Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 9 de 9
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
Pharmacoeconomics ; 39(5): 563-577, 2021 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33791945

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: The study aim was to evaluate the cost effectiveness and budget impact of siponimod compared to interferon beta-1a for adult patients with secondary progressive multiple sclerosis (SPMS) with active disease, from a Swiss health insurance perspective. METHODS: We conducted an analysis using a Markov cohort model with a cycle length of 1 year, life-long time horizon, and discount rate of 3% for cost and health outcomes. We used a matching-adjusted indirect comparison to estimate clinical outcomes using data from the EXPAND randomised controlled trial of siponimod vs placebo and the Nordic SPMS randomised controlled trial of interferon beta-1a vs placebo as the basis for estimates of disability progression and relapse outcomes. We used 6-month confirmed disability progression results to estimate disability progression in the base-case analysis. We calculated quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) based on an external study that administered the EQ-5D-3L questionnaire to European patients with multiple sclerosis. We included costs (Swiss Franc (CHF), year 2020) of drug acquisition/administration, adverse events and disease management. We also performed a budget impact analysis to estimate the cost over the first 3 years of introducing siponimod. RESULTS: For the base case, siponimod resulted in mean incremental costs of CHF 84,901 (siponimod: CHF 567,838, interferon beta-1a: CHF 482,937) and mean incremental QALYs of 1.591 (siponimod: 7.495, interferon beta-1a: 5.905), leading to an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of CHF 53,364 per QALY gained. In the probabilistic sensitivity analysis, the probability of the cost effectiveness of siponimod assuming a willingness-to-pay threshold of CHF 100,000 per QALY gained was 90%. Siponimod was projected to result in drug administration costs for siponimod of CHF 23,817,856 in the first 3 years after introduction, accompanied by large cost offsets in drug acquisition of other multiple sclerosis drugs. Considering drug administration, monitoring and adverse event management costs, it was estimated to result in additional healthcare costs in Switzerland of CHF 2,177,021. CONCLUSIONS: In the base-case analysis, we found that siponimod may be cost effective for treating Swiss adult patients with SPMS with active disease. The results of the cost-effectiveness analyses are valid under the assumption that the efficacy of siponimod and the comparators on disability progression for the overall SPMS population would be the same in the active SPMS population. CLINICAL TRIAL IDENTIFIER: NCT01665144. This economic evaluation was based on the EXPAND trial.


Subject(s)
Multiple Sclerosis, Chronic Progressive , Multiple Sclerosis , Adult , Azetidines , Benzyl Compounds , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Humans , Interferon beta-1a , Quality-Adjusted Life Years , Switzerland
2.
mSphere ; 4(3)2019 06 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31243080

ABSTRACT

Brucella, the agent causing brucellosis, is a major zoonotic pathogen with worldwide distribution. Brucella resides and replicates inside infected host cells in membrane-bound compartments called Brucella-containing vacuoles (BCVs). Following uptake, Brucella resides in endosomal BCVs (eBCVs) that gradually mature from early to late endosomal features. Through a poorly understood process that is key to the intracellular lifestyle of Brucella, the eBCV escapes fusion with lysosomes by transitioning to the replicative BCV (rBCV), a replicative niche directly connected to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Despite the notion that this complex intracellular lifestyle must depend on a multitude of host factors, a holistic view on which of these components control Brucella cell entry, trafficking, and replication is still missing. Here we used a systematic cell-based small interfering RNA (siRNA) knockdown screen in HeLa cells infected with Brucella abortus and identified 425 components of the human infectome for Brucella infection. These include multiple components of pathways involved in central processes such as the cell cycle, actin cytoskeleton dynamics, or vesicular trafficking. Using assays for pathogen entry, knockdown complementation, and colocalization at single-cell resolution, we identified the requirement of the VPS retromer for Brucella to escape the lysosomal degradative pathway and to establish its intracellular replicative niche. We thus validated the VPS retromer as a novel host factor critical for Brucella intracellular trafficking. Further, our genomewide data shed light on the interplay between central host processes and the biogenesis of the Brucella replicative niche.IMPORTANCE With >300,000 new cases of human brucellosis annually, Brucella is regarded as one of the most important zoonotic bacterial pathogens worldwide. The agent causing brucellosis resides inside host cells within vacuoles termed Brucella-containing vacuoles (BCVs). Although a few host components required to escape the degradative lysosomal pathway and to establish the ER-derived replicative BCV (rBCV) have already been identified, the global understanding of this highly coordinated process is still partial, and many factors remain unknown. To gain deeper insight into these fundamental questions, we performed a genomewide RNA interference (RNAi) screen aiming at discovering novel host factors involved in the Brucella intracellular cycle. We identified 425 host proteins that contribute to Brucella cellular entry, intracellular trafficking, and replication. Together, this study sheds light on previously unknown host pathways required for the Brucella infection cycle and highlights the VPS retromer components as critical factors for the establishment of the Brucella intracellular replicative niche.


Subject(s)
Brucella abortus/genetics , Endosomal Sorting Complexes Required for Transport/genetics , Host-Pathogen Interactions , RNA, Small Interfering , Vacuoles/microbiology , Brucella abortus/physiology , DNA Replication , Endoplasmic Reticulum/microbiology , Endosomal Sorting Complexes Required for Transport/metabolism , Gene Knockdown Techniques , Genome, Bacterial , HeLa Cells , High-Throughput Screening Assays , Humans
3.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 46(18): 9309-9320, 2018 10 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30215772

ABSTRACT

Perturbation of gene expression by means of synthetic small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) is a powerful way to uncover gene function. However, siRNA technology suffers from sequence-specific off-target effects and from limitations in knock-down efficiency. In this study, we assess a further problem: unintended effects of siRNA transfections on cellular fitness/proliferation. We show that the nucleotide compositions of siRNAs at specific positions have reproducible growth-restricting effects on mammalian cells in culture. This is likely distinct from hybridization-dependent off-target effects, since each nucleotide residue is seen to be acting independently and additively. The effect is robust and reproducible across different siRNA libraries and also across various cell lines, including human and mouse cells. Analyzing the growth inhibition patterns in correlation to the nucleotide sequence of the siRNAs allowed us to build a predictor that can estimate growth-restricting effects for any arbitrary siRNA sequence. Competition experiments with co-transfected siRNAs further suggest that the growth-restricting effects might be linked to an oversaturation of the cellular miRNA machinery, thus disrupting endogenous miRNA functions at large. We caution that competition between siRNA molecules could complicate the interpretation of double-knockdown or epistasis experiments, and potential interactions with endogenous miRNAs can be a factor when assaying cell growth or viability phenotypes.


Subject(s)
Cell Proliferation/genetics , MicroRNAs/genetics , Nucleic Acid Hybridization , RNA Interference , RNA, Small Interfering/genetics , A549 Cells , Animals , Cell Line , Cell Survival/genetics , Cells, Cultured , Embryo, Mammalian/cytology , Fibroblasts/cytology , Fibroblasts/metabolism , Gene Expression , HeLa Cells , Humans , Mice , Transfection
4.
J Vis Exp ; (114)2016 08 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27584799

ABSTRACT

Brucella species are facultative intracellular pathogens that infect animals as their natural hosts. Transmission to humans is most commonly caused by direct contact with infected animals or by ingestion of contaminated food and can lead to severe chronic infections. Brucella can invade professional and non-professional phagocytic cells and replicates within endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-derived vacuoles. The host factors required for Brucella entry into host cells, avoidance of lysosomal degradation, and replication in the ER-like compartment remain largely unknown. Here we describe two assays to identify host factors involved in Brucella entry and replication in HeLa cells. The protocols describe the use of RNA interference, while alternative screening methods could be applied. The assays are based on the detection of fluorescently labeled bacteria in fluorescently labeled host cells using automated wide-field microscopy. The fluorescent images are analyzed using a standardized image analysis pipeline in CellProfiler which allows single cell-based infection scoring. In the endpoint assay, intracellular replication is measured two days after infection. This allows bacteria to traffic to their replicative niche where proliferation is initiated around 12 hr after bacterial entry. Brucella which have successfully established an intracellular niche will thus have strongly proliferated inside host cells. Since intracellular bacteria will greatly outnumber individual extracellular or intracellular non-replicative bacteria, a strain constitutively expressing GFP can be used. The strong GFP signal is then used to identify infected cells. In contrast, for the entry assay it is essential to differentiate between intracellular and extracellular bacteria. Here, a strain encoding for a tetracycline-inducible GFP is used. Induction of GFP with simultaneous inactivation of extracellular bacteria by gentamicin enables the differentiation between intracellular and extracellular bacteria based on the GFP signal, with only intracellular bacteria being able to express GFP. This allows the robust detection of single intracellular bacteria before intracellular proliferation is initiated.


Subject(s)
Brucella/pathogenicity , Brucellosis/metabolism , High-Throughput Screening Assays/methods , Brucellosis/microbiology , HeLa Cells , Host-Parasite Interactions , Humans , Microscopy/methods , Phagocytes/microbiology
6.
Genome Biol ; 16: 220, 2015 Oct 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26445817

ABSTRACT

Small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) exhibit strong off-target effects, which confound the gene-level interpretation of RNA interference screens and thus limit their utility for functional genomics studies. Here, we present gespeR, a statistical model for reconstructing individual, gene-specific phenotypes. Using 115,878 siRNAs, single and pooled, from three companies in three pathogen infection screens, we demonstrate that deconvolution of image-based phenotypes substantially improves the reproducibility between independent siRNA sets targeting the same genes. Genes selected and prioritized by gespeR are validated and shown to constitute biologically relevant components of pathogen entry mechanisms and TGF-ß signaling. gespeR is available as a Bioconductor R-package.


Subject(s)
Gene Knockdown Techniques , Models, Statistical , RNA Interference , Software , Bartonella henselae/genetics , Brucella abortus/genetics , HeLa Cells , Humans , Phenotype , RNA, Small Interfering , Salmonella typhimurium/genetics , Signal Transduction , Transforming Growth Factor beta/physiology
7.
BMC Genomics ; 15: 1162, 2014 Dec 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25534632

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Large-scale RNAi screening has become an important technology for identifying genes involved in biological processes of interest. However, the quality of large-scale RNAi screening is often deteriorated by off-targets effects. In order to find statistically significant effector genes for pathogen entry, we systematically analyzed entry pathways in human host cells for eight pathogens using image-based kinome-wide siRNA screens with siRNAs from three vendors. We propose a Parallel Mixed Model (PMM) approach that simultaneously analyzes several non-identical screens performed with the same RNAi libraries. RESULTS: We show that PMM gains statistical power for hit detection due to parallel screening. PMM allows incorporating siRNA weights that can be assigned according to available information on RNAi quality. Moreover, PMM is able to estimate a sharedness score that can be used to focus follow-up efforts on generic or specific gene regulators. By fitting a PMM model to our data, we found several novel hit genes for most of the pathogens studied. CONCLUSIONS: Our results show parallel RNAi screening can improve the results of individual screens. This is currently particularly interesting when large-scale parallel datasets are becoming more and more publicly available. Our comprehensive siRNA dataset provides a public, freely available resource for further statistical and biological analyses in the high-content, high-throughput siRNA screening field.


Subject(s)
Genomics/methods , RNA Interference , RNA, Small Interfering/genetics , Cell Line , Gene Library , Genomics/standards , High-Throughput Screening Assays , Host-Pathogen Interactions/genetics , Humans , ROC Curve , Reproducibility of Results
8.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 111(12): 4548-53, 2014 Mar 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24616511

ABSTRACT

Systematic genetic perturbation screening in human cells remains technically challenging. Typically, large libraries of chemically synthesized siRNA oligonucleotides are used, each designed to degrade a specific cellular mRNA via the RNA interference (RNAi) mechanism. Here, we report on data from three genome-wide siRNA screens, conducted to uncover host factors required for infection of human cells by two bacterial and one viral pathogen. We find that the majority of phenotypic effects of siRNAs are unrelated to the intended "on-target" mechanism, defined by full complementarity of the 21-nt siRNA sequence to a target mRNA. Instead, phenotypes are largely dictated by "off-target" effects resulting from partial complementarity of siRNAs to multiple mRNAs via the "seed" region (i.e., nucleotides 2-8), reminiscent of the way specificity is determined for endogenous microRNAs. Quantitative analysis enabled the prediction of seeds that strongly and specifically block infection, independent of the intended on-target effect. This prediction was confirmed experimentally by designing oligos that do not have any on-target sequence match at all, yet can strongly reproduce the predicted phenotypes. Our results suggest that published RNAi screens have primarily, and unintentionally, screened the sequence space of microRNA seeds instead of the intended on-target space of protein-coding genes. This helps to explain why previously published RNAi screens have exhibited relatively little overlap. Our analysis suggests a possible way of identifying "seed reagents" for controlling phenotypes of interest and establishes a general strategy for extracting valuable untapped information from past and future RNAi screens.


Subject(s)
Brucella abortus/drug effects , Bunyaviridae/drug effects , MicroRNAs/genetics , Oligonucleotides/pharmacology , RNA Interference , Salmonella typhimurium/drug effects , Base Sequence , Brucella abortus/genetics , Bunyaviridae/genetics , Genes, Bacterial , HeLa Cells , Humans , RNA, Small Interfering/genetics , Salmonella typhimurium/genetics
9.
Mol Microbiol ; 72(6): 1500-16, 2009 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19460094

ABSTRACT

Biofilms are communities of surface-attached, matrix-embedded microbial cells that can resist antimicrobial chemotherapy and contribute to persistent infections. Using an Escherichia coli biofilm model we found that exposure of bacteria to subinhibitory concentrations of ribosome-targeting antibiotics leads to strong biofilm induction. We present evidence that this effect is elicited by the ribosome in response to translational stress. Biofilm induction involves upregulation of the polysaccharide adhesin poly-beta-1,6-N-acetyl-glucosamine (poly-GlcNAc) and two components of the poly-GlcNAc biosynthesis machinery, PgaA and PgaD. Poly-GlcNAc control depends on the bacterial signalling molecules guanosine-bis 3', 5'(diphosphate) (ppGpp) and bis-(3'-5')-cyclic di-GMP (c-di-GMP). Treatment with translation inhibitors causes a ppGpp hydrolase (SpoT)-mediated reduction of ppGpp levels, resulting in specific derepression of PgaA. Maximal induction of PgaD and poly-GlcNAc synthesis requires the production of c-di-GMP by the dedicated diguanylate cyclase YdeH. Our results identify a novel regulatory mechanism that relies on ppGpp signalling to relay information about ribosomal performance to the Pga machinery, thereby inducing adhesin production and biofilm formation. Based on the important synergistic roles of ppGpp and c-di-GMP in this process, we suggest that interference with bacterial second messenger signalling might represent an effective means for biofilm control during chronic infections.


Subject(s)
Biofilms/growth & development , Cyclic GMP/analogs & derivatives , Escherichia coli/physiology , Guanosine Tetraphosphate/metabolism , Ribosomes/drug effects , Second Messenger Systems , Adhesins, Bacterial/metabolism , Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology , Cyclic GMP/metabolism , Escherichia coli/drug effects , Escherichia coli/genetics , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Escherichia coli Proteins/genetics , Escherichia coli Proteins/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial , Phosphorus-Oxygen Lyases/genetics , Phosphorus-Oxygen Lyases/metabolism , Protein Biosynthesis/drug effects , Pyrophosphatases/genetics , Pyrophosphatases/metabolism , RNA Processing, Post-Transcriptional , beta-Glucans/metabolism
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...