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Featured researches published by Steinar Sørnes.


Journal of Immunological Methods | 2000

Phagocytosis: measurement by flow cytometry.

A. K. Lehmann; Steinar Sørnes; Alfred Halstensen

Defects in phagocyte function or in the interactions between phagocytes, microorganisms and serum factors are associated with increased susceptibility to infection. Flow cytometry (FCM) offers rapid and reproducible measurements of single cells in suspension and, following staining with one or more fluorochromes, simultaneous biochemical and functional examinations of the complex process of phagocytosis. FCM techniques have been used for more than two decades to evaluate phagocyte cellular defects, as well as species-specific serum opsonic activities during disease and after vaccination. Recently, multiparameter assays have been developed to reveal the antigen-specificity of opsonophagocytic responses. This review presents basic methodological principles of FCM quantitation of phagocytosis and intracellular oxidative burst, and assays to evaluate species-specific and antigen-specific opsonophagocytosis. The calculations performed to present opsonophagocytosis results, as well as technical and methodological challenges are discussed, and examples of applications are presented.


Toxicology in Vitro | 2008

Induction of cell death by TiO2 nanoparticles : Studies on a human monoblastoid cell line

Carmen I. Vamanu; Mihaela R. Cimpan; Paul Johan Høl; Steinar Sørnes; Stein Atle Lie; Nils Roar Gjerdet

The cellular responses to degradation products from titanium (Ti) implants are important indicators for the biocompatibility of these widely used implantable medical devices. The potential toxicity of nanoparticulate matter released from implants has been scarcely studied. The aim of this study was to investigate the potential of TiO2 nanoparticles to induce modifications characteristic for death by apoptosis and/or necrosis in U937 human monoblastoid cells. Suspensions of TiO2 nanoparticles with a diameter <100nm were prepared in RPMI cell culture medium at concentrations that covered a range (0.005-4mg/ml) corresponding to concentrations found in blood, plasma, or in tissues surrounding Ti implants. The cells were exposed to the nanoparticulate suspensions for 24 and 48h and the responses were evaluated by flow cytometry and transmission electron microscopy. TiO2 nanoparticles induced both apoptotic and necrotic modifications in U937 cells.


Journal of Immunological Methods | 1989

Flow cytometric assay for the measurement of serum opsonins to Neisseria meningitidis serogroup B, serotype 15

Haakon Sjursen; Robert Bjerknes; Alfred Halstensen; Are Næss; Steinar Sørnes; Claus Ola Solberg

A flow cytometric phagocytosis assay has been developed for the measurement of human serum opsonins to serogroup B meningococci. Live bacteria and bacteria inactivated by heat, formalin or ethanol were labelled with fluorescein-isothiocyanate (FITC). The bacteria were opsonized with sera from patients with group B meningococcal disease and sera from healthy controls, and phagocytosis determined by combined measurements of FITC-fluorescence and forward angle light scatter. Optimal sensitivity was obtained using viable bacteria, 5% serum, 20 bacteria per leukocyte capable of phagocytosis, 7.5 min opsonization time, 5 min phagocytosis time, 37 degrees C, and continuous agitation during opsonization and phagocytosis. The opsonic activity of sera from convalescent patients was markedly higher than that of sera from patients with acute illness. Only minor day-to-day and interindividual variations were observed. The flow cytometric phagocytosis technique is a rapid and reproducible method for the measurement of serum opsonins to meningococci.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2011

Human Cellular Immune Response Against Giardia lamblia 5 Years After Acute Giardiasis

Kurt Hanevik; Einar K. Kristoffersen; Staffan G. Svärd; Øystein Bruserud; Emma Ringqvist; Steinar Sørnes; Nina Langeland

BACKGROUND Clinical and epidemiological studies have suggested the development of acquired immunity in individuals previously infected with Giardia lamblia. However, there are no data on the long-term cellular immunity and genotype cross-reactivity. An outbreak of assemblage B giardiasis in a nonendemic area made it possible to evaluate the long-term cellular mediated immunity and its specificity toward the 2 Giardia assemblages known to infect humans. METHODS Peripheral blood mononuclear cells from 19 individuals infected with Giardia assemblage B 5 years previously and from 10 uninfected controls were cultured with antigens from assemblage A and B Giardia trophozoites for 6 days. Cell-mediated immunity was measured by a (3)H-thymidine proliferation assay and flow cytometric analysis of activation markers HLA-DR, CD45RO, CD25, and CD26 in T-cell subsets. RESULTS Proliferation responses were significantly elevated in the group previously exposed to Giardia for nearly all Giardia antigens tested. Individual responses toward Giardia trophozoite whole cell, cytosolic, and excretory-secretory antigens from both assemblages correlated well. Activation marker responses were mainly seen in CD4 T cells. CONCLUSIONS G. lamblia infection induces long-term, albeit variable, cellular immune responses that are not assemblage specific and that are largely driven by CD4 T-cell activation.


Journal of Periodontology | 2009

Fusobacterium nucleatum Enters Normal Human Oral Fibroblasts In Vitro

Gabriela Dabija-Wolter; Mihaela-Roxana Cimpan; Daniela Elena Costea; Anne Christine Johannessen; Steinar Sørnes; Evelyn Neppelberg; Mohammed Al-Haroni; Nils Skaug; Vidar Bakken

BACKGROUND Fusobacterium nucleatum, a commensal opportunistic oral bacterium, is capable of invading gingival epithelial cells, but the entrance into human primary oral fibroblast cells has not been documented. This study evaluated the ability of three strains of F. nucleatum (F. nucleatum ssp. nucleatum, F. nucleatum ssp. polymorphum, and F. nucleatum ssp. vincentii) to enter gingival fibroblasts (GFs) and periodontal ligament fibroblasts (PLFs). METHODS GFs and PLFs were cocultured for various periods of time with different strains of F. nucleatum. Scanning and transmission electron microscopy, together with confocal laser scanning microscopy, were used to visualize the entrance and presence of bacteria in host cells. Flow cytometry was performed to compare the load of internalized bacteria in GFs and PLFs exposed for 3 and 5 hours to live F. nucleatum labeled with fluorescein isothiocyanate. RESULTS All three strains of F. nucleatum were found entering and located in the cytoplasm of GFs and PLFs after 1 hour of exposure. Flow cytometry tests revealed a significant increase in the fluorescent signal, compared to baseline, derived from bacteria internalized in fibroblasts exposed for 3 hours (P <0.001); a further increase was found at 5 hours. The greatest bacterial mass in exposed fibroblasts of both types was of F. nucleatum ssp. polymorphum; the smallest was of F. nucleatum ssp. vincentii. Although not statistically significant, PLFs had a higher bacterial load than corresponding GFs. CONCLUSION F. nucleatum was capable of entering GFs and PLFs in a manner that is dependent on the cell type and the bacterial strain.


Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2016

Human Memory CD4+ T Cell Immune Responses against Giardia lamblia.

Christina Skår Saghaug; Steinar Sørnes; Dimitra Peirasmaki; Staffan G. Svärd; Nina Langeland; Kurt Hanevik

ABSTRACT The intestinal protozoan parasite Giardia lamblia may cause severe prolonged diarrheal disease or pass unnoticed as an asymptomatic infection. T cells seem to play an important role in the immune response to Giardia infection, and memory responses may last years. Recently, TH17 responses have been found in three animal studies of Giardia infection. The aim of this study was to characterize the human CD4+ T cell responses to Giardia. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) were obtained from 21 returning travelers with recent or ongoing giardiasis and 12 low-risk healthy controls and stimulated in vitro with Giardia lamblia proteins. Production of tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α), gamma interferon, interleukin-17A (IL-17A), IL-10, and IL-4 was measured in CD4+ effector memory (EM) T cells after 24 h by flow cytometry. After 6 days of culture, activation and proliferation were measured by flow cytometry, while an array of inflammatory cytokine levels in supernatants were measured with multiplex assays. We found the number of IL-17A-producing CD4+ EM T cells, as well as that of cells simultaneously producing both IL-17A and TNF-α, to be significantly elevated in the Giardia-exposed individuals after 24 h of antigen stimulation. In supernatants of PBMCs stimulated with Giardia antigens for 6 days, we found inflammation-associated cytokines, including 1L-17A, as well as CD4+ T cell activation and proliferation, to be significantly elevated in the Giardia-exposed individuals. We conclude that symptomatic Giardia infection in humans induces a CD4+ EM T cell response of which IL-17A production seems to be an important component.


BMC Infectious Diseases | 2012

Immunophenotyping in post-giardiasis functional gastrointestinal disease and chronic fatigue syndrome

Kurt Hanevik; Einar K. Kristoffersen; Steinar Sørnes; Kristine Mørch; Halvor Naess; Ann Christin Rivenes; Jørn Bødtker; Trygve Hausken; Nina Langeland

BackgroundA Giardia outbreak was associated with development of post-infectious functional gastrointestinal disorders (PI-FGID) and chronic fatigue syndrome (PI-CFS). Markers of immune dysfunction have given conflicting results in CFS and FGID patient populations. The aim of this study was to evaluate a wide selection of markers of immune dysfunction in these two co-occurring post-infectious syndromes.Methods48 patients, reporting chronic fatigue in a questionnaire study, were clinically evaluated five years after the outbreak and grouped according to Fukuda criteria for CFS (n=19) and idiopathic chronic fatigue (n=5) and Rome II criteria for FGIDs (n=54). 22 Giardia exposed non-fatigued individuals and 10 healthy unexposed individuals were recruited as controls. Peripheral blood lymphocyte subsets were analyzed by flow cytometry.ResultsIn peripheral blood we found significantly higher CD8 T-cell levels in PI-FGID, and significantly lower NK-cell levels in PI-CFS patients. Severity of abdominal and fatigue symptoms correlated negatively with NK-cell levels. A tendency towards lower T-cell CD26 expression in FGID was seen.ConclusionPatients with PI-CFS and/or PI-FGID 5 years after Giardia lamblia infection showed alterations in NK-cell and CD8-cell populations suggesting a possible immunological abnormality in these conditions. We found no significant changes in other markers examined in this well-defined group of PI-CFS and PI-FGID elicited by a gastrointestinal infection. Controlling for co-morbid conditions is important in evaluation of CFS-biomarkers.


Fems Immunology and Medical Microbiology | 2004

Comparative analysis of amplified fragment length polymorphism and pulsed field gel electrophoresis in a hospital outbreak and subsequent endemicity of ampicillin-resistant Enterococcus faecium

Roland Jureen; Stig Harthug; Steinar Sørnes; Asbjørn Digranes; Rob J. L. Willems; Nina Langeland

Reliable molecular methods for determination of relatedness between bacterial isolates have become increasingly important to evaluate outbreaks and endemic situations with nosocomial pathogens. In the present study Simpsons index of diversity with calculated confidence intervals was used to compare amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) and pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) analysis of a hospital outbreak of ampicillin-resistant Enterococcus faecium and subsequent endemicity. The outbreak, in a Norwegian tertiary hospital, of infections caused by these enterococci started in 1995 and increased in 1996 after which the situation turned endemic. The purpose of this study was to compare the two methods in this setting and to determine the length of time during an outbreak that these methods are sufficiently valid to be of value for hospital infection control efforts. One hundred and sixty clinical isolates from urine specimens collected during the period 1995-1999 were included. The findings indicate that PFGE and AFLP are equally discriminative and could in this setting be used for typing purposes over the whole 5-year period.


Chemotherapy | 2006

Linezolid and Human Polymorphonuclear Leukocyte Function

Are Næss; Kristin Stenhaug Kilhus; Tone Wikene Nystad; Steinar Sørnes

Background: To examine whether linezolid, a new oxazolidinone antibiotic, has an effect on human polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMN) function. Methods: Flow-cytometric techniques for the demonstration of PMN chemotaxis towards zymosan-activated serum, and phagocytosis and respiratory burst after incubation in linezolid. Results: Linezolid at concentrations of 10– 160 mg/l did not significantly influence PMN function as measured by chemotaxis, phagocytosis and respiratory burst. Conclusions: Linezolid at therapeutic or supratherapeutic concentrations does not influence human PMN function. This applies to the chemically pure substance as well as to the commercial preparation containing additives for intravenous infusion.


British Journal of Nutrition | 2017

High intake of fatty fish, but not of lean fish, improved postprandial glucose regulation and increased the n-3 PUFA content in the leucocyte membrane in healthy overweight adults: a randomised trial

Anita Helland; Marianne Bratlie; Ingrid V. Hagen; Svein A. Mjøs; Steinar Sørnes; Alfred Halstensen; Karl A. Brokstad; Harald Sveier; Grethe Rosenlund; Gunnar Mellgren; Oddrun Anita Gudbrandsen

The prevalence of type 2 diabetes (T2D) is low in populations with a high fish intake; however prospective studies with fish intake have shown positive, negative or no association between fish intake and the risk for T2D. The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of high intake of lean or fatty fish on glucose tolerance, leucocyte membrane fatty acid composition and leucocyte function in overweight/obese adults. In this randomised clinical trial, sixty-eight healthy overweight/obese participants consumed 750 g/week of either lean or fatty fish as dinners, or were instructed to continue their normal eating habits but to avoid fish intake (control group), for 8 weeks. Energy and macronutrient intake and physical activity were not changed within the groups during the study period. High intake of fatty fish, but not of lean fish, significantly improved glucose regulation 120 min postprandially (P=0·012), but did not affect fasting glucose concentration. A smaller increase in fasting to 120 min postprandial insulin C-peptide concentration was seen after fatty fish intake (P=0·012). Lean fish increased the DHA content in leucocyte membranes (P=0·010), and fatty fish increased the total content of n-3 PUFA (P=0·00016) and reduced the content of n-6 PUFA (P=0·00057) in leucocyte membranes. Lean and fatty fish intake did not affect phagocytosis of bacteria ex vivo. The findings suggest that high intake of fatty fish, but not of lean fish, beneficially affected postprandial glucose regulation in overweight/obese adults, and may therefore prevent or delay the development of T2D in this population.

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Claus Ola Solberg

Haukeland University Hospital

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Nina Langeland

Haukeland University Hospital

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Øystein Bruserud

Haukeland University Hospital

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