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Ana S. Almeida

University of Lisbon

ORCID: 0000-0001-8997-2639

Publishes on Immunotherapy and Immune Responses, Gut microbiota and health, Mycobacterium research and diagnosis. 26 papers and 4.2k citations.

26Publications
4.2kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Distinct populations of inflammatory fibroblasts and myofibroblasts in pancreatic cancer
Daniel Öhlund, Abram Handly-Santana, Giulia Biffi et al.|The Journal of Experimental Medicine|2017
Cited by 2.5kOpen Access

Pancreatic stellate cells (PSCs) differentiate into cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) that produce desmoplastic stroma, thereby modulating disease progression and therapeutic response in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDA). However, it is unknown whether CAFs uniformly carry out these tasks or if subtypes of CAFs with distinct phenotypes in PDA exist. We identified a CAF subpopulation with elevated expression of α-smooth muscle actin (αSMA) located immediately adjacent to neoplastic cells in mouse and human PDA tissue. We recapitulated this finding in co-cultures of murine PSCs and PDA organoids, and demonstrated that organoid-activated CAFs produced desmoplastic stroma. The co-cultures showed cooperative interactions and revealed another distinct subpopulation of CAFs, located more distantly from neoplastic cells, which lacked elevated αSMA expression and instead secreted IL6 and additional inflammatory mediators. These findings were corroborated in mouse and human PDA tissue, providing direct evidence for CAF heterogeneity in PDA tumor biology with implications for disease etiology and therapeutic development.

Cancer cells induce metastasis-supporting neutrophil extracellular DNA traps
Juwon Park, Robert W. Wysocki, Zohreh Amoozgar et al.|Science Translational Medicine|2016
Cited by 977Open Access

Neutrophils, the most abundant type of leukocytes in blood, can form neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs). These are pathogen-trapping structures generated by expulsion of the neutrophil's DNA with associated proteolytic enzymes. NETs produced by infection can promote cancer metastasis. We show that metastatic breast cancer cells can induce neutrophils to form metastasis-supporting NETs in the absence of infection. Using intravital imaging, we observed NET-like structures around metastatic 4T1 cancer cells that had reached the lungs of mice. We also found NETs in clinical samples of triple-negative human breast cancer. The formation of NETs stimulated the invasion and migration of breast cancer cells in vitro. Inhibiting NET formation or digesting NETs with deoxyribonuclease I (DNase I) blocked these processes. Treatment with NET-digesting, DNase I-coated nanoparticles markedly reduced lung metastases in mice. Our data suggest that induction of NETs by cancer cells is a previously unidentified metastasis-promoting tumor-host interaction and a potential therapeutic target.

Comparative analysis of Klebsiella pneumoniae genomes identifies a phospholipase D family protein as a novel virulence factor
Letícia Lery, Lionel Frangeul, Anna Tomás et al.|BMC Biology|2014
Cited by 181Open Access

BACKGROUND: Klebsiella pneumoniae strains are pathogenic to animals and humans, in which they are both a frequent cause of nosocomial infections and a re-emerging cause of severe community-acquired infections. K. pneumoniae isolates of the capsular serotype K2 are among the most virulent. In order to identify novel putative virulence factors that may account for the severity of K2 infections, the genome sequence of the K2 reference strain Kp52.145 was determined and compared to two K1 and K2 strains of low virulence and to the reference strains MGH 78578 and NTUH-K2044. RESULTS: In addition to diverse functions related to host colonization and virulence encoded in genomic regions common to the four strains, four genomic islands specific for Kp52.145 were identified. These regions encoded genes for the synthesis of colibactin toxin, a putative cytotoxin outer membrane protein, secretion systems, nucleases and eukaryotic-like proteins. In addition, an insertion within a type VI secretion system locus included sel1 domain containing proteins and a phospholipase D family protein (PLD1). The pld1 mutant was avirulent in a pneumonia model in mouse. The pld1 mRNA was expressed in vivo and the pld1 gene was associated with K. pneumoniae isolates from severe infections. Analysis of lipid composition of a defective E. coli strain complemented with pld1 suggests an involvement of PLD1 in cardiolipin metabolism. CONCLUSIONS: Determination of the complete genome of the K2 reference strain identified several genomic islands comprising putative elements of pathogenicity. The role of PLD1 in pathogenesis was demonstrated for the first time and suggests that lipid metabolism is a novel virulence mechanism of K. pneumoniae.

Ecological dynamics of Enterobacteriaceae in the human gut microbiome across global populations
Qi Yin, Ana C. da Silva, Francisco Zorrilla et al.|Nature Microbiology|2025
Cited by 64Open Access

Gut bacteria from the Enterobacteriaceae family are a major cause of opportunistic infections worldwide. Given their prevalence among healthy human gut microbiomes, interspecies interactions may play a role in modulating infection resistance. Here we uncover global ecological patterns linked to Enterobacteriaceae colonization and abundance by leveraging a large-scale dataset of 12,238 public human gut metagenomes spanning 45 countries. Machine learning analyses identified a robust gut microbiome signature associated with Enterobacteriaceae colonization status, consistent across health states and geographic locations. We classified 172 gut microbial species as co-colonizers and 135 as co-excluders, revealing a genus-wide signal of colonization resistance within Faecalibacterium and strain-specific co-colonization patterns of the underexplored Faecalimonas phoceensis. Co-exclusion is linked to functions involved in short-chain fatty acid production, iron metabolism and quorum sensing, while co-colonization is linked to greater functional diversity and metabolic resemblance to Enterobacteriaceae. Our work underscores the critical role of the intestinal environment in the colonization success of gut-associated opportunistic pathogens with implications for developing non-antibiotic therapeutic strategies.