Maria de Sousa
{{Short description|Portuguese scientist, immunologist, author, and poet (1939–2020)}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2020}}
{{Infobox person
| name = Maria de Sousa
| honorific-suffix = GCSE GOSE GOIH
| image =
| alt =
| caption =
| birth_name = Maria Ângela Brito de Sousa
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1939|10|17|df=y}}
| birth_place = Lisbon, Portugal
| death_date = {{Death date and age|2020|4|14|1939|10|17|df=y}}
| death_place = Arroios, Lisbon, Portugal
| nationality =
| other_names =
| occupation = Immunologist
| years_active =
| known_for =
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}}
Maria Ângela Brito de Sousa {{post-nominals|post-noms=GCSE GOSE GOIH}} (17 October 1939 – 14 April 2020) was a Portuguese immunologist, science leader poet and writer. She gained international recognition as a medical researcher, as the author of several seminal scientific papers: she was the first to describe thymus-dependent (or T cell) areas in 1966, a fundamental discovery in the mapping of peripheral lymphoid organs; she coined the term "ecotaxis" in 1971, to describe the phenomenon of cells of different origins to migrate and to organize among themselves in very specific lymphoid areas.{{cite journal |last1=Duarte |first1=Delfim |title=Ever-changing homes |url= |journal=Porto Biomedical Journal |year=2019 |volume=4 |issue=2 |pages=e33 |doi=10.1016/j.pbj.0000000000000033 |pmid=31595261 |pmc=6726294 }} In the 1980s she focused on the study of hereditary hemochromatosis, an iron overload genetic disease.{{cite web |url=https://www.i3s.up.pt/news?v=97 |title=Professor Maria de Sousa passed away |publisher=Instituto de Investigação e Inovação em Saúde (i3S), University of Porto |access-date=16 April 2020 }}
Early life and education
Maria de Sousa was born in Lisbon in 1939. Her father was a naval officer and her mother a homemaker.{{Cite web |last=Minder |first=Raphael |date=2020-07-02 |title=Maria de Sousa, Leading Portuguese Scientist, Dies at 80 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/02/obituaries/maria-de-sousa-dead-coronavirus.html |access-date=2020-09-05 |website=The New York Times |language=en-US}}
She graduated from medical school at the University of Lisbon in 1963. In 1964, she moved to London to work at the then Imperial Cancer Research Fund's Experimental Biology Laboratories.{{Cite journal |last=Watts |first=Geoff |date=2020-09-05 |title=Maria Angela Brito de Sousa |journal=The Lancet |language=en |volume=396 |issue=10252 |pages=662 |doi=10.1016/S0140-6736(20)31833-X |issn=0140-6736|doi-access=free |pmc=7470717 }}
Career
She won a Gulbenkian Foundation scholarship.{{citation |url=https://www.immunology.org/sslpage.aspx?pid=1188 |title=Delphine Parrott |author=Thomas T. MacDonald |publisher=British Society for Immunology |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131202232647/https://www.immunology.org/sslpage.aspx?pid=1188 |archive-date=2 December 2013 |df=dmy-all }} and from 1964 to 1966 de Sousa worked with Delphine Parrott studying mice who had their thymus removed.
In 1966, she moved to the University of Glasgow to do a PhD. She observed in her study by light microscopy, that lymphocytes from the thymus, the so-called T-cells move to other lymphatic organs a process which she termed ecotaxis.
In 1975 went to NYC. She was an adjunct professor at what was then Cornell Medical College and became head of the cell ecology lab at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center.
An interest in the non-immunological functions of lymphocytes, such as iron metabolism led her to study hemochromatosis, which is common in northern Portugal.
In 1984, she returned to Portugal, as Professor of Immunology at the medical school of the Instituto Abel Salazar, University of Porto.{{Cite web |date=2020-06-09 |title=Obituary - Maria de Sousa, (1939-2020) |url=https://www.spimunologia.org/news/obituary-maria-de-sousa-1939-2020/ |access-date=2020-09-05 |website=SPI {{!}} Sociedade Portuguesa de Imunologia |language=en-US}} She established a Masters Program in Immunology and over the next 10 years she helped forge two Ph.D. programs, one of them being the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation and in 1996, the Graduate Program in Basic and Applied Biology (GABBA).
Personal life and death
Sousa "was fond of art", she was a pianist and poet. She died in Lisbon on 14 April 2020, leaving no immediate survivors. She was a victim of COVID-19 during the COVID-19 pandemic in Portugal, after a week in the intensive care unit of São José Hospital.
Among the many top figures in Portuguese science and society that paid homage to Sousa, the President of the Republic, Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa, issued a statement offering his condolences to the family, referring to her as a "unmatched figure in Portuguese science" and underscoring her "inescapable legacy in science and great example in rigor, exigence, and civic and cultural commitment".{{cite news |title="Uma cientista de corpo inteiro" que fazia "grandes perguntas": as reacções à morte de Maria de Sousa |trans-title="A full-body scientist" who asked "big questions": reactions to Maria de Sousa's death |url=https://www.publico.pt/2020/04/14/ciencia/noticia/reaccoes-morte-maria-sousa-1912214 |language=pt |work=Público |access-date=16 April 2020 }}
Distinctions
=National orders=
- 80px Grand Officer of the Order of Prince Henry (9 June 1995){{cite web|title=Cidadãos Nacionais Agraciados com Ordens Portuguesas|url=http://www.ordens.presidencia.pt/?idc=153&list=1|website=Página Oficial das Ordens Honoríficas Portuguesas|access-date=16 April 2020}}
- 80px Grand Officer of the Order of Saint James of the Sword (20 January 2012)
- 80px Grand Cross of the Order of Saint James of the Sword (18 November 2016)
Selected publications
- Parrott, DMV, de Sousa, MAB, and East, J. "Thymus-dependent areas in the lymphoid organs of neonatally thymectomized mice". Journal of Experimental Medicine; 123: 191–1966.
- Parrott, DMV and De Sousa, MAB. "Changes in thymus-dependent areas of lymph nodes after immunological stimulation". Nature, 212: 1316-,1966.
- De Sousa, MAB, Parrott, DMV and Pantelouris. "Lymphoid tissues in mice with congenital aplasia of the thymus". Clinical and Experimental Immunology 4: 637-,1969.
- Sousa, MD "Kinetics of distribution of thymus and marrow cells in peripheral organs of the mouse – Ecotaxis". Clinical and Experimental Immunology 9: 371-,1971.
- Broxmeyer, HE, Smithyman, A, Eger, RR, Meyer, PA and De Sousa, M. "Identification of Lactoferrin as granulocyte derived inhibitor of colony stimulating activity production". Journal of Experimental Medicine 148: 1052–1067, 1977.
- Dörner, M., Silverstone, A., Nishyia, K., de Sostoa, A., Munn, G and De Sousa, M. "Ferritin synthesis by Human T lymphocytes". Science, 209: 1019–1021.
- De Sousa M., Reimão, R., Lacerda, R., Hugo, P. and Kaufman. S. "Iron overload in ß2 microglobulin deficient mice". Immunology Letters 39: 105–111. 1994.
- Santos, M., Schilham, MW, Rademakers, LHPM, Marx, JJM, de Sousa, M. and Clevers, H. "Defective iron homeostasis in beta 2-microglobulin knockout mice recapitulates Hereditary Hemochromatosis in man". Journal of Experimental Medicine 184: 1975–1985. 1996.
- De Almeida SF, Carvalho IF, Cardoso CS, Cordeiro JV, Azevedo JE, Neefjes J, De Sousa M. (2005) "HFE crosstalks with the MHC class I antigen presentation pathway". Blood 106:971-7.
- De Sousa, M. 2011. "An outsider's perspective-ecotaxis revisited: an integrative review of cancer environment, iron and immune system cells". Integrative Biology, 3, 343–349.
- Hoshino A, Costa-Silva B, Shen TL, et al. (2015). "Tumour exosome integrins determine organotropic metastasis". Nature 527(7578):329-35. Epub 2015 Oct 28.
References
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Category:20th-century Portuguese physicians
Category:21st-century Portuguese physicians
Category:Deaths from the COVID-19 pandemic in Portugal
Category:Grand Crosses of the Order of Saint James of the Sword
Category:Grand Officers of the Order of Prince Henry
Category:Grand Officers of the Order of Saint James of the Sword
Category:Portuguese immunologists
Category:Portuguese medical researchers