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Dive into the research topics where Victoria L. Gadd is active.

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Featured researches published by Victoria L. Gadd.


Hepatology | 2014

The portal inflammatory infiltrate and ductular reaction in human nonalcoholic fatty liver disease

Victoria L. Gadd; Richard Skoien; Elizabeth E. Powell; Kevin J. Fagan; Clay Winterford; Leigh Horsfall; Katharine M. Irvine; Andrew D. Clouston

Although nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is conventionally assessed histologically for lobular features of inflammation, development of portal fibrosis appears to be associated with disease progression. We investigated the composition of the portal inflammatory infiltrate and its relationship to the ductular reaction (DR), a second portal phenomenon implicated in fibrogenesis. The portal inflammatory infiltrate may contribute directly to fibrogenesis as well as influence the fate of the DR hepatic progenitor cells (HPCs), regulating the balance between liver repair and fibrosis. The presence of portal inflammation in NAFLD was strongly correlated with disease severity (fibrosis stage) and the DR. The portal infiltrate was characterized by immunostaining NAFLD liver biopsy sections (n = 33) for broad leukocyte subset markers (CD68, CD3, CD8, CD4, CD20, and neutrophil elastase) and selected inflammatory markers (matrix metalloproteinase 9 and interleukin [IL]‐17). Cells expressing all markers examined were identified throughout the liver lobules and in portal tracts, although portal tracts were more densely populated (P < 0.01), and dominated by CD68+ macrophages and CD8+ lymphocytes, at all stages of disease. An increase in portal macrophages in NAFLD patients with steatosis alone (P < 0.01) was the earliest change detected, even before elevated expression of the proinflammatory cytokines, IL1B and TNF, in patients with early NASH (P < 0.05). Portal and periductal accumulation of all other cell types examined occurred in progressed NASH (all P < 0.05). Conclusion: Knowledge of the complex cellular composition of the portal inflammatory infiltrate and HPC/DR niche in NAFLD will shape future functional studies to elucidate the contribution of portal inflammation to HPC differentiation and NAFLD pathogenesis. (Hepatology 2014;59:1393‐1405)


Hepatology | 2014

Ductular reaction in hereditary hemochromatosis: The link between hepatocyte senescence and fibrosis progression

Marnie J. Wood; Victoria L. Gadd; Lawrie W. Powell; Grant A. Ramm; Andrew D. Clouston

The development of portal fibrosis following the iron loading of hepatocytes is the first stage of fibrogenesis in hereditary hemochromatosis. In other chronic liver diseases it has been shown that a ductular reaction (DR) appears early, correlates with fibrosis progression, and is a consequence of activation of an alternative pathway of hepatocyte replication. This study was designed to investigate the presence of the DR in hemochromatosis and describe its associations. Liver biopsies from 63 C282Y homozygous patients were assessed for hepatic iron concentration (HIC) and graded for iron loading, fibrosis stage, steatosis, and inflammation. Immunostaining allowed quantification of the DR, hepatocyte senescence and proliferation, and analysis incorporated clinical data. Hepatocyte senescence was positively correlated with HIC, serum ferritin, and oxidative stress. A DR was demonstrated and occurred prior to histological fibrosis. HIC, age, hepatocyte senescence and proliferation, portal inflammation, and excessive alcohol consumption all had significant associations with the extent of the DR. In multivariate analysis, iron loading, hepatocyte replicative arrest, and portal inflammation remained independently and significantly associated with the DR. Of factors associated with fibrosis progression, the DR (odds ratio [OR] 10.86 P < 0.0001) and the presence of portal inflammation (OR 4.31, P = 0.028) remained significant after adjustment for cofactors. The extent of the DR regressed following therapeutic venesection. Conclusion: Iron loading of hepatocytes leads to impaired replication, stimulating the development of the DR in hemochromatosis and this correlates strongly with hepatic fibrosis. Portal inflammation occurs in hemochromatosis and is independently associated with the DR and fibrosis, and thus its role in this disease should be evaluated further. (Hepatology 2014;59:848–857)


Liver International | 2013

Portal, but not lobular, macrophages express matrix metalloproteinase-9: association with the ductular reaction and fibrosis in chronic hepatitis C

Victoria L. Gadd; Michelle Melino; Sandrine Roy; Leigh Horsfall; Peter O'Rourke; Millicent R. Williams; Katharine M. Irvine; Matthew J. Sweet; Julie R. Jonsson; Andrew D. Clouston; Elizabeth E. Powell

Liver macrophages are a heterogeneous cell population that produces factors involved in fibrogenesis and matrix turnover, including matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) ‐9. During liver injury, their close proximity to hepatic progenitor cells and the ductular reaction may enable them to regulate liver repair and fibrosis.


American Journal of Pathology | 2016

Spatiotemporal Characterization of the Cellular and Molecular Contributors to Liver Fibrosis in a Murine Hepatotoxic-Injury Model.

Michelle Melino; Victoria L. Gadd; Kylie A. Alexander; Lynette Beattie; Katie E. Lineburg; Michelle Martinez; Bianca E. Teal; Laetitia Le Texier; Katharine M. Irvine; Gregory Miller; Glen M. Boyle; Geoffrey R. Hill; Andrew D. Clouston; Elizabeth E. Powell; Kelli P. A. MacDonald

The interplay between the inflammatory infiltrate and tissue resident cell populations invokes fibrogenesis. However, the temporal and mechanistic contributions of these cells to fibrosis are obscure. To address this issue, liver inflammation, ductular reaction (DR), and fibrosis were induced in C57BL/6 mice by thioacetamide administration for up to 12 weeks. Thioacetamide treatment induced two phases of liver fibrosis. A rapid pericentral inflammatory infiltrate enriched in F4/80(+) monocytes co-localized with SMA(+) myofibroblasts resulted in early collagen deposition, marking the start of an initial fibrotic phase (1 to 6 weeks). An expansion of bone marrow-derived macrophages preceded a second phase, characterized by accelerated progression of fibrosis (>6 weeks) after DR migration from the portal tracts to the centrilobular site of injury, in association with an increase in DR/macrophage interactions. Although chemokine (C-C motif) ligand 2 (CCL2) mRNA was induced rapidly in response to thioacetamide, CCL2 deficiency only partially abrogated fibrosis. In contrast, colony-stimulating factor 1 receptor blockade diminished C-C chemokine receptor type 2 [CCR2(neg) (Ly6C(lo))] monocytes, attenuated the DR, and significantly reduced fibrosis, illustrating the critical role of colony-stimulating factor 1-dependent monocyte/macrophage differentiation and linking the two phases of injury. In response to liver injury, colony-stimulating factor 1 drives early monocyte-mediated myofibroblast activation and collagen deposition, subsequent macrophage differentiation, and their association with the advancing DR, the formation of fibrotic septa, and the progression of liver fibrosis to cirrhosis.


Fibrogenesis & Tissue Repair | 2015

Deletion of Wntless in myeloid cells exacerbates liver fibrosis and the ductular reaction in chronic liver injury

Katharine M. Irvine; Andrew D. Clouston; Victoria L. Gadd; Gregory Miller; Weng-Yew Wong; Michelle Melino; Muralidhara Rao Maradana; Kelli P. A. MacDonald; Richard A. Lang; Matthew J. Sweet; Antje Blumenthal; Elizabeth E. Powell

BackgroundMacrophages play critical roles in liver regeneration, fibrosis development and resolution. They are among the first responders to liver injury and are implicated in orchestrating the fibrogenic response via multiple mechanisms. Macrophages are also intimately associated with the activated hepatic progenitor cell (HPC) niche or ductular reaction that develops in parallel with fibrosis. Among the many macrophage-derived mediators implicated in liver disease progression, a key role for macrophage-derived Wnt proteins in driving pro-regenerative HPC activation towards a hepatocellular fate has been suggested. Wnt proteins, in general, however, have been associated with both pro- and anti-fibrogenic activities in the liver and other organs. We investigated the role of macrophage-derived Wnt proteins in fibrogenesis and HPC activation in murine models of chronic liver disease by conditionally deleting Wntless expression, which encodes a chaperone essential for Wnt protein secretion, in LysM-Cre-expressing myeloid cells (LysM-Wls mice).ResultsFibrosis and HPC activation were exacerbated in LysM-Wls mice compared to littermate controls, in the absence of an apparent increase in myofibroblast activation or interstitial collagen mRNA expression, in both the TAA and CDE models of chronic liver disease. Increased Epcam mRNA levels paralleled the increased HPC activation and more mature ductular reactions, in LysM-Wls mice. Increased Epcam expression in LysM-Wls HPC was also observed, consistent with a more cholangiocytic phenotype. No differences in the mRNA expression levels of key pro-inflammatory and pro-fibrotic cytokines or the macrophage-derived HPC mitogen, Tweak, were observed. LysM-Wls mice exhibited increased expression of Timp1, encoding the key Mmp inhibitor Timp1 that blocks interstitial collagen degradation, and, in the TAA model, reduced expression of the anti-fibrotic matrix metalloproteinases, Mmp12 and Mmp13, suggesting a role for macrophage-derived Wnt proteins in restraining fibrogenesis during ongoing liver injury.ConclusionIn summary, these data suggest that macrophage-derived Wnt proteins possess anti-fibrogenic potential in chronic liver disease, which may be able to be manipulated for therapeutic benefit.


JCI insight | 2016

CRIg-expressing peritoneal macrophages are associated with disease severity in patients with cirrhosis and ascites

Katharine M. Irvine; Xuan Banh; Victoria L. Gadd; Kyle Wojcik; Juliana K. Ariffin; Sara Jose; Samuel W. Lukowski; Gregory J. Baillie; Matthew J. Sweet; Elizabeth E. Powell

Infections are an important cause of morbidity and mortality in patients with decompensated cirrhosis and ascites. Hypothesizing that innate immune dysfunction contributes to susceptibility to infection, we assessed ascitic fluid macrophage phenotype and function. The expression of complement receptor of the immunoglobulin superfamily (CRIg) and CCR2 defined two phenotypically and functionally distinct peritoneal macrophage subpopulations. The proportion of CRIghi macrophages differed between patients and in the same patient over time, and a high proportion of CRIghi macrophages was associated with reduced disease severity (model for end-stage liver disease) score. As compared with CRIglo macrophages, CRIghi macrophages were highly phagocytic and displayed enhanced antimicrobial effector activity. Transcriptional profiling by RNA sequencing and comparison with human macrophage and murine peritoneal macrophage expression signatures highlighted similarities among CRIghi cells, human macrophages, and mouse F4/80hi resident peritoneal macrophages and among CRIglo macrophages, human monocytes, and mouse F4/80lo monocyte-derived peritoneal macrophages. These data suggest that CRIghi and CRIglo macrophages may represent a tissue-resident population and a monocyte-derived population, respectively. In conclusion, ascites fluid macrophage subset distribution and phagocytic capacity is highly variable among patients with chronic liver disease. Regulating the numbers and/or functions of these macrophage populations could provide therapeutic opportunities in cirrhotic patients.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Altered Peripheral Blood Monocyte Phenotype and Function in Chronic Liver Disease: Implications for Hepatic Recruitment and Systemic Inflammation

Victoria L. Gadd; Preya J. Patel; Sara Jose; Leigh Horsfall; Elizabeth E. Powell; Katharine M. Irvine

Background and Aims Liver and systemic inflammatory factors influence monocyte phenotype and function, which has implications for hepatic recruitment and subsequent inflammatory and fibrogenic responses, as well as host defence. Methods Peripheral blood monocyte surface marker (CD14, CD16, CD163, CSF1R, CCR2, CCR4, CCR5, CXCR3, CXCR4, CX3CR1, HLA-DR, CD62L, SIGLEC-1) expression and capacity for phagocytosis, oxidative burst and LPS-stimulated TNF production were assessed in patients with hepatitis C (HCV) (n = 39) or non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) (n = 34) (classified as non-advanced disease, compensated cirrhosis and decompensated cirrhosis) and healthy controls (n = 11) by flow cytometry. Results The selected markers exhibited similar monocyte-subset-specific expression patterns between patients and controls. Monocyte phenotypic signatures differed between NAFLD and HCV patients, with an increased proportion of CD16+ non-classical monocytes in NAFLD, but increased expression of CXCR3 and CXCR4 in HCV. In both cohorts, monocyte CCR2 expression was reduced and CCR4 elevated over controls. CD62L expression was specifically elevated in patients with decompensated cirrhosis and positively correlated with the model-for-end-stage-liver-disease score. Functionally, monocytes from patients with decompensated cirrhosis had equal phagocytic capacity, but displayed features of dysfunction, characterised by lower HLA-DR expression and blunted oxidative responses. Lower monocyte TNF production in response to LPS stimulation correlated with time to death in 7 (46%) of the decompensated patients who died within 8 months of recruitment. Conclusions Chronic HCV and NAFLD differentially affect circulating monocyte phenotype, suggesting specific injury-induced signals may contribute to hepatic monocyte recruitment and systemic activation state. Monocyte function, however, was similarly impaired in patients with both HCV and NAFLD, particularly in advanced disease, which likely contributes to the increased susceptibility to infection in these patients.


Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry | 2014

Combining Immunodetection with Histochemical Techniques The Effect of Heat-induced Antigen Retrieval on Picro-Sirius Red Staining

Victoria L. Gadd

Picro-Sirius red is a routine diagnostic stain intended for the histological visualization of collagen fibers (fibrosis) in tissue. Multi-label immunohistochemistry is a powerful tool used by researchers to visualize different cell types and their location within a tissue specimen, and to observe co-localization of antigens. Combining the specificity of immunodetection with the simplicity of Sirius red staining will allow researchers to visualize multi-antigen detection in relation to fibrosis, a common histological feature of injury in many chronic diseases. Pre-treatment of formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue (FFPE) specimens with antigen retrieval is essential for the work-up of most commercially available antibodies. The most common form of antigen retrieval involves boiling tissue specimens in buffer to break the cross-linkages caused by formalin fixation. However, this method causes tissue modification and collagen fiber shrinkage leading to suboptimal results when counterstaining for Sirius red. Reduced heat and enzymatic digestion are antigen retrieval methods compatible with Sirius red counterstaining. This paper will discuss the difficulties faced when combining these two staining methods, and provide a detailed method for the simultaneous detection of antigen and Sirius red in FFPE tissues.


Current Hepatitis Reports | 2014

New Paradigms in the Histopathology of NAFLD

Andrew D. Clouston; Victoria L. Gadd; Katharine M. Irvine; Elizabeth E. Powell

Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is a rapidly growing global health problem. It can be separated histologically into two broad groups: steatosis, which usually follows a benign clinical course and non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) that typically has hepatocyte ballooning, necroinflammatory activity and can progress to fibrosis and cirrhosis. More recently the histological spectrum has expanded with the recognition of a paediatric pattern of NASH that has portal-based inflammation and fibrosis without ballooning. An overlap pattern is also described. There is increasing interest in the portal changes of NASH as these correlate with the progression of fibrosis. Disease-associated hepatocyte senescence appears to trigger an alternative regenerative pathway and the development of a periportal ductular reaction (DR), which in turn may have a role in progressive fibrogenesis. Portal inflammation, particularly in association with the DR, is an area of recent study.


Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology | 2010

Macrophage-secreted products induce a phenotypic change in hepatocytes: Implications for fibrogenesis

Michelle Melino; Elizabeth E. Powell; Victoria L. Gadd; Richard Skoien; Gene V. Walker; Andrew D. Clouston; J. R. Jonsson

Matrix metalloproteinases and their inhibitors are altered in a time-course model of irinotecaninduced mucositis N AL-DASOOQI, R GIBSON, J BOWEN, R LOGAN, A STRINGER, D KEEFE Department of Medicine, University of Adelaide, Department of Medical Oncology, Royal Adelaide Hospital, School of Medical Sciences, University of Adelaide, Division of Surgical Pathology, SA Pathology, Oral Pathology, School of Dentistry, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Adelaide, Cancer Council South Australia, Eastwood, Australia

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Michelle Melino

QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute

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Richard Skoien

University of Queensland

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Kevin J. Fagan

Princess Alexandra Hospital

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Leigh Horsfall

University of Queensland

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Gene V. Walker

University of Queensland

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Gregory Miller

University of Queensland

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