Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Stefania Varchetta is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Stefania Varchetta.


Gastroenterology | 2009

Natural Killer Cell Functional Dichotomy in Chronic Hepatitis B and Chronic Hepatitis C Virus Infections

Barbara Oliviero; Stefania Varchetta; Enrica Paudice; Giuseppe Michelone; Marco Zaramella; Domenico Mavilio; Francesca De Filippi; Savino Bruno; Mario U. Mondelli

BACKGROUND & AIMS The phenotypic and functional characteristics of natural killer (NK) cells in chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections are incompletely defined and largely controversial. METHODS We studied NK cell receptor expression, cytotoxic activity, and cytokine production in peripheral blood mononuclear cells from 35 patients with chronic hepatitis C, 22 with chronic hepatitis B, and 30 healthy controls. RESULTS Patients with chronic HBV infection had an increased proportion of NKG2C(+) NK cells with normal inhibitory receptor expression and a lower proportion of activated NK cells compared with HCV(+) patients, which was associated with normal or reduced cytolytic activity and markedly dysfunctional tumor necrosis factor-alpha and interferon-gamma production. Patients with chronic HCV infection showed a predominantly activating phenotype, featuring a decreased percentage of cells expressing the inhibitory receptor KIR3DL1 and a concomitant increase in the proportion of NKG2D(+) NK cells. Expression of the CD69 early activation antigen on NK cells positively correlated with serum alanine aminotransferase and HCV RNA values, suggesting participation of virus-induced effector NK cells in liver necroinflammation. Phenotypic changes in HCV(+) patients were associated with enhanced cytokine-induced cytolytic activity and increased usage of natural cytotoxicity and NKG2D receptor pathways, accompanied by defective cytokine production, although to a lesser extent than patients with chronic HBV infection. CONCLUSIONS These findings provide evidence for a functional dichotomy in patients with chronic HBV and HCV infections, featuring conserved or enhanced cytolytic activity and dysfunctional cytokine production, which may contribute to virus persistence.


Cancer Research | 2007

Elements Related to Heterogeneity of Antibody-Dependent Cell Cytotoxicity in Patients Under Trastuzumab Therapy for Primary Operable Breast Cancer Overexpressing Her2

Stefania Varchetta; Nadia Gibelli; Barbara Oliviero; Elena Nardini; Roberto Gennari; Giovanna Gatti; Luzemira Santos Silva; Laura Villani; Elda Tagliabue; Sylvie Ménard; Alberto Costa; Francesco F. Fagnoni

Preliminary results from a pilot trial on trastuzumabs mechanism of action against operable breast tumors overexpressing Her2 suggested a role for antibody-dependent cell cytotoxicity (ADCC). To examine factors affecting ADCC intensity and variability, we extended this study to the phenotypic and functional analysis of circulating mononuclear cells in 18 patients. ADCC was induced by trastuzumab therapy in 15 of 18 patients (83%). Inability to develop ADCC in three patients did not depend on inadequate levels of trastuzumab because further increase in its concentration in vitro was ineffective. Rather, susceptibility to develop ADCC was fairly predicted by test with trastuzumab before therapy and was correlated to the number of lymphocytes coexpressing CD16 and CD56. Phenotypic analysis at the end of ADCC evaluating down-regulation of CD16, and up-regulation of CD69 and CD107a, confirmed that natural killer (NK) cells and CD56(+) T cells were involved in productive engagement of trastuzumab. Also, the killing efficiency of CD16(+) lymphocytes was influenced by 158 V/F polymorphism of Fc gamma RIII (CD16), whereas variations of CD247 on NK cells were consistent with trends between ADCC before and after therapy. Complete pathologic response was observed in one patient showing ADCC of outstanding intensity, whereas four cases of partial response showed intermediate ADCC; none of the three patients unable to mount ADCC had significant tumor regression. These data indicate that quantity and lytic efficiency of CD16(+) lymphocytes are major factors for ADCC induction by trastuzumab, and confirm that breast cancer responses to short-term trastuzumab monotherapy may depend on involvement of the ADCC mechanism.


PLOS Pathogens | 2008

Lysis of endogenously infected CD4+ T cell blasts by rIL-2 activated autologous natural killer cells from HIV-infected viremic individuals.

Manuela Fogli; Domenico Mavilio; Enrico Brunetta; Stefania Varchetta; Khaled Ata; Gregg Roby; Colin Kovacs; Dean Follmann; Daniela Pende; Jeffrey P. Ward; Edward D. Barker; Emanuela Marcenaro; Alessandro Moretta; Anthony S. Fauci

Understanding the cellular mechanisms that ensure an appropriate innate immune response against viral pathogens is an important challenge of biomedical research. In vitro studies have shown that natural killer (NK) cells purified from healthy donors can kill heterologous cell lines or autologous CD4+ T cell blasts exogenously infected with several strains of HIV-1. However, it is not known whether the deleterious effects of high HIV-1 viremia interferes with the NK cell-mediated cytolysis of autologous, endogenously HIV-1-infected CD4+ T cells. Here, we stimulate primary CD4+ T cells, purified ex vivo from HIV-1-infected viremic patients, with PHA and rIL2 (with or without rIL-7). This experimental procedure allows for the significant expansion and isolation of endogenously infected CD4+ T cell blasts detected by intracellular staining of p24 HIV-1 core antigen. We show that, subsequent to the selective down-modulation of MHC class-I (MHC-I) molecules, HIV-1-infected p24pos blasts become partially susceptible to lysis by rIL-2-activated NK cells, while uninfected p24neg blasts are spared from killing. This NK cell-mediated killing occurs mainly through the NKG2D activation pathway. However, the degree of NK cell cytolytic activity against autologous, endogenously HIV-1-infected CD4+ T cell blasts that down-modulate HLA-A and –B alleles and against heterologous MHC-Ineg cell lines is particularly low. This phenomenon is associated with the defective surface expression and engagement of natural cytotoxicity receptors (NCRs) and with the high frequency of the anergic CD56neg/CD16pos subsets of highly dysfunctional NK cells from HIV-1-infected viremic patients. Collectively, our data demonstrate that the chronic viral replication of HIV-1 in infected individuals results in several phenotypic and functional aberrancies that interfere with the NK cell-mediated killing of autologous p24pos blasts derived from primary T cells.


AIDS | 2010

Chronic HIV-1 viremia reverses NKG2A/NKG2C ratio on natural killer cells in patients with human cytomegalovirus co-infection.

Enrico Brunetta; Manuela Fogli; Stefania Varchetta; Luisa Bozzo; Kelly Hudspeth; Emanuela Marcenaro; Alessandro Moretta; Domenico Mavilio

Background:The HIV-1-induced expansion of highly dysfunctional natural killer (NK) cell subsets represents a strategy to evade NK cell antiviral functions. In this context, the loss of NKG2Apos NK cells in chronic viremic HIV-1-infected individuals has also been associated with a dramatic expansion of NKG2Cpos NK cells. The viral trigger associated with high frequencies of NK cell subsets expressing NKG2C is still being debated. Objective:To confirm that human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) infection is necessary for the expansion of NKG2Cpos NK cells and to assess whether this phenomenon affects NKG2A/NKG2C ratio on NK cells in patients coinfected with HIV-1 and HCMV. Design:We measured the expression of NKG2A and NKG2C on NK cells from 70 healthy donors, 21 early, 96 chronic and 27 long-term nonprogressors (LTNPs) HIV-1-infected patients using a multicolor flow cytometric approach. HCMV infection was detected by titrating the serum levels of specific circulating antibodies. Results:A significant expansion of NKG2Cpos NK cells could be detected only in HCMV-infected patients. This phenotypic feature, together with the HIV-1-mediated downmodulation of NKG2A, pathologically reverses the ratio of NKG2A/NKG2C uniquely on NK cells from chronic viremic HIV-1-infected patients with a concomitant HCMV infection. The normalization of NKG2A/NKG2C ratio to values more than one occurred only after 24 months of suppression of HIV-1 replication following antiretroviral therapy. Conclusion:The inversion of NKG2A/NKG2C ratio characterizes advanced stages of HIV-1 disease in patients showing a concomitant HCMV infection. This NK cell immune parameter renders this cohort of patients distinguishable from LTNPs and early HIV-1-infected individuals.


Hepatology | 2012

Impaired intrahepatic natural killer cell cytotoxic function in chronic hepatitis C virus infection

Stefania Varchetta; Dalila Mele; Stefania Mantovani; Barbara Oliviero; Eleonora Cremonesi; Serena Ludovisi; Giuseppe Michelone; M. Alessiani; Riccardo Rosati; Marco Montorsi; Mario U. Mondelli

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) persistence in the host results from inefficiencies of innate and adaptive immune responses. Most studies addressing the role of innate immunity concentrated on peripheral blood (PB) natural killer (NK) cells, whereas only limited information is available on intrahepatic (IH) NK cells. We therefore examined phenotypic and functional features of IH and PB NK cells in paired liver biopsy and venous blood samples from 70 patients with chronic HCV infection and 26 control persons subjected to cholecystectomy for gallstones as controls. Ex vivo isolated IH NK cells from HCV‐infected patients displayed unique phenotypic features, including increased expression of NKp46‐activating receptor in the face of reduced tumor necrosis factor–related apoptosis‐inducing ligand (TRAIL) and cluster of differentiation (CD) 107a expression, which resulted in impaired degranulation compared with controls. To gain insights into the effect of HCV on NK cells, we exposed peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from patients and healthy donors to cell‐culture–derived HCV (HCVcc) and measured NK cell degranulation, TRAIL, and phosphorylated extracellular signal‐regulated kinase 1/2 (pERK1/2) expression. Exposure of PBMCs to HCVcc significantly boosted NK degranulation, pERK1/2, and TRAIL expression in healthy donors, but not in patients with chronic HCV infection, a defect that was completely reversed by interferon‐alpha. Purified NK cells showed a minimal, though significant, increase in degranulation and TRAIL expression, both in patients and controls, after exposure to HCVcc. Conclusions: These findings indicate dysfunctional IH NK cell cytotoxicity associated with TRAIL down‐regulation in chronic HCV infection, which may contribute to virus persistence. PB NK cell impairment upon exposure to HCVcc suggests the existence of an accessory cell‐dependent NK cell lytic defect in chronic HCV infection predominantly involving the TRAIL pathway. (HEPATOLOGY 2012;56:841–849)


European Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2010

Natural killer cells in viral hepatitis: facts and controversies

Mario U. Mondelli; Stefania Varchetta; Barbara Oliviero

Eur J Clin Invest 2010; 40 (9): 851–863


Blood | 2009

The decreased expression of Siglec-7 represents an early marker of dysfunctional natural killer cell subsets associated with high levels of HIV-1 viremia

Enrico Brunetta; Manuela Fogli; Stefania Varchetta; Luisa Bozzo; Kelly Hudspeth; Emanuela Marcenaro; Alessandro Moretta; Domenico Mavilio

HIV-1 has developed several strategies to evade natural killer (NK)-cell antiviral functions. One of these mechanisms is the HIV-1-induced expansion of highly dysfunctional NK-cell subsets. Here, we analyze a large cohort of HIV-1-infected patients in early or chronic phases of infection, both cross-sectionally and longitudinally. We demonstrate that a striking decrease in the surface expression of sialic acid-binding immunoglobulin-like lectin 7 (Siglec-7) represents the earliest marker of the aberrant NK-cell dysregulation, which precedes the down-modulation of CD56 mostly occurring in patients with chronic HIV-1 viremia. The combined detection of Siglec-7 and CD56 allows the identification of 2 new pathologic NK-cell subsets expanded preferentially in early (Siglec-7-/CD56+) or chronic (Siglec-7-/CD56-) stages of HIV-1 infection. Remarkably, these phenotypic abnormalities were directly associated with progressive and distinct impairments of NK-cell functions. The aforementioned NK-cell aberrancies could be observed only in the presence of high levels of viral replication and not in patients with low or undetectable HIV-1 viremia, such as long-term nonprogressors or patients having undergone antiretroviral therapy. High frequencies of Siglec-7-/CD56+ and Siglec-7-/CD56- pathologic NK cells reflect the immune and clinical status of HIV-1 infection and can also track the effectiveness of therapy.


Journal of Hepatology | 2013

Natural killer cell dynamic profile is associated with treatment outcome in patients with chronic HCV infection

Barbara Oliviero; Dalila Mele; Elisabetta Degasperi; A. Aghemo; Eleonora Cremonesi; Maria Grazia Rumi; Carmine Tinelli; Stefania Varchetta; Stefania Mantovani; M. Colombo; Mario U. Mondelli

BACKGROUND & AIMS A substantial proportion of patients with chronic hepatitis C virus infection treated with pegylated interferon α/ribavirin fail to achieve sustained virological response (SVR). Since growing evidence suggests that innate immunity may influence treatment responses, we examined natural killer (NK) cell phenotypic and functional changes during standard antiviral therapy. METHODS Expression of several NK-cell regulatory molecules was evaluated by flow cytometry in 37 consecutive patients with chronic HCV infection at baseline and at different time points during and after discontinuation of treatment. Cytokine production was evaluated by intracellular staining. Cytolytic potential was assessed as degranulation and as antibody-dependent cytotoxicity. RESULTS Baseline frequencies of CD56(dim) NK cells and perforin content were significantly higher, whereas CD16 expression was lower in SVR vs. non-responder subjects. Analysis by linear regression for repeated measures during the first 12 weeks showed significantly increased frequencies of activated (CD69(+)) NK cells in rapid virological responders (RVR) and identified a typical NK cell profile associated with SVR, featuring higher NK perforin content, lower CD16 expression, and higher proportion of CD56(dim)/CD16(-) cells. Moreover, SVR patients displayed higher natural and antibody-dependent NK cell cytotoxicity. IL28B rs12979860 CC homozygosis was significantly associated with SVR, independently of NK-cell phenotype and function. CONCLUSIONS Different NK-cell phenotypic and functional features, in patients with chronic hepatitis C treated with standard therapy, were observed between non-responder vs. SVR patients, suggesting a potential role of NK cells in the response to treatment.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Engagement of Siglec-7 Receptor Induces a Pro-Inflammatory Response Selectively in Monocytes

Stefania Varchetta; Enrico Brunetta; Alessandra Roberto; Joanna Mikulak; Kelly Hudspeth; Mario U. Mondelli; Domenico Mavilio

Sialic acid binding immunoglobulin-like lectin-7 (Siglec-7) is a trans-membrane receptor carrying immunoreceptor tyrosine based inhibitory motifs (ITIMs) and delivering inhibitory signals upon ligation with sialylated glycans. This inhibitory function can be also targeted by several pathogens that have evolved to express sialic acids on their surface to escape host immune responses. Here, we demonstrate that cross-linking of Siglec-7 by a specific monoclonal antibody (mAb) induces a remarkably high production of IL-6, IL-1α, CCL4/MIP-1β, IL-8 and TNF-α. Among the three immune cell subsets known to constitutively express Siglec-7, the production of these pro-inflammatory cytokines and chemokines selectively occurs in monocytes and not in Natural Killer or T lymphocytes. This Siglec-7-mediated activating function is associated with the phosphorylation of the extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) pathway. The present study also shows that sialic acid-free Zymosan yeast particles are able to bind Siglec-7 on monocytes and that this interaction mimics the ability of the anti Siglec-7 mAb to induce the production of pro-inflammatory mediators. Indeed, blocking or silencing Siglec-7 in primary monocytes greatly reduced the production of inflammatory cytokines and chemokines in response to Zymosan, thus confirming that Siglec-7 participates in generating a monocyte-mediated inflammatory outcome following pathogen recognition. The presence of an activating form of Siglec-7 in monocytes provides the host with a new and alternative mechanism to encounter pathogens not expressing sialylated glycans.


Frontiers in Immunology | 2012

Natural killer cell functional dichotomy: a feature of chronic viral hepatitis?

Mario U. Mondelli; Barbara Oliviero; Dalila Mele; Stefania Mantovani; Chiara Gazzabin; Stefania Varchetta

Natural killer (NK) cells are involved in innate immune responses to viral infections either via direct cytotoxicity which destroys virus-infected cells or production of immunoregulatory cytokines which modulate adaptive immunity and directly inhibit virus replication. These functions are mediated by different NK subpopulations, with cytotoxicity being generally performed by CD56dim NK cells, whereas CD56bright NK cells are mainly involved in cytokine secretion. NK functional defects are usually combined so that impaired degranulation is often associated with deficient cytokine production. Innate immunity is thought to be relevant in the control of hepatitis virus infections such as hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV), and recent findings reproducibly indicate that NK cells in chronic viral hepatitis are characterized by a functional dichotomy, featuring a conserved or enhanced cytotoxicity and a reduced production of interferon (IFN)-γ and tumor necrosis factor-α. In chronic HCV infection this appears to be caused by altered IFN-α signaling resulting from increased signal transducer and activator of transcription 1 (STAT1) phosphorylation, which polarizes NK cells toward cytotoxicity, and a concomitantly reduced IFN-α induced STAT4 phosphorylation yielding reduced IFN-γ mRNA levels. These previously unappreciated findings are compatible on the one hand with the inability to clear HCV and HBV from the liver and on the other they may contribute to understand why these patients are often resistant to IFN-α-based therapies.

Collaboration


Dive into the Stefania Varchetta's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge