Κυριακή 11 Αυγούστου 2019


Activated cytotoxic T cells within zoonotic cutaneous leishmaniasis lesions
Thouraya Boussoffara, Mohamed Samir Boubaker, Melika Ben Ahmed, Mourad Mokni, Salma Feriani, Afif Ben Salah, Hechmi Louzir
Pages: 95-104 | First Published: 17 April 2019
 
The aim of this study is to investigate the role of cytotoxic cells on the outcome of the Zoonotic cutaneous leishmaniasis (ZCL) due to infection by Leishmania major. We demonstrated the presence of cytotoxic T lymphocytes expressing high levels of granzyme B and granulysine within ZCL lesions comparing to healthy skin. Immunohistochemical analysis showed that GrB is produced essentially by CD8+T cells.
 Open Access
Flow Plex—A tool for unbiased comprehensive flow cytometry data analysis
Johannes Nowatzky MD, Ezra Resnick MS, Julia Manasson MD, Cristy Stagnar MS, Arshed Fahad Al‐Obeidi MS, Olivier Manches PhD
Pages: 105-111 | First Published: 23 April 2019
This study introduces Flow Plex, a Java‐based computational tool for comprehensive unbiased flow cytometry data analysis we have developed for immunologists without bioinformatics background. Flow Plex allows for the extraction of the entire information content from a given flow cytometry panel and enables the generation of large meta‐data sets that can be processed further using standard or customized statistical support. Applications are in sample classification, biomarker discovery, and bias‐minimizing experimental settings.
Key Messages
  • Computation of all possible combinations of markers used in a given flow cytometry panel allows extraction of the entire information content of the panel in an unbiased fashion.

  • The resulting metadata describing the frequency of all retrievable cell populations within predefined starting populations facilitate sample classification according to disease states and the discovery of cell populations with the potential to serve as biomarkers or research targets.

  • With the program provided, extraction of the entire information content is possible for users of standard flow cytometry analysis software without special computational skills.
 Open Access
IL‐2 modulates Th2 cell responses to glucocorticosteroid: A cause of persistent type 2 inflammation?
Tharsan Kanagalingam, Lauren Solomon, Meerah Vijeyakumaran, Nami Shrestha Palikhe, Harissios Vliagoftis, Lisa Cameron
Pages: 112-124 | First Published: 17 April 2019
 
Propensity to produce interleukin 2 (IL‐2) influences asthma severity and type 2 inflammation.
 Open Access
Disseminated Trichosporon asahii infection in a combined liver‐kidney transplant recipient successfully treated with voriconazole
Ranjit Sah, Arbindra singh Soin, Sony Chawla, Teena Wadhwa, Neha Gupta
Pages: 125-129 | First Published: 20 April 2019
 
Trichosporon asahii is an emerging cause of systemic fungal infection in an immunocompromised host. There are several reports of life threatening disseminated T. asahii infection in a single solid organ (liver or kidney) transplant recipient, in neutropenic and hematological malignancy patients. This is the first case report of disseminated T. asahii infection in a combined liver‐kidney transplant recipient successfully treated with voriconazole.
 Open Access
Immunomodulatory asthma therapy in the equine animal model: A dose‐response study and evaluation of a long‐term effect
John Klier, Carolin Bartl, Sabine Geuder, Katharina J. Geh, Sven Reese, Lutz S. Goehring, Gerhard Winter, Heidrun Gehlen
Pages: 130-149 | First Published: 29 May 2019
 
Equine asthma represents a naturally occurring animal model for human allergic neutrophilic asthma. Inhalative nanoparticle‐bound cytosine‐phosphate‐guanosine (CpG‐GNP) immunotherapy, independent of specific allergens, has already shown promising clinical and immunological results in previous studies and offers the possibility of a causal treatment of the underlying mechanism of the disease. This study analyses the relationship between dose and response, and evaluates a possible long‐term effect. On the immunological level, an anti‐inflammatory, as well as an immunomodulatory effect, apart from a Th2‐ dominated immune response, could be observed. This immunomodulatory inhalation treatment could indicate a new possibility for human allergic asthma therapy.
 Open Access
Microfibrillar‐associated protein 4 in serum is associated with asthma in Danish adolescents and young adults
Benjamin Hoffmann‐Petersen, Raymond Suffolk, Jens Jakob Herrche Petersen, Thomas Houmann Petersen, Kirsten Arendt, Arne Høst, Susanne Halken, Grith Lykke Sorensen, Lone Agertoft
Pages: 150-159 | First Published: 28 June 2019
 
This is the first clinical study investigating the significance of serum microfibrillar‐associated Protein 4 (MFAP4) in adolescents and young adults with asthma. The study reveals an association between the extracellular matrix protein MFAP4 and current asthma in a comprehensively characterized population of adolescents and young adults previously diagnosed with asthma during childhood. The study supports previous findings from experimental in vitro and in vivo studies hypothesizing that MFAP4 plays a role in the pathogenesis of asthma.
 Open Access
Concurrent decreases in the prevalence of wheezing and Ascaris infection among 5‐year‐old children in rural Bangladesh and their regulatory T cell immunity after the implementation of a national deworming program
Haruko Takeuchi, Md. Alfazal Khan, Shaikh Meshbahuddin Ahmad, S. M. Tafsir Hasan, Md. Jahangir Alam, Sayaka Takanashi, Samar Kumar Hore, Sultana Yeasmin, Masamine Jimba, Tsutomu Iwata
Pages: 160-169 | First Published: 29 June 2019
 
Wheezing prevalence decreased despite the decreased burden of Ascarisinfections, which were more prevalent among wheezing children. No association between regulatory T (Treg) cells and wheezing was found. Although Ascaris infection was not a risk factor for wheezing, the national deworming program did not increase wheezing prevalence.
 Open Access
The allergic phenotype during the first 10 years of life in a prospective cohort
Sophia Björkander, Jenny Hallberg, Jan‐Olov Persson, Gunnar Lilja, Caroline Nilsson, Eva Sverremark‐Ekström
Pages: 170-182 | First Published: 17 June 2019
 
Allergic eczema/asthma in early life, being born during the autumn/winter, having multiple allergic symptoms and two allergic parents were all strong predictors for having allergic diseases at 5 and 10 years of age. However, the allergic march seems to be independent of heredity, as IgE‐mediated allergies follow the same trajectories in children with and without allergic heredity.
 Open Access
Allergic sensitization among Danish infants at 13 months of age
Lisbeth M. Thøstesen, Poul‐Erik Kofoed
Pages: 183-190 | First Published: 12 June 2019
 
Sensitization at 13 months of age is primarily toward food allergens. Children with atopic dermatitis are more prone to be sensitized.
 Open Access
Decrease in number of mast cells in resected nasal polyps as an indicator for postoperative recurrence of chronic rhinosinusitis
Yuichi Teranishi, Denan Jin, Sakurako Takano, Kishiko Sunami, Shinji Takai
Pages: 191-200 | First Published: 17 June 2019
 
Decrease in number of mast cells in resected nasal polyps as an indicator for postoperative recurrence of chronic rhinosinusitis. Our findings indicated that the enumeration of mast cells in resected polyps may be another approach to predict postoperative polyp recurrence in CRSwNP patients.
 Open Access
Dimethyl fumarate abrogates dust mite‐induced allergic asthma by altering dendritic cell function
Anil K. Jaiswal, Maninder Sandey, Amol Suryawanshi, Russell C. Cattley, Amarjit Mishra
Pages: 201-213 | First Published: 02 July 2019
 
In this study, we show that lung DMF administration attenuates house dust mite (HDM)‐induced allergic sensitization and eosinophilic airway inflammation. Therefore, these findings support a novel therapeutic effect of local DMF application modulating airway inflammation during the pathogenesis of allergic asthma.
 Open Access
Improving adrenaline autoinjector adherence: A psychologically informed training for healthcare professionals
Béré Mahoney, Elaine Walklet, Eleanor Bradley, Steve O'Hickey
Pages: 214-228 | First Published: 09 July 2019
 
Clinicians draw on instructional approaches when training patients with anaphylaxis to use adrenaline autoinjectors, but patient use is poor, and psychological barriers to these behaviours exist but are not considered routinely when training patients to use autoinjectors. The study evaluated the impact of a 90‐minute workshop training clinicians in strategies and techniques for exploring and responding to psychological barriers to autoinjector use with patients. The workshop produced sustained improvements in clinicians confidence and knowledge around patient autoinjector education, and their likelihood of using strategies in clinical practice.
 Open Access
Relationship between oral and gut microbiota in elderly people
Megumi Iwauchi, Ayako Horigome, Kentaro Ishikawa, Aya Mikuni, Manabu Nakano, Jin‐zhong Xiao, Toshitaka Odamaki, Shouji Hironaka
Pages: 229-236 | First Published: 15 July 2019
 
Recent studies have shown that oral bacteria might induce systemic inflammation through alteration of gut microbiota. We investigated the relationship between oral and gut microbiota and evaluated the transition of oral bacteria to the gastrointestinal tract. Unweighted UniFrac distance revealed that the elderly group had a higher similarity between fecal and subgingival plaque microbiota than the adult group. Moreover, a significantly higher prevalence of some bacterial taxa found in oral samples was observed in the feces of the elderly group than of the adult group. Our results suggest that the prevalence of oral bacterial transition to gut is higher in the elderly than in adults; thus, we expect that in the elderly, oral health care will affect gut microbiota composition and consequently promote human health.

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