus Type 4 Enhanced Replication

Sarah Jacca; Valentina Franceschi; Angelo Colagiorgi; I. Martin Sheldon; Gaetano Donofrio

ABSTRACT Bovine uterine infections are the most important cause of economic losses in the cattle industry. Although the etiology of uterine diseases is mainly ascribed to bacterial infection, they can also be associated with viral infection, such as bovine herpesvirus 4 (BoHV-4), which is often a secondary agent following bacteria. Besides microbial infection, many inflammatory molecules belonging to the innate immune response orchestrate the outcome of the infection. In the present study, the interaction between BoHV-4-infected bovine endometrial stromal cells and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) was investigated. Bovine herpesvirus 4 possesses a special tropism toward endometrial stromal cells. For this reason, a simian virus 40 (SV40) immortalized endometrial stromal cell line (SV40BESC) was established; it was proven that it was stable, it expressed toll-like receptors (TLRs; from 1 to 10) and TNF-alpha receptors I and II, and it was responsive to exogenous TNF-alpha. Further, an increase of BoHV-4 replication and cytopathic effect was observed in BoHV-4-infected and TNF-alpha-treated SV40BESCs. This increase of viral replication was associated with BoHV-4 immediate early 2 (IE2) gene promoter trans-activation through the interaction of the nuclear factor KB (NFKB) with the putative NFKB-responsive elements found within BoHV-4 IE2 gene promoter, and this interaction was abolished when NFKB-responsive elements were deleted. These data shed light on two important and rather controversial issues: the role of TNF-alpha receptor, which is weakly expressed in the stromal layer of the bovine uterus, as well as the possible interactions between proinflammatory molecules, viral replication, and chronic uterine disease.


Gene Therapy | 2014

Retinal transduction profiles by high-capacity viral vectors

Agostina Puppo; Giulia Cesi; Elena Marrocco; Pasquale Piccolo; Sarah Jacca; Dmitry M. Shayakhmetov; Robin J. Parks; Beverly L. Davidson; Stefano Colloca; Nicola Brunetti-Pierri; Philip Ng; Gaetano Donofrio; Alberto Auricchio

Retinal gene therapy with adeno-associated viral (AAV) vectors is safe and effective in humans. However, the limited cargo capacity of AAV prevents their use for therapy of those inherited retinopathies (IRs) due to mutations in large (>5 kb) genes. Viral vectors derived from adenovirus (Ad), lentivirus (LV) and herpes virus (HV) can package large DNA sequences, but do not target efficiently retinal photoreceptors (PRs) where the majority of genes responsible for IRs are expressed. Here, we have evaluated the mouse retinal transduction profiles of vectors derived from 16 different Ad serotypes, 7 LV pseudotypes and from a bovine HV. Most of the vectors tested transduced efficiently the retinal pigment epithelium. We found that LV-GP64 tends to transduce more PRs than the canonical LV-VSVG, albeit this was restricted to a narrow region. We observed more extensive PR transduction with HdAd1, 2 and 5/F35++ than with LV, although none of them outperformed the canonical HdAd5 or matched the extension of PR transduction achieved with AAV2/8.


PLOS ONE | 2014

In vivo image analysis of BoHV-4-based vector in mice.

Valentina Franceschi; Fabio Stellari; Carlo Mangia; Sarah Jacca; Sophia Lavrentiadou; Sandro Cavirani; Mathias Heikenwalder; Gaetano Donofrio

Due to its biological characteristics bovine herpesvirus 4 (BoHV-4) has been considered as an appropriate gene delivery vector. Its genomic clone, modified as a bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC), is better genetically manipulable and can be used as an efficient gene delivery and vaccine vector. Although a large amount of data have been accumulated in vitro on this specific aspect, the same cannot be asserted for the in vivo condition. Therefore, here we investigated the fate of a recombinant BoHV-4 strain expressing luciferase (BoHV-4-A-CMVlucΔTK) after intraperitoneal or intravenous inoculation in mice, by generating a novel recombinant BoHV-4 expressing luciferase (BoHV-4-A-CMVlucΔTK) and by following the virus replication through in vivo imaging analysis. BoHV-4-A-CMVlucΔTK was first characterized in vitro where it was shown, on one hand that its replication properties are identical to those of the parental virus, and on the other that the transduced/infected cells strongly express luciferase. When BoHV-4-A-CMVlucΔTK was inoculated in mice, either intraperitoneally or intravenously, BoHV-4-A-CMVlucΔTK infection/transduction was exclusively localized to the liver, as detected by in vivo image analysis, and in particular almost exclusively in the hepatocytes, as determined by immuno-histochemistry. These data, that add a new insight on the biology of BoHV-4 in vivo, provide the first indication for the potential use of a BoHV-4-based vector in gene-transfer in the liver.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2015

BoHV-4-Based Vector Single Heterologous Antigen Delivery Protects STAT1(-/-) Mice from Monkeypoxvirus Lethal Challenge

Valentina Franceschi; Scott Parker; Sarah Jacca; Ryan W. Crump; Konstantin Doronin; Edguardo Hembrador; Daniela Pompilio; Giulia Tebaldi; Ryan D. Estep; Scott W. Wong; Mark R. Buller; Gaetano Donofrio

Monkeypox virus (MPXV) is the etiological agent of human (MPX). It is an emerging orthopoxvirus zoonosis in the tropical rain forest of Africa and is endemic in the Congo-basin and sporadic in West Africa; it remains a tropical neglected disease of persons in impoverished rural areas. Interaction of the human population with wildlife increases human infection with MPX virus (MPXV), and infection from human to human is possible. Smallpox vaccination provides good cross-protection against MPX; however, the vaccination campaign ended in Africa in 1980, meaning that a large proportion of the population is currently unprotected against MPXV infection. Disease control hinges on deterring zoonotic exposure to the virus and, barring that, interrupting person-to-person spread. However, there are no FDA-approved therapies against MPX, and current vaccines are limited due to safety concerns. For this reason, new studies on pathogenesis, prophylaxis and therapeutics are still of great interest, not only for the scientific community but also for the governments concerned that MPXV could be used as a bioterror agent. In the present study, a new vaccination strategy approach based on three recombinant bovine herpesvirus 4 (BoHV-4) vectors, each expressing different MPXV glycoproteins, A29L, M1R and B6R were investigated in terms of protection from a lethal MPXV challenge in STAT1 knockout mice. BoHV-4-A-CMV-A29LgD106ΔTK, BoHV-4-A-EF1α-M1RgD106ΔTK and BoHV-4-A-EF1α-B6RgD106ΔTK were successfully constructed by recombineering, and their capacity to express their transgene was demonstrated. A small challenge study was performed, and all three recombinant BoHV-4 appeared safe (no weight-loss or obvious adverse events) following intraperitoneal administration. Further, BoHV-4-A-EF1α-M1RgD106ΔTK alone or in combination with BoHV-4-A-CMV-A29LgD106ΔTK and BoHV-4-A-EF1α-B6RgD106ΔTK, was shown to be able to protect, 100% alone and 80% in combination, STAT1(-/-) mice against mortality and morbidity. This work demonstrated the efficacy of BoHV-4 based vectors and the use of BoHV-4 as a vaccine-vector platform.


Biology of Reproduction | 2014

Interferon Gamma-Mediated BoHV-4 Replication Restriction in Bovine Endometrial Stromal Cells Is Host IDO1 Gene Expression Independent and BoHV-4 IE2 Gene Expression Dependent

Sarah Jacca; Valentina Franceschi; Mattia Agosti; Sandro Cavirani; Federico Mistretta; Gaetano Donofrio

ABSTRACT In the present work the interaction between bovine herpesvirus 4 (BoHV-4)-infected bovine endometrial stromal cells (BESCs) and interferon gamma (IFNG) was investigated. Starting from the particular tropism of BoHV-4 toward BESCs, a pure population of these cells, free of CD45-positive cells, was prepared and proven to have a bona fide mesenchymal derivation as shown by vimentin-positive and cytokeratin-negative staining. BESCs expressed functional IFNG receptors (IFNGR) 1 and 2 but not IFNG ligand. BESCs transfected with a new reporter construct made by cloning the bovine indoleamine 2, 3-dioxygenase 1 (IDO1) promoter in front of the luciferase reporter gene responded to exogenous IFNG treatment. Further, IFNG-treated or constitutively secreting IFNG BESCs strongly restricted BoHV-4 replication and consequent cytopathic effect. IDO1 expression in BESCs was tightly induced by IFNG and IDO1 was previously shown to be the mediator for some of the IFNG pathogenostatic effects. However, IDO1 inhibitors and IDO1 constitutive expression could not respectively abrogate or recapitulate IFNG effect on BoHV-4-infected BESCs, whereas BoHV-4 immediate early (IE2) gene expression was transcriptionally depressed by IFNG axis activation independently from IDO1 expression; this was further confirmed by revealing a BoHV-4 IE2 gene promoter area containing potential responsive elements interacting with inhibitory transcription factors induced by IFNG in BESCs. The data achieved in this work highlight at least two issues: first, the role of BESCs as target/effector cells for the IFNG; second, the importance of uterine IFNG integrity to control BoHV-4 infection recrudescence from a persistent/latent state to a chronic disease, endometritis.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Generation and characterization of the first immortalized alpaca cell line suitable for diagnostic and immunization studies.

Valentina Franceschi; Sarah Jacca; Elena L. Sassu; Fabio Stellari; Vicky L. van Santen; Gaetano Donofrio

Raising of alpacas as exotic livestock for wool and meat production and as companion animals is growing in importance in the United States, Europe and Australia. Furthermore the alpaca, as well as the rest of the camelids, possesses the peculiarity of producing single-chain antibodies from which nanobodies can be generated. Nanobodies, due to their structural simplicity and reduced size, are very versatile in terms of manipulation and bio-therapeutic exploitation. In fact the biotech companies involved in nanobody production and application continue to grow in number and size. Hence, the development of reagents and tools to assist in the further growth of this new scientific and entrepreneurial reality is becoming a necessity. These are needed mainly to address alpaca disease diagnosis and prophylaxis, and to develop alpaca immunization strategies for nanobody generation. For instance an immortalized alpaca cell line would be extremely valuable. In the present work the first stabilized alpaca cell line from alpaca skin stromal cells (ASSCs) was generated and characterized. This cell line was shown to be suitable for replication of viruses bovine herpesvirus-1, bovine viral diarrhea virus and caprine herpesvirus-1 and the endocellular parasite Neospora caninum. Moreover ASSCs were easy to transfect and transduce by several methods. These two latter characteristics are extremely useful when recombinant antigens need to be produced in a host homologous system. This work could be considered as a starting point for the expansion of the biotechnologies linked to alpaca farming and industry.


Vaccine | 2013

Efficient heterologous antigen gene delivery and expression by a replication-attenuated BoHV-4-based vaccine vector

Antonio Capocefalo; Carlo Mangia; Valentina Franceschi; Sarah Jacca; Vicky L. van Santen; Gaetano Donofrio

Bovine Herpesvirus 4 (BoHV-4) is a gammaherpesvirus belonging to the Rhadinovirus genus and due to its biological characteristics has been proposed as a vaccine vector for veterinary vaccines. Because viral vector-associated risk is a major concern for viral vector applications, attenuation is a desirable feature. Therefore, efforts are directed toward the development of highly attenuated viral vectors. BoHV-4 naturally exhibits limited pathogenicity and a further attenuation, in terms of replication, was obtained by disrupting the late gene encoding the 1.7-kb polyadenylated RNA (L1.7). An L1.7 deleted mutant BoHV-4 (BoHV-4-A-KanaGalKΔL1.7), as well as its revertant (BoHV-4-A-Rev), was generated by homologous recombination from the genome of a BoHV-4 isolate (BoHV-4-A) cloned as a bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC). BoHV-4-A-KanaGalKΔL1.7 showed attenuation in terms of competence to reconstitute infectious virus, viral replication, and plaque size when compared to BoHV-4-A, BoHV-4-A-Rev, and BoHV-4-A-KanaGalKΔTK, a recombinant control virus where the KanaGalK selectable marker was inserted into the thymidine kinase open reading frame. The capability of BoHV-4-A-KanaGalKΔL1.7 to deliver and express a heterologous antigen was investigated by replacing the KanaGalK cassette with a vesicular stomatitis virus glycoprotein (VSVg) expression cassette to generate BoHV-4-A-EF1αVSVgΔL1.7. BoHV-4-A-EF1αVSVgΔL1.7 infected cells robustly expressed VSVg, thus confirming that the replication deficiency resulting from L1.7 disruption did not prevent heterologous gene delivery and expression. Although further work is needed to identify the specific function of the BoHV-4 L1.7 gene, the L1.7 gene may represent an ideal targeting locus for the integration of a heterologous antigen expression cassette, resulting in attenuation of the viral vector.


OncoImmunology | 2016

Bovine herpesvirus 4-based vector delivering a hybrid rat/human HER-2 oncoantigen efficiently protects mice from autochthonous Her-2+ mammary cancer

Sarah Jacca; Valeria Rolih; Elena Quaglino; Valentina Franceschi; Giulia Tebaldi; Elisabetta Bolli; Alfonso Rosamilia; Simone Ottonello; Federica Cavallo; Gaetano Donofrio

ABSTRACT The epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER-2) oncogene is a major target for the immunotherapy of breast cancer. Following up to the therapeutic success achieved with Her-2-targeting monoclonal antibodies, immune-prophylactic approaches directed against Her-2 have also been investigated taking into account, and trying to overcome, Her-2 self-tolerance. Perhaps due to safety (and efficacy) concerns, the least explored anti-Her-2 active immunization strategy so far has been the one relying on viral-vectored vaccine formulations. Taking advantage of the favorable properties of bovine herpesvirus 4 (BoHV-4) in terms of safety and ease of manipulation as well as its previously documented ability to transduce and confer immunogenicity to heterologous antigens, we tested the ability of different recombinant HER-2-BoHV-4 immunogens to 8break tolerance and elicit a protective, anti-mammary tumor antibody response in HER-2 transgenic BALB-neuT mice. All the tested constructs expressed the HER-2 transgenes at high levels and elicited significant cellular immune responses in BALB/c mice upon administration via either DNA vaccination or viral infection. In BALB-neuT mice, instead, only the viral construct expressing the membrane-bound chimeric form of Her-2 protein (BoHV-4-RHuT-gD) elicited a humoral immune response that was more intense and earlier-appearing than that induced by DNA vaccination. In keeping with this observation, two administrations of BoHV-4-RHuT-gD effectively protected BALB-neuT mice from tumor formation, with 50% of vaccinated animals tumor-free after 30 weeks from immunization compared to 100% of animals exhibiting at least one palpable tumor in the case of animals vaccinated with the other BoHV-4-HER-2 constructs.


Veterinary Research | 2014

Enlightened Mannhemia haemolytica lung inflammation in bovinized mice

Fabio Stellari; Sophia Lavrentiadou; Francesca Ruscitti; Sarah Jacca; Valentina Franceschi; Maurizio Civelli; Chiara Carnini; Gino Villetti; Gaetano Donofrio

Polymorphonuclear cells diapedesis has an important contribution to the induced Mannhemia haemolytica (M. haemolytica) infection lung inflammation and IL-8 is the primary polymorphonuclear chemoattractant. Using a bovine IL-8/luciferase transiently transgenized mouse model, the orchestration among M. haemolytica, IL-8 promoter activation and neutrophilia was followed in real time by in vivo image analysis.


Frontiers in Immunology | 2017

Coordinated Role of Toll-Like Receptor-3 and Retinoic Acid-Inducible Gene-I in the Innate Response of Bovine Endometrial Cells to Virus

Luísa Cunha Carneiro; Carmen Bedford; Sarah Jacca; Alfonso Rosamilia; Vera Fernanda Martins Hossepian de Lima; Gaetano Donofrio; I. Martin Sheldon; James G. Cronin

Bovine herpesvirus-4 (BoHV-4) and bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV) infect the uterus of cattle, often resulting in reduced fertility, or abortion of the fetus, respectively. Here, exposure of primary bovine endometrial cells to BoHV-4 or BVDV modulated the production of inflammatory mediators. Viral pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs) are detected via pattern-recognition receptors (PRRs). However, the relative contribution of specific PRRs to innate immunity, during viral infection of the uterus, is unclear. Endometrial epithelial and stromal cells constitutively express the PRR Toll-like receptor (TLR)-3, but, the status of retinoic acid-inducible gene I (RIG-I), a sensor of cytosolic nucleic acids, is unknown. Primary endometrial epithelial and stromal cells had low expression of RIG-I, which was increased in stromal cells after 12 h transfection with the TLR3 ligand Poly(I:C), a synthetic analog of double-stranded RNA. Furthermore, short interfering RNA targeting TLR3, or interferon (IFN) regulatory transcription factor 3, an inducer of type I IFN transcription, reduced Poly(I:C)-induced RIG-I protein expression and reduced inflammatory mediator secretion from stromal cells. We conclude that antiviral defense of endometrial stromal cells requires coordinated recognition of PAMPs, initially via TLR3 and later via inducible RIG-I.

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