Biochemistry and Pharmacology - Research Publications

Permanent URI for this collection

Search Results

Now showing 1 - 4 of 4
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Vaccine strain affects seroconversion after influenza vaccination in COPD patients and healthy older people
    Snape, N ; Anderson, GP ; Irving, LB ; Jarnicki, AG ; Hurt, AC ; Collins, T ; Xi, Y ; Upham, JW (NATURE PORTFOLIO, 2022-01-24)
    Though clinical guidelines recommend influenza vaccination for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients and other high-risk populations, it is unclear whether current vaccination strategies induce optimal antibody responses. This study aimed to identify key variables associated with strain-specific antibody responses in COPD patients and healthy older people. 76 COPD and 72 healthy participants were recruited from two Australian centres and inoculated with influenza vaccine. Serum strain-specific antibody titres were measured pre- and post-inoculation. Seroconversion rate was the primary endpoint. Antibody responses varied between vaccine strains. The highest rates of seroconversion were seen with novel strains (36-55%), with lesser responses to strains included in the vaccine in more than one consecutive year (27-33%). Vaccine responses were similar in COPD patients and healthy participants. Vaccine strain, hypertension and latitude were independent predictors of seroconversion. Our findings reassure that influenza vaccination is equally immunogenic in COPD patients and healthy older people; however, there is room for improvement. There may be a need to personalise the yearly influenza vaccine, including consideration of pre-existing antibody titres, in order to target gaps in individual antibody repertoires and improve protection.
  • Item
    No Preview Available
    CD11b immunophenotyping identifies inflammatory profiles in the mouse and human lungs
    Duan, M ; Steinfort, DP ; Smallwood, D ; Hew, M ; Chen, W ; Ernst, M ; Irving, LB ; Anderson, GP ; Hibbs, ML (NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP, 2016-03)
    The development of easily accessible tools for human immunophenotyping to classify patients into discrete disease endotypes is advancing personalized therapy. However, no systematic approach has been developed for the study of inflammatory lung diseases with often complex and highly heterogeneous disease etiologies. We have devised an internally standardized flow cytometry approach that can identify parallel inflammatory alveolar macrophage phenotypes in both the mouse and human lungs. In mice, lung innate immune cell alterations during endotoxin challenge, influenza virus infection, and in two genetic models of chronic obstructive lung disease could be segregated based on the presence or absence of CD11b alveolar macrophage upregulation and lung eosinophilia. Additionally, heightened alveolar macrophage CD11b expression was a novel feature of acute lung exacerbations in the SHIP-1(-/-) model of chronic obstructive lung disease, and anti-CD11b antibody administration selectively blocked inflammatory CD11b(pos) but not homeostatic CD11b(neg) alveolar macrophages in vivo. The identification of analogous profiles in respiratory disease patients highlights this approach as a translational avenue for lung disease endotyping and suggests that heterogeneous innate immune cell phenotypes are an underappreciated component of the human lung disease microenvironment.
  • Item
    No Preview Available
    Identifying viral infections in vaccinated Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) patients using clinical features and inflammatory markers
    Hutchinson, AF ; Black, J ; Thompson, MA ; Bozinovski, S ; Brand, CA ; Smallwood, DM ; Irving, LB ; Anderson, GP (WILEY, 2010-01)
    BACKGROUND: Known inflammatory markers have limited sensitivity and specificity to differentiate viral respiratory tract infections from other causes of acute exacerbation of COPD (AECOPD). To overcome this, we developed a multi-factorial prediction model combining viral symptoms with inflammatory markers. METHODS: Interleukin-6 (IL-6), serum amyloid A (SAA) and viral symptoms were measured in stable COPD and at AECOPD onset and compared with the viral detection rates on multiplex PCR. The predictive accuracy of each measure was assessed using logistic regression and receiver operating characteristics curve (ROC) analysis. RESULTS: There was a total of 33 viruses detected at the onset of 148 AECOPD, the majority 26 (79%) were picornavirus. Viral symptoms with the highest predictive values were rhinorrhoea [Odds ratio (OR) 4.52; 95% CI 1.99-10.29; P < 0.001] and sore throat (OR 2.64; 95% CI 1.14-6.08; P = 0.022), combined the AUC ROC curve was 0.67. At AECOPD onset patients experienced a 1.6-fold increase in IL-6 (P = 0.008) and 4.5-fold increase in SAA (P < 0.001). The addition of IL-6 to the above model significantly improved diagnostic accuracy compared with symptoms alone (AUC ROC 0.80 (P = 0.012). CONCLUSION: The addition of inflammatory markers increases the specificity of a clinical case definition for viral infection, particularly picornavirus infection.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Tumour-associated neutrophils and loss of epithelial PTEN can promote corticosteroid-insensitive MMP-9 expression in the chronically inflamed lung microenvironment
    Vannitamby, A ; Seow, HJ ; Anderson, G ; Vlahos, R ; Thompson, M ; Steinfort, D ; Irving, LB ; Bozinovski, S (BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP, 2017-12)
    Matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) is increased in a number of pathological lung conditions, where the proteinase contributes to deleterious remodelling of the airways. While both lung cancer and COPD are associated with increased MMP-9 expression, the cellular and molecular drivers of MMP-9 remain unresolved. In this study, MMP-9 transcript measured within the tumour region from patients with non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and coexisting COPD was found to be uniformly increased relative to adjacent tumour-free tissue. MMP-9 gene expression and immunohistochemistry identified tumour-associated neutrophils, but not macrophages, as a predominant source of this proteinase. In addition, PTEN gene expression was significantly reduced in tumour and there was evidence of epithelial MMP-9 expression. To explore whether PTEN can regulate epithelial MMP-9 expression, a small interfering (si)RNA knockdown strategy was used in Beas-2B bronchial epithelial cells. PTEN knockdown by siRNA selectively increased MMP-9 expression in response to lipopolysaccharide in a corticosteroid-insensitive manner. In summary, tumour-associated neutrophils represent an important source of MMP-9 in NSCLC, and loss of epithelial PTEN may further augment steroid-insensitive expression.