306 results
Search Results
2. Microfluidic device to study flow-free chemotaxis of swimming cells.
- Author
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Garcia-Seyda, Nicolas, Aoun, Laurene, Tishkova, Victoria, Seveau, Valentine, Biarnes-Pelicot, Martine, Bajénoff, Marc, Valignat, Marie-Pierre, and Theodoly, Olivier
- Subjects
MICROFLUIDIC devices ,CHEMOTAXIS ,T cells ,CELLS - Abstract
Microfluidic devices have been used in the last two decades to study in vitro cell chemotaxis, but few existing devices generate gradients in flow-free conditions. Flow can bias cell directionality of adherent cells and precludes the study of swimming cells like naïve T lymphocytes, which only migrate in a non-adherent fashion. We developed two devices that create stable, flow-free, diffusion-based gradients and are adapted for adherent and swimming cells. The flow-free environment is achieved by using agarose gel barriers between a central channel with cells and side channels with chemoattractants. These barriers insulate cells from injection/rinsing cycles of chemoattractants, they dampen residual drift across the device, and they allow co-culture of cells without physical interaction, to study contactless paracrine communication. Our devices were used here to investigate neutrophil and naïve T lymphocyte chemotaxis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The history of the two‐signal model of lymphocyte activation: A personal perspective.
- Author
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Bretscher, Peter A.
- Subjects
LYMPHOCYTE transformation ,T cells ,B cells ,LYMPHOCYTES - Abstract
The first ideas leading to The Two‐Signal Model of lymphocyte activation were published 50 years ago, but the model was not realized in one sitting. I describe the three phases that led to its contemporary formulations. A motivation underlying all these models was to generate a minimal description of what is required for antigen to inactivate and activate mature lymphocytes that, at the same time, accounts for how peripheral tolerance is achieved. I suggest the two signal model has not only provided a substantiated framework for understanding how antigen interacts differently with B cells and CD8 T cells, to result in their inactivation and activation, but its postulates are pertinent to contemporary issues concerning the inactivation and activation of CD4 T cells. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Notch Signaling in T-Cell Development and T-ALL.
- Author
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Xiaoyu Li and von Boehmer, Harald
- Subjects
CELLS ,CELL proliferation ,APOPTOSIS ,T cells ,LEUKEMIA - Abstract
The Notch signaling pathway is an evolutionarily conserved cell signaling system present in most multicellular organisms, as it controls cell fate specification by regulating cell proliferation, differentiation, apoptosis, and survival. Regulation of the Notch signaling pathway can be achieved at multiple levels. Notch proteins are involved in lineage fate decisions in a variety of tissues in various species. Notch is essential for T lineage cell differentiation including T versus B and αβ versus γδ lineage specification. In this paper, we discuss Notch signaling in normal T-cell maturation and differentiation as well as in T-cell acute lymphoblastic lymphoma/leukemia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Levels of Interferon-Gamma and Transcription Factor T-Bet in Progressive Periodontal Lesions in Patients With Chronic Periodontitis.
- Author
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Dutzan, Nicolas, Vernal, Rolando, Hernandez, Marcela, Dezerega, Andrea, Rivera, Oriana, Silva, Nora, Aguillon, Juan Carlos, Puente, Javier, Pozo, Patricia, and Gamonal, Jorge
- Subjects
PERIODONTITIS ,INTERFERONS ,TRANSCRIPTION factors ,CELLS ,PHAGOCYTES ,LYMPHOCYTES ,PATIENTS - Abstract
Background: Periodontitis is an infection with an episodic pattern of tissue-support destruction. During the generation of a primary CD4
+ T helper 1 (Th1) response, interferon-gamma (IFN-γ) acts as a positive regulator by selectively inducing Th1 differentiation through increased transcription of T-bet. The aims of this work were to determine IFN-γ levels in samples of gingival crevicular fluid (GCF) and to determine IFN-γ and transcription factor T-bet expression in gingival tissue from patients undergoing the progression of chronic periodontitis. Methods: One hundred six patients with moderate or advanced chronic periodontitis were selected. Periodontitis was characterized by at least six sites with probing depth ≥5 mm, clinical attachment loss ≥3 mm, and radiographic bone loss. Periodontitis progression was determined by the tolerance method. GCF was collected using a paper strip, and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay was performed to determine the total amount of IFN-γ. Gingival biopsies were obtained from patients for real-time reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction to determine IFN-γ and T-bet expression. Statistical analysis was performed using statistical software. Data were expressed as subject means ± SD. The χ² and Student t tests were used. Results: The total amount and concentration of cytokine IFN-γ were significantly higher in active sites than in inactive sites (99.90 versus 68.90 pg; P= 0.03; 106.62 pg/mg versus 75.64 pg/mg, P= 0.04, respectively). Active sites showed a significantly lower Δ cycle threshold (Ct) of IFN-γ than inactive sites (P= 0.04), whereas the expression of transcription factor T-bet was increased 1.42-fold in active sites compared to inactive sites. Conclusion: The total amount and concentration of cytokine IFN-γ in GCF samples and transcription factor T-bet expression were increased in progressive periodontal lesions in patients with chronic periodontitis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2009
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6. Amino Acid Similarity Accounts for T Cell Cross-Reactivity and for "Holes" in the T Cell Repertoire.
- Author
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Frankild, Sune, de Boer, Rob J., Lund, Ole, Nielsen, Morten, and Kesmir, Can
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AMINO acids ,T cells ,PEPTIDES ,CELL receptors ,CELLS ,REACTIVITY (Chemistry) ,EPITOPES ,HIV - Abstract
Background: Cytotoxic T cell (CTL) cross-reactivity is believed to play a pivotal role in generating immune responses but the extent and mechanisms of CTL cross-reactivity remain largely unknown. Several studies suggest that CTL clones can recognize highly diverse peptides, some sharing no obvious sequence identity. The emerging realization in the field is that T cell receptors (TcR) recognize multiple distinct ligands. Principal Findings: First, we analyzed peptide scans of the HIV epitope SLFNTVATL (SFL9) and found that TCR specificity is position dependent and that biochemically similar amino acid substitutions do not drastically affect recognition. Inspired by this, we developed a general model of TCR peptide recognition using amino acid similarity matrices and found that such a model was able to predict the cross-reactivity of a diverse set of CTL epitopes. With this model, we were able to demonstrate that seemingly distinct T cell epitopes, i.e., ones with low sequence identity, are in fact more biochemically similar than expected. Additionally, an analysis of HIV immunogenicity data with our model showed that CTLs have the tendency to respond mostly to peptides that do not resemble self-antigens. Conclusions: T cell cross-reactivity can thus, to an extent greater than earlier appreciated, be explained by amino acid similarity. The results presented in this paper will help resolving some of the long-lasting discussions in the field of T cell cross-reactivity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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7. ADVANCES IN MOLECULAR IMMUNOTOXICOLOGY OF OCCUPATIONAL ASTHMA INDUCED BY LOW MOLECULAR WEIGHT CHEMICALS.
- Author
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Lutz, Waldemar and Palczynski, Cezary
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MOLECULAR weights ,WORK environment ,IMMUNE system ,CELLS ,ANTIGENS ,OBSTRUCTIVE lung diseases ,ASTHMA ,DENDRITIC cells ,OCCUPATIONAL medicine - Abstract
The paper reviews the literature reports on low molecular weight (LMW) sensitizers that are commonly encountered in the work environment as well as on the major mechanisms responsible for their effect on the immune cells of the respiratory tract. Current studies have focused on: LMW-antigens; the role of airway epithelial and dendritic cells (DCs); activation of naive helper T (Th) cells by DCs; naive B cell-effector Th2 cell interactions; and activation of mast cells by LMW asthmogens. A better understanding of the pathogenesis of occupational asthma due to LMW asthmogens should facilitate the development of better diagnostics and the improvement of strategies for disease surveillance and intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
8. Longevity in vitro of human CD4+ T helper cell clones derived from young donors and elderly donors, or from progenitor cells: age-associated differences in cell surface molecule expression and cytokine secretion.
- Author
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Pawelec, Graham, Mariani, Erminia, Bradley, Ben, and Solana, Rafael
- Subjects
CELLS ,LONGEVITY ,IMMUNE system ,APOPTOSIS ,CELL death ,STEM cells - Abstract
The effectiveness of the adaptive immune system relies upon extensive proliferation of an initially small number of antigen-specific T cells. At the end of a successful response, the majority die by apoptosis and a small minority joins the memory cell pool. Upon re-challenge with antigen, these memory cells must again undergo clonal expansion in order to mediate an effective response. Thus, T cells are subjected to marked proliferative stress which may result in clonal exhaustion due to replicative senescence. In other systems made up of rapidly proliferating cells (e.g. in the gut) individual clones are identical and are replaced at the end of their lifespan by differentiation from a stem cell reservoir. However, because of the unique clonal distribution of antigen receptors on T cells, mere replacement with other T cells is not sufficient to maintain the integrity of the system. Moreover, the very source of new T cells decreases with age (due to thymic involution). Therefore, the adaptive immune system may be uniquely susceptible to the deleterious effects of replicative senescence. Particularly in humans, in vivo studies of the behaviour of individual T-cell clones in the body is difficult. However, T-cell longevity, measured as proliferative capacity in terms of population doublings, can be usefully modelled at the clonal level in vitro. This paper discusses the surprisingly little that is known about the average longevity, variation between clones, and the maximal longevity of human T cells under clonal culture conditions in vitro. From our own studies, we show that average lifespan of human T cells is as little as 17 PD; however, established clones reach 35 PD on average, with maximum longevity generally in the region of 60–80 PD, regardless of the source of the cloned cells. Expression of surface molecules in general did not differ strikingly between young and old donors, but the frequency of clones secreting IL-10, and the amount secreted per clone was higher in the elderly than in the young. Conversely, the frequency of clones secreting IL-6 and the amount secreted per clone was higher in the young. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
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9. Ecalectin as a T Cell-Derived Eosinophil Chemoattractant.
- Author
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Hirashima, Mitsuomi
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T cells ,LYMPHOCYTES ,CELLS ,EOSINOPHILS ,CHEMOTAXIS - Abstract
In our previous papers, we have shown that human T cells produce a unique eosinophil chemotactic factor (ECF), termed Ecalectin, with a molecular weight of about 30–50 kD during interaction with BALL-1 (a B cell line) extracts, antigen or mitogen. A 1.6-kB cDNA was isolated from a human T cell-derived expression library that encodes Ecalectin. Ecalectin is a 36-kD protein consisting of 323 amino acids based on its deduced amino acid sequence. Ecalectin was found to be a variant of human galectin-9, a member of the growing family of animal lectins exhibiting affinity for β-galactosides. Recombinant Ecalectin, expressed in COS cells, exhibited potent ECF activity in vitro and in vivo in a dose-dependent manner but not chemotactic activity for neutrophils, lymphocytes, or monocytes. The finding that the Ecalectin transcript is present in various lymphatic tissues and that its expression increases substantially in antigen-activated peripheral blood mononuclear cells suggests that Ecalectin is an important T cell-derived regulator of eosinophil recruitment in allergic reaction sites. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Evidence for disregulation in the control of Epstein-Barr virus latency in patients with AIDS-related complex.
- Author
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Ragona, G., Caterina Sirianni, Maria, Soddu, Silvia, Vercelli, Brunella, Sebastiani, G., Piccoli, M., and Aiuti, F.
- Subjects
EPSTEIN-Barr virus ,AIDS patients ,HIV infections ,VIRUSES ,CELLS ,KILLER cells ,T cells - Abstract
Patients affected by AIDS-related complex (ARC) show several immunological abnormalities which may lead to a disregulation of immunosurveillance against viral latent infections. In this paper evidence for Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) reactivation in seven out of eight affected by persistent generalized lymphadenopathy is given. These patients showed either elevated levels of circulating EBNA-positive transformed cells or depressed EBV-specific T cell cytotoxicity, as assessed by the regression assay, or both. A direct involvement of EBV in the pathogenesis of ARC is thus suggested. Natural killer cell activity was found decreased, correlating to the evidence of circulating EBV-infected cells and of impaired EBV-specific immune control. These data provide evidence that, when specific immune mechanisms lose control on ubiquitous latent viruses, the risk for reactivation becomes higher. In the case of EBV, direct evidence of this event is provided by the emergence in the peripheral blood of clones of infected cells with unlimited growth potential. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1986
11. The role of I-J in the suppressor T-cell circuit which influences the effector stage of contact sensitivity: antigen together with syngeneic I-J region determinants induces and activates T suppressor cells.
- Author
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Colizzi, V., Asherson, G. L., and James, Bridget M. B.
- Subjects
T cells ,SUPPRESSOR cells ,VASCULAR endothelium ,CELLS ,BLOOD vessels ,ANTIGENS - Abstract
One of the T suppressor circuits induced by picrylsulphonic acid includes the T suppressor cell (Ts-eff) which acts at the efferent stage of the contact sensitivity reaction and produces antigen-specific T suppressor factor (TsF). This factor does not act directly but arms a T acceptor cell (Tacc). This Tacc liberates a non-specific inhibitor when it is armed with TsF and then exposed to picrylated cells sharing the I-J genotype of the source of the TsF. This paper investigates the role of I-J region gene products in this T suppressor circuit. Two approaches were used. Syngeneic CBA (H-2
k ) lymphocytes were separated into I-J+ and I-J- cells by treatment with anti-I-Jk serum followed by panning on anti-immunoglobulin plates. The cells were then picrylated and used as a source of antigen. Alternatively, B10.A congeneic mice syngeneic (SR) or allogeneic (3R) with CBA at the I-J locus were picrylated and used similarly. The main findings were as follows. (i) The intravenous injection of picrylated I-J+ spleen cells but not a similar number of I-J- cells induced Ts-eff which blocked the transfer of contact sensitivity. Picrylated unseparated cells syngeneic, but not allogeneic, at the I-J locus were also effective. (ii) It is known that the lymphocytes of mice injected with picrylsulphonic acid and then re-exposed to antigen by painting with picryl chloride liberate TsF in vitro. The re-exposure to antigen can be replaced by the intravenous injection of picrylated I-J+ cells or by cells syngeneic at the I-J locus the day before harvesting the spleen cells. (iii) The release of non-specific inhibitor by Tacc armed with TsF requires exposure to picrylated I-J+ cells or cells syngeneic at the I-J locus. The requirement for antigen on a cell bearing syngeneic I-J suggests that antigen together with I-J is an activation signal in this T-cell circuit. The simplest explanation is that the receptor of the pristine Ts and of the mature Ts-eff is similar to T suppressor factor. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 1983
12. Antibody responses to a cytochrome <em>c</em> peptide do not correlate with lymphokine production patterns from helper T-cell subsets.
- Author
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Fox, B. S.
- Subjects
IMMUNOLOGICAL adjuvants ,T cells ,IMMUNIZATION ,ANTINEOPLASTIC agents ,CELLS ,ANTIVIRAL agents - Abstract
This paper examines helper T-cell responses and antibody titres and isotypes following immunization with a peptide antigen in association with three different adjuvants. B10.A mice were primed with pigeon cytochrome c fragment 81-104 in association with the adjuvants complete Freund's adjuvant (CFA), incomplete Freund's adjuvant (IFA) and alum. Strong antibody responses, dominated by IgG1, were observed upon priming with CFA and IFA. In contrast, priming with alum induced a weak antibody response with little or no detectable antigen-specific IgG1. These differences did not correlate with differences in T-cell priming, as immunization with peptide in association with all three adjuvants induced comparable T-cell proliferative responses and frequencies of antigen-specific cells. In addition, no significant differences in iiiterleukin-2 (IL-2), interferon-gamma (IFN-γ) and IL-4 production could be found, suggesting that the adjuvants did not differentially affect Th1 and Th2 cells. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1992
13. Quantification of Immunohistochemically Stained Cells in Skin Biopsies.
- Author
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Emmanuel, Thomas, Brent, Mikkel Bo, Iversen, Lars, and Johansen, Claus
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SKIN biopsy ,IMMUNOHISTOCHEMISTRY ,BLAND-Altman plot ,THERAPEUTICS ,T cells ,ROSACEA - Abstract
Immunohistochemical quantification of inflammatory cells in skin biopsies is a valuable tool for diagnosing skin diseases and assessing treatment response. The quantification of individual cells in biopsies is time-consuming, tedious, and difficult. In this study, we presented and compared two methods for the quantification of CD8
+ T cells in skin biopsies from patients with psoriasis using both commercial software (Adobe Photoshop) and open-source software (Qupath). In addition, we provided a detailed, step-by-step description of both methods. The methods are scalable by replacing the CD8 antibody with other antibodies to target different cells. Moreover, we investigated the correlation between quantifying CD8+ cells normalized to area or epidermal length and cell classifications, compared cell classifications in QuPath with threshold classifications in Photoshop, and analyzed the impact of data normalization to epidermal length or area on inflammatory cell densities in skin biopsies from patients with psoriasis. We found a satisfactory correlation between normalizing data to epidermal length and area for psoriasis skin. However, when non-lesional and lesional skin samples were compared, a significant underestimation of inflammatory cell density was found when data were normalized to area instead of epidermal length. Finally, Bland–Altman plots comparing Qupath and Photoshop to quantify inflammatory cell density demonstrated a good agreement between the two methods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Engineering Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells for Cancer Immunotherapy.
- Author
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Zhou, Yang, Li, Miao, Zhou, Kuangyi, Brown, James, Tsao, Tasha, Cen, Xinjian, Husman, Tiffany, Bajpai, Aarushi, Dunn, Zachary Spencer, and Yang, Lili
- Subjects
HOMOGRAFTS ,CELLULAR therapy ,MACROPHAGES ,CELL receptors ,STEM cells ,GENETIC engineering ,CELLS ,TUMORS ,T cells ,IMMUNOTHERAPY - Abstract
Simple Summary: Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) that can be genetically engineered and differentiated into different types of immune cells, providing an unlimited resource for developing off-the-shelf cell therapies. Here, we present a comprehensive review that describes the current stages of iPSC-based cell therapies, including iPSC-derived T, nature killer (NK), invariant natural killer T (iNKT), gamma delta T (γδ T), mucosal-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells, and macrophages (Mφs). Cell-based immunotherapy, such as chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy, has revolutionized the treatment of hematological malignancies, especially in patients who are refractory to other therapies. However, there are critical obstacles that hinder the widespread clinical applications of current autologous therapies, such as high cost, challenging large-scale manufacturing, and inaccessibility to the therapy for lymphopenia patients. Therefore, it is in great demand to generate the universal off-the-shelf cell products with significant scalability. Human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) provide an "unlimited supply" for cell therapy because of their unique self-renewal properties and the capacity to be genetically engineered. iPSCs can be differentiated into different immune cells, such as T cells, natural killer (NK) cells, invariant natural killer T (iNKT) cells, gamma delta T (γδ T), mucosal-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells, and macrophages (Mφs). In this review, we describe iPSC-based allogeneic cell therapy, the different culture methods of generating iPSC-derived immune cells (e.g., iPSC-T, iPSC-NK, iPSC-iNKT, iPSC-γδT, iPSC-MAIT and iPSC-Mφ), as well as the recent advances in iPSC-T and iPSC-NK cell therapies, particularly in combinations with CAR-engineering. We also discuss the current challenges and the future perspectives in this field towards the foreseeable applications of iPSC-based immune therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Casein kinase I delta controls centrosome positioning during T cell activation.
- Author
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Zyss, Deborah, Ebrahimi, Hani, and Gergely, Fanni
- Subjects
- *
CENTROSOMES , *CELLS , *T cells , *EPITHELIAL cells , *CARRIER proteins - Abstract
Although termed central body, the centrosome is located off-center in many polarized cells. T cell receptor (TCR) engagement by antigens induces a polarity switch in T cells. This leads to the recruitment of the centrosome to the immunological synapse (IS), a specialized cell--cell junction. Despite much recent progress, how TCR signaling triggers centrosome repositioning remains poorly understood. In this paper, we uncover a critical requirement for the centrosomal casein kinase I delta (CKId) in centrosome translocation to the IS. CKId binds and phosphorylates the microtubule plus-end--binding protein EB1. Moreover, a putative EB1-binding motif at the C terminus of CKId is required for centrosome translocation to the IS. We find that depletion of CKId in T lymphocytes and inhibition of CKI in epithelial cells reduce microtubule growth. Therefore, we propose that CKId--EB1 complexes contribute to the increase in microtubule growth speeds observed in polarized T cells, a mechanism that might serve to generate long-stable microtubules necessary for centrosome translocation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Novel synthesis of α-galactosyl-ceramides and confirmation of their powerful NKT cell agonist activity
- Author
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Lee, Adrianne, Farrand, Kathryn J., Dickgreber, Nina, Hayman, Colin M., Jürs, Stefan, Hermans, Ian F., and Painter, Gavin F.
- Subjects
- *
CELLS , *BIOLOGY , *T cells , *CELLULAR immunity - Abstract
Abstract: α-Galactosyl-ceramide (1) has been identified as a powerful modulator of immunological processes through its capacity to bind CD1d molecules and specifically activate invariant natural killer (NK)-like T cells (iNKT cells). This paper describes the synthesis of 1, the analogous α-galactosyl-ceramide 3, and its short chain analogue ‘OCH’ (2), by use of the 4,6-di-O-tert-butylsilylene (DTBS) protecting group to produce a powerful α-galactosylating agent. In vivo experiments confirmed these compounds to be potent and selective activators of iNKT cells in a CD1d-dependent manner, each inducing a unique profile of cytokine release. This synthesis strategy will permit the generation of novel derivatives for use in the study of the mechanism of iNKT cell activation. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2006
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17. Quantifying cell turnover using CFSE data
- Author
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Ganusov, Vitaly V., Pilyugin, Sergei S., de Boer, Rob J., Murali-Krishna, Kaja, Ahmed, Rafi, and Antia, Rustom
- Subjects
- *
CYTOLOGY , *CELL proliferation , *CELLS , *T cells - Abstract
Abstract: The CFSE dye dilution assay is widely used to determine the number of divisions a given CFSE labelled cell has undergone in vitro and in vivo. In this paper, we consider how the data obtained with the use of CFSE (CFSE data) can be used to estimate the parameters determining cell division and death. For a homogeneous cell population (i.e., a population with the parameters for cell division and death being independent of time and the number of divisions cells have undergone), we consider a specific biologically based “Smith–Martin” model of cell turnover and analyze three different techniques for estimation of its parameters: direct fitting, indirect fitting and rescaling method. We find that using only CFSE data, the duration of the division phase (i.e., approximately the S+G2 +M phase of the cell cycle) can be estimated with the use of either technique. In some cases, the average division or cell cycle time can be estimated using the direct fitting of the model solution to the data or by using the Gett–Hodgkin method [Gett A. and Hodgkin, P. 2000. A cellular calculus for signal integration by T cells. Nat. Immunol. 1:239-244]. Estimation of the death rates during commitment to division (i.e., approximately the G1 phase of the cell cycle) and during the division phase may not be feasible with the use of only CFSE data. We propose that measuring an additional parameter, the fraction of cells in division, may allow estimation of all model parameters including the death rates during different stages of the cell cycle. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Impairment of gamma/delta T lymphocytes in elderly: implications for immunosenescence
- Author
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Colonna-Romano, Giuseppina, Aquino, Alessandra, Bulati, Matteo, Lio, Domenico, Candore, Giuseppina, Oddo, Gioacchino, Scialabba, Giuseppe, Vitello, Salvatore, and Caruso, Calogero
- Subjects
- *
LYMPHOCYTES , *CELLS , *LEUCOCYTES , *T cells - Abstract
Gamma/delta T lymphocytes cells recognize the antigen in a non-classical way and are considered the third branch of the immune system devoted to defend the integrity of the body. Ageing is characterized by an impairment of the main way of protection (the adaptive branch) but, successfully aged people show compensatory mechanisms of defense such as proneness to inflammation. Moreover, very old subjects show an increased number of NK cells. We have previously demonstrated that γδT lymphocytes are reduced in elderly. In the present paper we have studied some characteristics of these cells to evaluate the possibility that these cells might balance the decreased action of the adaptive branch in successfully aged people. Cytofluorimetric analysis of cells collected from young, old and centenarian subjects has been used to evaluate the ability of these cells to expand in vitro. Here we demonstrate that γδT cells are impaired in the ability to proliferate to different stimuli such as isopentenyl pyrophoshate, that select γδT lymphocytes bearing δ2 chain, other than to phytohemagglutinin and anti-CD3 that are polyclonal activators. Moreover, we demonstrate that γδT cells in aged and centenarians show an enhanced sensitivity to undergo apoptosis induced both by α-Fas and TNF-α. All together these data suggest that γδT lymphocytes are impaired in elderly and suggest that the reduced ability to proliferate and the reduced number of circulating γδT lymphocytes is due to the proneness to apoptosis. Finally on the basis of these data, we conclude that γδT lymphocytes, do not participate in the remodeling of the immune system due to the reduction of classical T cell response and replacement by NK cells in elderly. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Nanosecond Electroperturbation--Mammalian Cell Sensitivity and Bacterial Spore Resistance.
- Author
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Vernier, P. Thomas, Thu, Mya Mya S., Marcu, Laura, Craft, Cheryl M., and Gundersen, Martin A.
- Subjects
BACTERIAL spores ,CELLS ,BACILLUS (Bacteria) ,BIOLOGICAL systems ,T cells ,BIOENGINEERING - Abstract
Ultra-short, high-field electric pulses induce apoptosis in Jurkat T lymphoblasts but have little effect on rat glioma C6 cells even at much higher doses. Germination of Bacillus atrophaeus spores is unaffected even by exposure to millions of nanosecond, megavolt-per-meter pulses. Despite the many fundamental similarities among biological systems at the cellular level, and the well-defined physical and electrical parameters of nanoelectropulse delivery systems, a wide variety of responses to stimuli in this new bioelectrontagnetic regime must be anticipated. Future studies can utilize these differences to uncover the underlying mechanisms and to exploit the relative resistances and sensitivities among cell and tissue types for the expansion of fundamental knowledge of cell biology and for practical applications in therapeutics and bioengineering. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Overexpression of a mutant CTLA4 inhibits T-cell activation and homeostasis-driven expansion
- Author
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Mao, Yifan, Brigham, Dan, and Chen, Dan
- Subjects
- *
CELLS , *LYMPHOCYTES , *PHYSIOLOGICAL control systems , *T cells , *PHYSIOLOGY , *BONE marrow - Abstract
Interaction of B7 with CD28 and CTLA4 plays an important function in T-cell activation and homeostasis. Disruption of CD28, CTLA4, or both has shown impact on T-cell biology. This paper examined the consequences of overexpressing a tailless mutant form of CTLA4 on T-cell activation and in vivo expansion.Retroviral gene transfer was used to infect bone marrow progenitor cells with either a control vector or a cytoplasmic domain-deleted mutant of CTLA-4 (ΔCTLA4). The cells were subsequently adoptively transferred to RAG-/- mice and allowed to repopulate. The T cells derived from the reconstituted RAG-/- mice were analyzed functionally in vitro and in vivo.The T cells were defective in their ability for IL-2 secretion, survival, and proliferation in response to Ag/APC stimulation in vitro. Addition of exogenous IL-2 or normal T cells was able to rescue the survival defect and allow cell-cycle progression. In adoptive transfer studies, the naïve T cells expressing ΔCTLA4 exhibited compromised capability to expand in RAG-/- mice. Memory ΔCTLA4T cells, however, were capable of proliferating in lymphopenic hosts to a similar extent as control memory T cells, but showed reduced survival.Surface ΔCTLA4 has similar tolerogenic/regulatory activity as CTLA4-Ig. In contrast to CTLA4-Ig, the effect of ΔCTLA-4 is autonomous. The inhibition of in vivo expansion by ΔCTLA4 indicates developmental and/or activation stage dependency of costimulation in T cells. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Regulatory CD8+ T cells control thyrotropin receptor-specific CD4+ clones in healthy subjects
- Author
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Molteni, Monica, Rossetti, Carlo, Scrofani, Santo, Bonara, Paola, Scorza, Raffaella, and Kohn, Leonard D.
- Subjects
- *
T cells , *CELLS , *CELL communication , *AUTOIMMUNE thyroiditis , *DISEASES - Abstract
One of the mechanisms ensuring immunological unresponsiveness or tolerance depends on the action of CD8+ lymphocytes. In this paper, we report that, in healthy subjects, a subset of CD8+CD28− T cells suppresses the specific response to TSH receptor (TSHR) of CD4+ clones. Suppression was highly specific, required cell–cell interaction, and was not mediated by cytotoxicity. Co-incubation of CD8+ and CD4+ clones, followed by the removal of the CD8+ cells from the cultures before testing CD4+ responsiveness to TSHR, demonstrated that CD4+ cells were anergic since they showed low response to the antigen and a significant impairment of IL-2 production. In CD8-mediated anergy induction, the T-cell receptor (TCR) on both CD4+ and CD8+ cells seems to play a role. Our results indicate that one of the mechanisms ensuring peripheral tolerance involve CD8+CD28− cells. A disregulation in the control of autoreactive clones by this subset might be important for the onset of autoimmune thyroid diseases. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Abstracts.
- Subjects
- *
CELLS , *CELLULAR therapy , *CORD blood , *T cells - Abstract
Presents abstracts of papers related to cytotherapy. "Cord Blood-Derived Mesenchymal Progenitor Cells Can Present Distinct Hematopoietic Supportive Capacity," by Z. C. Alfonso; "Large-Scale Transcriptional Analysis of ex vivo Expanded Human T Cells," by H. Haddad; "Extensive Purging of NHL Cells Using a Photodynamic Strategy," by N. Dallaire.
- Published
- 2001
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- View/download PDF
23. Immune cell infiltrates as prognostic biomarkers in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma: a systematic review and meta‐analysis.
- Author
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McGuigan, Andrew J, Coleman, Helen G, McCain, R Stephen, Kelly, Paul J, Johnston, David I, Taylor, Mark A, and Turkington, Richard C
- Subjects
PROGNOSIS ,PROGRESSION-free survival ,META-analysis ,ADENOCARCINOMA ,CELLS ,T cells ,PROGRAMMED cell death 1 receptors - Abstract
Immune cell infiltration has been identified as a prognostic biomarker in several cancers. However, no immune based biomarker has yet been validated for use in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). We undertook a systematic review and meta‐analysis of immune cell infiltration, measured by immunohistochemistry (IHC), as a prognostic biomarker in PDAC. All other IHC prognostic biomarkers in PDAC were also summarised. MEDLINE, EMBASE and Web of Science were searched between 1998 and 2018. Studies investigating IHC biomarkers and prognosis in PDAC were included. REMARK score and Newcastle–Ottawa scale were used for qualitative analysis. Random‐effects meta‐analyses were used to pool results, where possible. Twenty‐six articles studied immune cell infiltration IHC biomarkers and PDAC prognosis. Meta‐analysis found high infiltration with CD4 (hazard ratio [HR] = 0.65, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.51–0.83.) and CD8 (HR = 0.68, 95% CI = 0.55–0.84.) T‐lymphocytes associated with better disease‐free survival. Reduced overall survival was associated with high CD163 (HR = 1.62, 95% CI = 1.03–2.56). Infiltration of CD3, CD20, FoxP3 and CD68 cells, and PD‐L1 expression was not prognostic. In total, 708 prognostic biomarkers were identified in 1101 studies. In summary, high CD4 and CD8 infiltration are associated with better disease‐free survival in PDAC. Increased CD163 is adversely prognostic. Despite the publication of 708 IHC prognostic biomarkers in PDAC, none has been validated for clinical use. Further research should focus on reproducibility of prognostic biomarkers in PDAC in order to achieve this. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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24. Clonal tracking of haematopoietic cells: insights and clinical implications.
- Author
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Cordes, Stefan, Wu, Chuanfeng, and Dunbar, Cynthia E.
- Subjects
STEM cells ,IMMUNOLOGIC memory ,CELLS ,BLOOD cells ,CELLULAR therapy - Abstract
Summary: Recent advances in high‐throughput genomics have enabled the direct tracking of outputs from many cell types, greatly accelerating the study of developmental processes and tissue regeneration. The capacity for long‐term self‐renewal with multilineage differentiation potential characterises the cellular dynamics of a special set of developmental states that are critical for maintaining homeostasis. In haematopoiesis, the archetypal model for development, lineage‐tracing experiments have elucidated the roles of haematopoietic stem cells to ongoing blood production and the importance of long‐lived immune cells to immunological memory. An understanding of the biology and clonal dynamics of these cellular fates and states can provide clues to the response of haematopoiesis to ageing, the process of malignant transformation, and are key to designing more efficacious and durable clinical gene and cellular therapies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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25. Functional Analysis of B--L (la-Like) Antigen- Bearing Chicken Peripheral Blood Cells.
- Author
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Hála, K., Boyd, R. L., Wolf, H., Böck, G., and Wick, G.
- Subjects
LYMPHOCYTES ,CELLS ,LEUCOCYTES ,FLUORESCENCE ,T cells ,IMMUNOCYTOCHEMISTRY ,IMMUNOCHEMISTRY - Abstract
The function of B-L (Ia-equivalent)-positive (B-L
+ ) and -negative (B-L- ) chicken peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) was studied in vitro and in vivo. The PBL were first stained in direct immunofluorescence tests with a fluorescein isothiocyanate-labelled anti-B-L alloantiserum and then separated by means of a fluorescence-activated cell sorter. In agreement with our previous findings, B-L- cells showed functional properties of T lymphocytes, responding to concanavalin A and phytohaemagglutinin-P in vitro and inducing a graft-versus-host (GVH) reaction when injected into allogeneic embryos. Sorted B-L+ " gave no responses in any of these assays. Neither B-L+ nor B-L- cells, when tested alone, responded significantly to pokeweed mitogen, but mixtures of the two restored the responsiveness to that of the original unsorted suspension. Of the B-L+ PBL, 10% were T cells, which may account for the low GVH reactivity given by this population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 1984
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26. Cellular scars and local crosstalk in relapsing psoriasis: an example of a skin sticking disease.
- Author
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Gallais Sérézal, Irène, Cheuk, Stanley, Martini, Elisa, and Eidsmo, Liv
- Subjects
SKIN diseases ,PSORIASIS ,DISEASE remission ,CROSSTALK ,CELL anatomy ,PSORIATIC arthritis - Abstract
Psoriasis is an inflammatory disease that arises in genetically predisposed individuals. Chronic skin lesions that contain activated immune cells can persist for years. Systemic inhibition of TNF, IL‐17 and IL‐23 cytokines has revolutionized psoriasis care during the recent decades. Unfortunately, local relapse of disease is common at previously inflamed sites after cessation of treatment. This highlights that fundamental pathologic alterations of the affected tissues are not completely resolved during clinical remission. Here, we present arguments for a local disease memory located in both dermis and epidermis in psoriasis skin. We decipher different cellular components and intercellular crosstalk that sustain local disease memory and amplify disease relapse in human psoriasis. Decrypting the mechanisms underlying the establishment and persistence of pathogenic memory cells in resolved psoriasis may provide new therapeutic perspectives aimed at long‐term remission of psoriasis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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- View/download PDF
27. Correction: Serrano, R.; Wesch, D.; Kabelitz, D. Activation of Human γδ T Cells: Modulation by Toll-Like Receptor 8 Ligands and Role of Monocytes. Cells 2020, 9, 713.
- Author
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Serrano, Ruben, Wesch, Daniela, and Kabelitz, Dieter
- Subjects
TOLL-like receptors ,T cells ,LIGANDS (Biochemistry) ,CELLS ,MONOCYTES - Published
- 2020
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28. Human Lymphoid Stromal Cells Contribute to Polarization of Follicular T Cells Into IL-4 Secreting Cells.
- Author
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Misiak, Jan, Jean, Rachel, Rodriguez, Stéphane, Deleurme, Laurent, Lamy, Thierry, Tarte, Karin, and Amé-Thomas, Patricia
- Subjects
T cells ,T helper cells ,STROMAL cells ,NOTCH genes ,CELLS ,INTERLEUKIN-21 - Abstract
Fibroblastic reticular cells (FRCs) are the specialized lymphoid stromal cells initially identified as triggering T-cell recruitment and dynamic motion in secondary lymphoid organs. Interestingly, FRCs also display antigen presentation capacities and support lymphocyte survival. CXCR5
+ CD4+ follicular T cells are important players of B-cell maturation and antibody response. Our study reported that in vitro -differentiated FRC-like cells enhanced the growth of the whole CXCR5+ CD4+ T-cell compartment, while enhancing IL-4 secretion specifically by the PD1dim CXCR5+ CD4+ cell subset, in a Notch- and ICAM1/LFA1-dependent manner. In addition, we revealed that in follicular lymphoma (FL) tissues, previously identified as enriched for PD1hi CXCR5hi CD4+ mature follicular helper T cells, PD1dim CXCR5+ CD4+ T cells displayed an enrichment for Notch and integrin gene signatures, and a Notch and ICAM-1-dependent overexpression of IL-4 compared to their non-malignant counterparts. These findings suggest that the crosstalk between FRCs and CXCR5+ PD1dim CD4+ T cells may contribute to the FL IL-4 rich environment, thus providing new insights in FL lymphomagenesis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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- View/download PDF
29. Exosomes derived from Vδ2-T cells control Epstein-Barr virus–associated tumors and induce T cell antitumor immunity.
- Author
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Wang, Xiwei, Xiang, Zheng, Liu, Yinping, Huang, Chunyu, Pei, Yujun, Wang, Xia, Zhi, Hui, Wong, Wilfred Hing-Sang, Wei, Haiming, Ng, Irene Oi-Lin, Lee, Pamela Pui-Wah, Chan, Godfrey Chi-Fung, Lau, Yu-Lung, and Tu, Wenwei
- Subjects
EXOSOMES ,T cells ,CYTOTOXIC T cells ,KILLER cells ,CELLS ,CELLULAR immunity ,TUMORS - Abstract
No holds barred for antitumor attack: Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is a common pathogen that contributes to the development of several cancers, which can be difficult to treat. γδ-T cells have innate activity and have been proposed as a cancer immunotherapy, but they have been difficult to apply, particularly because they have to be individually prepared for each patient. To overcome the hurdles associated with whole γδ-T cell–based therapy, Wang et al. isolated exosomes from a subtype of activated γδ-T cells, which contained multiple immunostimulatory molecules and cell death–inducing ligands. These exosomes were effective against multiple mouse models of EBV-associated cancers and did not require customized preparation unlike cell-based therapies. Treatment of life-threatening Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)–associated tumors remains a great challenge, especially for patients with relapsed or refractory disease. Here, we found that exosomes derived from phosphoantigen-expanded Vδ2-T cells (Vδ2-T-Exos) contained death-inducing ligands (FasL and TRAIL), an activating receptor for natural killer (NK) cells (NKG2D), immunostimulatory ligands (CD80 and CD86), and antigen-presenting molecules (MHC class I and II). Vδ2-T-Exos targeted and efficiently killed EBV-associated tumor cells through FasL and TRAIL pathways and promoted EBV antigen–specific CD4 and CD8 T cell expansion. Administration of Vδ2-T-Exos effectively controlled EBV-associated tumors in Rag2
−/− γc−/− and humanized mice. Because expanding Vδ2-T cells and preparing autologous Vδ2-T-Exos from cancer patients ex vivo in large scale is challenging, we explored the antitumor activity of allogeneic Vδ2-T-Exos in humanized mouse cancer models. Here, we found that allogeneic Vδ2-T-Exos had more effective antitumor activity than autologous Vδ2-T-Exos in humanized mice; the allogeneic Vδ2-T-Exos increased the infiltration of T cells into tumor tissues and induced more robust CD4 and CD8 T cell–mediated antitumor immunity. Compared with exosomes derived from NK cells (NK-Exos) with direct cytotoxic antitumor activity or dendritic cells (DC-Exos) that induced T cell antitumor responses, Vδ2-T-Exos directly killed tumor cells and induced T cell–mediated antitumor response, thus resulting in more effective control of EBV-associated tumors. This study provided proof of concept for the strategy of using Vδ2-T-Exos, especially allogeneic Vδ2-T-Exos, to treat EBV-associated tumors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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- View/download PDF
30. Postnatal Expansion, Maturation, and Functionality of MR1T Cells in Humans.
- Author
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Swarbrick, Gwendolyn M., Gela, Anele, Cansler, Meghan E., Null, Megan D., Duncan, Rowan B., Nemes, Elisa, Shey, Muki, Nsereko, Mary, Mayanja-Kizza, Harriet, Kiguli, Sarah, Koh, Jeffrey, Hanekom, Willem A., Hatherill, Mark, Lancioni, Christina, Lewinsohn, David M., Scriba, Thomas J., and Lewinsohn, Deborah A.
- Subjects
BCG vaccines ,MYCOBACTERIUM tuberculosis ,T cells ,CELL populations ,CELLS ,AGE groups - Abstract
MR1-restricted T (MR1T) cells are defined by their recognition of metabolite antigens presented by the monomorphic MHC class 1-related molecule, MR1, the most highly conserved MHC class I related molecule in mammalian species. Mucosal-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells are the predominant subset of MR1T cells expressing an invariant TCR α-chain, TRAV1-2. These cells comprise a T cell subset that recognizes and mediates host immune responses to a broad array of microbial pathogens, including Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Here, we sought to characterize development of circulating human MR1T cells as defined by MR1-5-OP-RU tetramer labeling and of the TRAV1-2
+ MAIT cells defined by expression of TRAV1-2 and high expression of CD26 and CD161 (TRAV1-2+ CD161++ CD26++ cells). We analyzed postnatal expansion, maturation, and functionality of peripheral blood MR1-5-OP-RU tetramer+ MR1T cells in cohorts from three different geographic settings with different tuberculosis (TB) vaccination practices, levels of exposure to and infection with M. tuberculosis. Early after birth, frequencies of MR1-5-OP-RU tetramer+ MR1T cells increased rapidly by several fold. This coincided with the transition from a predominantly CD4+ and TRAV1-2− population in neonates, to a predominantly TRAV1-2+ CD161++ CD26++ CD8+ population. We also observed that tetramer+ MR1T cells that expressed TNF upon mycobacterial stimulation were very low in neonates, but increased ~10-fold in the first year of life. These functional MR1T cells in all age groups were MR1-5-OP-RU tetramer+ TRAV1-2+ and highly expressed CD161 and CD26, markers that appeared to signal phenotypic and functional maturation of this cell subset. This age-associated maturation was also marked by the loss of naïve T cell markers on tetramer+ TRAV1-2+ MR1T cells more rapidly than tetramer+ TRAV1-2− MR1T cells and non-MR1T cells. These data suggest that neonates have infrequent populations of MR1T cells with diverse phenotypic attributes; and that exposure to the environment rapidly and preferentially expands the MR1-5-OP-RU tetramer+ TRAV1-2+ population of MR1T cells, which becomes the predominant population of functional MR1T cells early during childhood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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- View/download PDF
31. MAIT Cells Display a Specific Response to Type 1 IFN Underlying the Adjuvant Effect of TLR7/8 Ligands.
- Author
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Pavlovic, Marion, Gross, Christelle, Chili, Chahinaize, Secher, Thomas, and Treiner, Emmanuel
- Subjects
LIGANDS (Biochemistry) ,CELLULAR recognition ,CELLS ,BACTERIAL diseases ,T cells - Abstract
Mucosal-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells constitute a highly conserved subset of effector T cells with innate-like recognition of a wide array of bacteria and fungi in humans. Harnessing the potential of these cells could represent a major advance as a new immunotherapy approach to fight difficult-to-treat bacterial infections. However, despite recent advances in the design of potent agonistic ligands for MAIT cells, it has become increasingly evident that adjuvants are required to elicit potent antimicrobial effector functions by these cells, such as IFNγ production and cytotoxicity. Indeed, TCR triggering alone elicits mostly barrier repair functions in MAIT cells, whereas an inflammatory milieu is required to drive the antibacterial functions. Cytokines such as IL-7, IL-12 and IL-18, IL-15 or more recently type 1 IFN all display an apparently similar ability to synergize with TCR stimulation to induce IFNγ production and/or cytotoxic functions in vitro , but their mechanisms of action are not well established. Herein, we show that MAIT cells feature a build-in mechanism to respond to IFNα. We confirm that IFNα acts directly and specifically on MAIT cells and synergizes with TCR/CD3 triggering to induce maximum cytokine production and cytotoxic functions. We provide evidences suggesting that the preferential activation of the Stat4 pathway is involved in the high sensitivity of MAIT cells to IFNα stimulation. Finally, gene expression data confirm the specific responsiveness of MAIT cells to IFNα and pinpoints specific pathways that could be the target of this cytokine. Altogether, these data highlight the potential of IFNα-inducing adjuvants to maximize MAIT cells responsiveness to purified ligands in order to induce potent anti-infectious responses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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- View/download PDF
32. A novel link between Lck, Bak expression and chemosensitivity.
- Author
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Heyninck, K and Beyaert, R
- Subjects
PROTEIN kinases ,PHYSIOLOGICAL control systems ,CELLS ,PROTEIN-tyrosine kinases ,APOPTOSIS ,T cells ,DRUG therapy - Abstract
Protein kinases are critically involved in signaling pathways that regulate cell growth, differentiation, activation, and survival. Lck, a member of the Src family of protein tyrosine kinases, plays a key role in T-lymphocyte activation and differentiation. However, under certain conditions Lck is also involved in the induction of apoptosis. In this issue of Oncogene, Samraj et al. used the Lck-defective JCaM1.6 cell line to demonstrate the critical role of Lck in the apoptotic response of T-cell leukemia cells to several chemotherapeutic drugs. They further showed that Lck controls the mitochondrial death pathway by regulating proapoptotic Bak expression. This chemosensitizing effect of Lck is independent of T-cell receptor signaling and does not require the kinase activity of Lck. These findings demonstrate that Lck might be part of two independent signaling pathways leading to either cell proliferation or apoptosis, and reveal a hitherto unrecognized link between Lck, Bak, and chemosensitivity of human leukemic cells.Oncogene (2006) 25, 1693–1695. doi:10.1038/sj.onc.1209157; published online 26 September 2005 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. CD1a and langerin: acting as more than Langerhans cell markers.
- Author
-
Mizumoto, Norikatsu and Takashima, Akira
- Subjects
- *
LANGERHANS cells , *EPIDERMIS , *CELLS , *EPITHELIUM , *SKIN , *IMMUNE response , *T cells , *MYCOBACTERIUM leprae , *ANTIGENS - Abstract
Langerhans cells (LCs) represent a unique DC subset populating the outermost body surface, i.e., the epidermis. Although CDla and langerin (CD207) are used as specific markers to distinguish LCs from other DC subsets, their immunological functions have remained mostly unknown. A new paper (see the related article beginning on page 701) demonstrates that LCs utilize these markers to induce cellular immune responses to Mycobacterium leprae: CDla mediates the presentation of nonpeptide antigens to T cells, while langerin facilitates uptake of microbial fragments and perhaps their delivery to a specialized subcellular compartment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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- View/download PDF
34. Requirements for the differentiation of innate T-bethigh memory-phenotype CD4+ T lymphocytes under steady state.
- Author
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Kawabe, Takeshi, Yi, Jaeu, Kawajiri, Akihisa, Hilligan, Kerry, Fang, Difeng, Ishii, Naoto, Yamane, Hidehiro, Zhu, Jinfang, Jankovic, Dragana, Kim, Kwang Soon, Trinchieri, Giorgio, and Sher, Alan
- Subjects
CELL differentiation ,LYMPHOCYTES ,HOMEOSTASIS ,T cells ,TECHNICAL specifications ,CELLS - Abstract
CD4
+ T lymphocytes consist of naïve, antigen-specific memory, and memory-phenotype (MP) cell compartments at homeostasis. We recently showed that MP cells exert innate-like effector function during host defense, but whether MP CD4+ T cells are functionally heterogeneous and, if so, what signals specify the differentiation of MP cell subpopulations under homeostatic conditions is still unclear. Here we characterize MP lymphocytes as consisting of T-bethigh , T-betlow , and T-bet− subsets, with innate, Th1-like effector activity exclusively associated with T-bethigh cells. We further show that the latter population depends on IL-12 produced by CD8α+ type 1 dendritic cells (DC1) for its differentiation. Finally, our data demonstrate that this tonic IL-12 production requires TLR-MyD88 signaling independent of foreign agonists, and is further enhanced by CD40-CD40L interactions between DC1 and CD4+ T lymphocytes. We propose that optimal differentiation of T-bethigh MP lymphocytes at homeostasis is driven by self-recognition signals at both the DC and Tcell levels. CD4+ T cells contain a T-bethigh memory-phenotype (MP) population with innate-like functions. Here the authors characterize the requirements for their differentiation at homeostasis and identify a function for IL-12 that is tonically produced by type 1 dendritic cells in an MyD88- and CD40-dependent, but foreign PAMP-independent manner. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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- View/download PDF
35. Analysis of lymphocyte T(CD4+) cells expression on severe early childhood caries and free caries.
- Author
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Luthfi, Muhammad, Rachmadi, Priyawan, Oki, Aqsa Sjuhada, Indrawati, Retno, Agung Sosiawan, and Rifa'i, Muhaimin
- Subjects
CARIOGENIC agents ,T cells ,T helper cells ,T cell receptors ,CELLS ,DENTAL caries ,DENDRITIC cells - Abstract
Early childhood caries (ECC) is still one of the many diseases found in children throughout the world. Cariogenic bacteria are a significant risk factor for ECC associated with early colonization and high levels of cariogenic microbes (Streptococcus mutans, S. mutans). Lymphocyte T (CD4+) cells known as helper T cells, are effector cells for mediated host immunity. Naive T cells (CD4+) must be activated to initiate effector function. This activation occurs through interaction with professional antigen- presenting cells (pro-APC), especially dendritic cells that lead to intracellular pathways that regulate T cell receptor (TCR) more specifically against antigen in T cells. Lymphocyte cells from samples were collected from severe early childhood caries (S-ECC) and Free caries aged 5 to 6 years. The subjects were instructed to gargle 10 mL of sterile NaCl 1.5% solution for 30 seconds, and expectorate it into a sterile glass then analyzing T lymphocyte cell (CD4+) expression using flow cytometry. Lymphocyte T (CD4+) cell expression at SECC (6.2525±64482) while in free caries (8.4138±1.10397) with P-value (P=0. 000). Conclusion of lymphocyte T (CD4+) cells expression at S-ECC is lower than that occurring in free caries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Defining the Threshold IL-2 Signal Required for Induction of Selective Treg Cell Responses Using Engineered IL-2 Muteins.
- Author
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Ghelani, Aazam, Bates, Darren, Conner, Kip, Wu, Min-Zu, Lu, Jiamiao, Hu, Yi-Ling, Li, Chi-Ming, Chaudhry, Ashutosh, and Sohn, Sue J.
- Subjects
SUPPRESSOR cells ,KILLER cells ,CELL proliferation ,T cells ,CELLS ,SIGMA receptors - Abstract
Among all T and NK cell subsets, regulatory T (Treg) cells typically respond to the lowest concentrations of IL-2 due to elevated surface expression of the IL-2R alpha chain (IL2RA; CD25) and the high affinity IL-2 receptor (IL-2R) complex. This enhanced sensitivity forms the basis for low-dose (LD) IL-2 therapy for the treatment of inflammatory diseases, where efficacy correlates with increased Treg cell number and expression of functional markers. Despite strong preclinical support for this approach, moderate and variable clinical efficacy has raised concerns that adequate Treg selectivity still cannot be achieved with LD IL-2, and/or that doses are too low to stimulate effective Treg-mediated suppression within tissues. This has prompted development of IL-2 variants with greater Treg selectivity, achieved through attenuated affinity for the signaling chains of the IL-2R complex (IL2RB or CD122 and IL2RG or CD132) and, consequently, greater reliance on high CD25 levels for full receptor binding and signaling. While certain IL-2 variants have advanced to the clinic, it remains unknown if the full range of IL-2R signaling potency and Treg-selectivity observed with low concentrations of wildtype IL-2 can be sufficiently recapitulated with attenuated IL-2 muteins at high concentrations. Using a panel of engineered IL-2 muteins, we investigated how a range of IL-2R signaling intensity, benchmarked by the degree of STAT5 phosphorylation, relates to biologically relevant Treg cell responses such as proliferation, lineage and phenotypic marker expression, and suppressor function. Our results demonstrate that a surprisingly wide dynamic range of IL-2R signaling intensity leads to productive biological responses in Treg cells, with negligible STAT5 phosphorylation associating with nearly complete downstream effects such as Treg proliferation and suppressor activity. Furthermore, we show with both in vitro and humanized mouse in vivo systems that different biological responses in Treg cells require different minimal IL-2R signaling thresholds. Our findings suggest that more than minimal IL-2R signaling, beyond that capable of driving Treg cell proliferation, may be required to fully enhance Treg cell stability and suppressor function in vivo. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Association of circulating SLAMF7+Tfh1 cells with IgG4 levels in patients with IgG4-related disease.
- Author
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Higashioka, Kazuhiko, Ota, Yuri, Maehara, Takashi, Moriyama, Masafumi, Ayano, Masahiro, Mitoma, Hiroki, Akahoshi, Mitsuteru, Arinobu, Yojiro, Horiuchi, Takahiko, Nakamura, Seiji, Akashi, Koichi, and Niiro, Hiroaki
- Subjects
TH1 cells ,B cells ,T helper cells ,T cells ,CELLS - Abstract
Background: Follicular helper CD4
+ T (Tfh) cells have a critical role in IgG4 production by B cells in IgG4-related disease (IgG4-RD). Recent studies including ours showed that SLAMF7+ CD4+ T cells are an important pathological driver of IgG4-RD. In this study, we have sought to elucidate a relationship between helper CD4+ T (Th), particularly Tfh, cells and SLAMF7+ CD4+ T cells in IgG4-RD. Results: The patients with IgG4-RD enrolled in this study were aged 66 ± 12 years and their titers of serum IgG4 were 372 ± 336 mg/dl. Th1 cells, activated circulating Tfh1 (cTfh1), and activated cTfh2 cells increased in IgG4-RD. SLAMF7 was mainly expressed on Th1 and cTfh1, but not cTfh2, cells in the patients. SLAMF7+ cTfh1 cells were PD-1/CD28 double-positive, whereas SLAMF7+ Th1 cells were CD28 negative. Positive correlations were noted between serum IgG4 levels and the number of activated cTfh2 cells and SLAMF7+ cTfh1 cells, but not SLAMF7+ Th1 cells. Intriguingly, among cTfh1 cells, activated SLAMF7+ cTfh1 cells were high producers of IL-10 along with IL-21. Blimp-1, but not Bcl-6, mRNA was expressed at high levels in activated SLAMF7+ cTfh1 cells. In addition to CD4+ T cells, the frequency of SLAMF7+ fraction was higher in memory B cells than naïve B cells in patients with IgG4RD. Finally, upon stimulation via B-cell receptor and CD40, Tfh1-associated cytokines, IL-21 and IFN-γ, most significantly induced SLAMF7 expression in memory B cells. Conclusions: Together, these results suggest that circulating SLAMF7+ Tfh1 cells, along with Tfh2 cells, play a pathologic role in IgG4 production in IgG4-RD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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- View/download PDF
38. Decidual CD8+T cells exhibit both residency and tolerance signatures modulated by decidual stromal cells.
- Author
-
Liu, Lu, Huang, Xixi, Xu, Chunfang, Chen, Chunqin, Zhao, Weijie, Li, Dajin, Li, Liping, Wang, Li, and Du, Meirong
- Subjects
STROMAL cells ,FIRST trimester of pregnancy ,DECIDUA ,TROPHOBLAST ,T cells ,CELLS ,B cells - Abstract
Background: During early pregnancy, tolerance of the semi-allogeneic fetus necessitates comprehensive modifications of the maternal immune system. How decidual CD8+T (CD8+dT) cells balance maternal tolerance of the fetus with defense from invading pathogens remains undefined.Methods: We investigated the distribution patterns of CD8+T cells and their heterogeneity in paired peripheral blood and decidual tissue in the first trimester of pregnancy using flow cytometry and mRNA-Seq. Gene Set Enrichment Analysis was utilized to determine the transcriptional features of CD8+dT cells. Moreover, we examined activation of T cells when they were cocultured with trophoblasts, in addition to the effect of the fetal-maternal environment on peripheral CD8+T (CD8+pT) cells.Results: We found that, compared with CD8+pT cells, CD8+dT cells consisted mainly of effector memory cells (TEM) and terminally differentiated effector memory cells (TEMRA). Both TEM and TEMRA subsets contained increased numbers of CD27+CD28- cells, which have been shown to possess only partial effector functions. In-depth analysis of the gene-expression profiles of CD8+dT cells revealed significant enrichment in T cell exhaustion-related genes and core tissue residency signature genes that have been found recently to be shared by tissue resident memory cells and tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs). In accordance with gene expression, protein levels of the exhaustion-related molecules PD-1 and CD39 and the tissue resident molecules CD103 and CXCR3 were increased significantly with almost no perforin secretion in CD8+dT cells compared with CD8+pT cells. However, the levels of granzyme B, IFN-γ, and IL-4 in CD8+dT cells were increased significantly compared with those in CD8+pT cells. Both CD8+dT and CD8+pT cells were not activated after being cocultured with autologous trophoblast cells. Moreover, the production of granzyme B in CD103+CD8+dT cells decreased significantly compared with that in their CD103- counterparts. Coculture with decidual stromal cells and trophoblasts upregulated CD103 expression significantly in CD8+pT cells.Conclusions: Our findings indicate that the selective silencing of effector functions of resident CD8+dT cells may favor maternal-fetal tolerance and that the decidual microenvironment plays an important role in promoting the residency of CD8+T cells and their tolerance-defense balance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Tcf1+ cells are required to maintain the inflationary T cell pool upon MCMV infection.
- Author
-
Welten, Suzanne P. M., Yermanos, Alexander, Baumann, Nicolas S., Wagen, Franziska, Oetiker, Nathalie, Sandu, Ioana, Pedrioli, Alessandro, Oduro, Jennifer D., Reddy, Sai T., Cicin-Sain, Luka, Held, Werner, and Oxenius, Annette
- Subjects
VIRUS reactivation ,CYTOMEGALOVIRUS diseases ,CELL populations ,CELLS ,TRANSCRIPTION factors ,T cell receptors ,T cells - Abstract
Cytomegalovirus-based vaccine vectors offer interesting opportunities for T cell-based vaccination purposes as CMV infection induces large numbers of functional effector-like cells that accumulate in peripheral tissues, a process termed memory inflation. Maintenance of high numbers of peripheral CD8 T cells requires continuous replenishment of the inflationary T cell pool. Here, we show that the inflationary T cell population contains a small subset of cells expressing the transcription factor Tcf1. These Tcf1
+ cells resemble central memory T cells and are proliferation competent. Upon sensing viral reactivation events, Tcf1+ cells feed into the pool of peripheral Tcf1− cells and depletion of Tcf1+ cells hampers memory inflation. TCR repertoires of Tcf1+ and Tcf1− populations largely overlap, with the Tcf1+ population showing higher clonal diversity. These data show that Tcf1+ cells are necessary for sustaining the inflationary T cell response, and upholding this subset is likely critical for the success of CMV-based vaccination approaches. Upon infection with cytomegalovirus, CD8+ T cells undergo prolific expansion in a process known as memory inflation. Here the authors define a population of Tcf1 expressing cells within the inflationary pool that is critical in fuelling this process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Astrocytes have the capacity to act as antigen-presenting cells in the Parkinson's disease brain.
- Author
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Rostami, Jinar, Fotaki, Grammatiki, Sirois, Julien, Mzezewa, Ropafadzo, Bergström, Joakim, Essand, Magnus, Healy, Luke, and Erlandsson, Anna
- Subjects
PARKINSON'S disease ,ASTROCYTES ,BRAIN diseases ,T cells ,ANTIGEN presentation ,CELL metabolism ,BRAIN metabolism ,BRAIN ,CELL culture ,ANTIGEN presenting cells ,CELLS ,RESEARCH funding - Abstract
Background: Many lines of evidence suggest that accumulation of aggregated alpha-synuclein (αSYN) in the Parkinson's disease (PD) brain causes infiltration of T cells. However, in which ways the stationary brain cells interact with the T cells remain elusive. Here, we identify astrocytes as potential antigen-presenting cells capable of activating T cells in the PD brain. Astrocytes are a major component of the nervous system, and accumulating data indicate that astrocytes can play a central role during PD progression.Methods: To investigate the role of astrocytes in antigen presentation and T-cell activation in the PD brain, we analyzed post mortem brain tissue from PD patients and controls. Moreover, we studied the capacity of cultured human astrocytes and adult human microglia to act as professional antigen-presenting cells following exposure to preformed αSYN fibrils.Results: Our analysis of post mortem brain tissue demonstrated that PD patients express high levels of MHC-II, which correlated with the load of pathological, phosphorylated αSYN. Interestingly, a very high proportion of the MHC-II co-localized with astrocytic markers. Importantly, we found both perivascular and infiltrated CD4+ T cells to be surrounded by MHC-II expressing astrocytes, confirming an astrocyte T cell cross-talk in the PD brain. Moreover, we showed that αSYN accumulation in cultured human astrocytes triggered surface expression of co-stimulatory molecules critical for T-cell activation, while cultured human microglia displayed very poor antigen presentation capacity. Notably, intercellular transfer of αSYN/MHC-II deposits occurred between astrocytes via tunneling nanotubes, indicating spreading of inflammation in addition to toxic protein aggregates.Conclusions: In conclusion, our data from histology and cell culture studies suggest an important role for astrocytes in antigen presentation and T-cell activation in the PD brain, highlighting astrocytes as a promising therapeutic target in the context of chronic inflammation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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41. PD‐1‐expressing MAIT cells from patients with tuberculosis exhibit elevated production of CXCL13.
- Author
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Jiang, Jing, Cao, Zhihong, Qu, Jiuxin, Liu, Houming, Han, Hongxing, and Cheng, Xiaoxing
- Subjects
TUBERCULOSIS patients ,PLEURAL effusions ,CELLS ,FLOW cytometry ,TUBERCULOSIS - Abstract
To understand functional role of PD‐1‐expressing MAIT cells during tuberculosis infection in humans, sorted PD‐1+ and PD‐1− MAIT cells from pleural effusions of patients with pleural tuberculosis were subjected to transcriptome sequencing. PD‐1‐expressing MAIT cells were analysed by flow cytometry and their phenotypic and functional features were investigated. Transcriptome sequencing identified 144 genes that were differentially expressed between PD‐1+ and PD‐1− MAIT cells from tuberculous pleural effusions and CXCL13 was the gene with highest fold difference. The level of PD‐1‐expressing MAIT cells was associated with extent of TB infection in humans. PD‐1‐expressing MAIT cells had increased production of CXCL13 and IL‐21 as determined by flow cytometry. PD‐1highCXCR5− MAIT cells were significantly expanded in pleural effusions from patients with pleural tuberculosis as compared with those from peripheral blood of both patients with tuberculosis and healthy controls. Although PD‐1highCXCR5− MAIT cells from tuberculous pleural effusions had reduced IFN‐γ level and increased expression of Tim‐3 and GITR, they showed activated phenotype and had higher glucose uptake and lipid content. It is concluded that PD‐1‐expressing MAIT cells had reduced IFN‐γ level but increased production of both CXCL13 and IL‐21. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Rapid expansion of Treg cells protects from collateral colitis following a viral trigger.
- Author
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Schorer, Michelle, Lambert, Katharina, Rakebrandt, Nikolas, Rost, Felix, Kao, Kung-Chi, Yermanos, Alexander, Spörri, Roman, Oderbolz, Josua, Raeber, Miro E., Keller, Christian W., Lünemann, Jan D., Rogler, Gerhard, Boyman, Onur, Oxenius, Annette, and Joller, Nicole
- Subjects
SUPPRESSOR cells ,COLITIS ,INFLAMMATORY bowel diseases ,VIRUS diseases ,T cells ,CELLS - Abstract
Foxp3
+ regulatory T (Treg) cells are essential for maintaining peripheral tolerance and preventing autoimmunity. While genetic factors may predispose for autoimmunity, additional environmental triggers, such as viral infections, are usually required to initiate the onset of disease. Here, we show that viral infection with LCMV results in type I IFN-dependent Treg cell loss that is rapidly compensated by the conversion and expansion of Vβ5+ conventional T cells into iTreg cells. Using Vβ5-deficient mice, we show that these Vβ5+ iTreg cells are dispensable for limiting anti-viral immunity. Rather, the delayed replenishment of Treg cells in Vβ5-deficient mice compromises suppression of microbiota-dependent activation of CD8+ T cells, resulting in colitis. Importantly, recovery from clinical symptoms in IBD patients is marked by expansion of the corresponding Vβ2+ Treg population in humans. Collectively, we provide a link between a viral trigger and an impaired Treg cell compartment resulting in the initiation of immune pathology. Viral infection transiently depletes T regulatory cells (Treg). Here the authors identify a compensatory induced Treg population, which is required to rapidly replenish the Treg niche and suppress microbiota-driven, virus-induced colitis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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43. Frequency of circulating CD8+CD73+T cells is associated with survival in nivolumab-treated melanoma patients.
- Author
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Capone, Mariaelena, Fratangelo, Federica, Giannarelli, Diana, Sorrentino, Claudia, Turiello, Roberta, Zanotta, Serena, Galati, Domenico, Madonna, Gabriele, Tuffanelli, Marilena, Scarpato, Luigi, Grimaldi, Antonio M., Esposito, Assunta, Azzaro, Rosa, Pinto, Antonio, Cavalcanti, Ernesta, Pinto, Aldo, Morello, Silvana, and Ascierto, Paolo A.
- Subjects
MELANOMA ,T cells ,FLOW cytometry ,BRAF genes ,LYMPHOCYTES ,CELLS ,INTERLEUKIN-7 - Abstract
Background: PD-1 blocking agents, such as nivolumab, have demonstrated clear anti-tumor effects and clinical benefits in a subset of patients with advanced malignancies. Nonetheless, more efforts are needed to identify reliable biomarkers for outcome, to correctly select patients who will benefit from anti-PD-1 treatment. The aim of this study was to investigate the role of peripheral CD8+T cells expressing CD73, involved in the generation of the immune suppressive molecule adenosine, in predicting outcome after nivolumab treatment in advanced melanoma patients.Methods: PBMCs from 100 melanoma patients treated with nivolumab were collected at National Cancer Institute "G. Pascale" of Naples. Frequencies of CD8+ lymphocytes phenotypes were assessed by flow cytometry at baseline before nivolumab treatment, along with clinical characteristics and blood count parameters. Healthy controls (n = 20) were also analysed. Percentages of baseline T cells expressing PD-1 and CD73 were correlated with outcome after nivolumab treatment.Results: Melanoma patients presented a lower frequency of total circulating CD8+ lymphocytes than control subjects (p = 0.008). Patients with low baseline percentage of circulating CD8+PD-1+CD73+ lymphocytes (< 2.3%) had better survival (22.4 months vs 6.9 months, p = 0.001). Patients (39%) with clinical benefit from nivolumab therapy presented a significantly lower frequency of circulating CD8+PD-1+CD73+ lymphocytes than patients who progressed to nivolumab treatment (p = 0.02).Conclusions: Our observations suggest that baseline CD73 expression on circulating CD8+PD-1+ lymphocytes appear a promising biomarker of response to anti-PD-1 treatment in melanoma patients. Further investigations are needed for validation and for clarifying its role as prognostic or predictive marker. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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44. Lymphatic endothelial cells prime naïve CD8+ T cells into memory cells under steady-state conditions.
- Author
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Vokali, Efthymia, Yu, Shann S., Hirosue, Sachiko, Rinçon-Restrepo, Marcela, V. Duraes, Fernanda, Scherer, Stefanie, Corthésy-Henrioud, Patricia, Kilarski, Witold W., Mondino, Anna, Zehn, Dietmar, Hugues, Stéphanie, and Swartz, Melody A.
- Subjects
T cells ,ENDOTHELIAL cells ,T cell differentiation ,LISTERIOSIS ,ANTIGEN presenting cells ,CELLS ,INTERLEUKIN-7 - Abstract
Lymphatic endothelial cells (LECs) chemoattract naïve T cells and promote their survival in the lymph nodes, and can cross-present antigens to naïve CD8
+ T cells to drive their proliferation despite lacking key costimulatory molecules. However, the functional consequence of LEC priming of CD8+ T cells is unknown. Here, we show that while many proliferating LEC-educated T cells enter early apoptosis, the remainders comprise a long-lived memory subset, with transcriptional, metabolic, and phenotypic features of central memory and stem cell-like memory T cells. In vivo, these memory cells preferentially home to lymph nodes and display rapid proliferation and effector differentiation following memory recall, and can protect mice against a subsequent bacterial infection. These findings introduce a new immunomodulatory role for LECs in directly generating a memory-like subset of quiescent yet antigen-experienced CD8+ T cells that are long-lived and can rapidly differentiate into effector cells upon inflammatory antigenic challenge. Lymphatic endothelial cells (LECs) can cross-present antigen to naïve CD8+ T cells, but the significance of this interaction was unclear. Here the authors show that LECs directly induce CD8+ T cell differentiation with memory-like phenotypes, migration patterns and transcriptome, which can later be recalled to promote effector immunity and protection from Listeria infection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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45. Combination therapies enhance immunoregulatory properties of MIAMI cells.
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Rossi, Fiorella, Noren, Hunter, Sarria, Leonor, Schiller, Paul C., Nathanson, Lubov, and Beljanski, Vladimir
- Subjects
T cells ,SMALL molecules ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,STROMAL cells ,CELLS ,PROGRAMMED cell death 1 receptors - Abstract
Background: Mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs), adult stromal cells most commonly isolated from bone marrow (BM), are being increasingly utilized in various therapeutic applications including tissue repair via immunomodulation, which is recognized as one of their most relevant mechanism of action. The promise of MSC-based therapies is somewhat hindered by their apparent modest clinical benefits, highlighting the need for approaches that would increase the efficacy of such therapies. Manipulation of cellular stress-response mechanism(s) such as autophagy, a catabolic stress-response mechanism, with small molecules prior to or during MSC injection could improve MSCs' therapeutic efficacy. Unfortunately, limited information exists on how manipulation of autophagy affects MSCs' response to inflammation and subsequent immunoregulatory properties. Methods: In this study, we exposed BM-MSC precursor cells, "marrow-isolated adult multilineage inducible" (MIAMI) cells, to autophagy modulators tamoxifen (TX) or chloroquine (CQ), together with IFN-γ. Exposed cells then underwent RNA sequencing (RNAseq) to determine the effects of TX or CQ co-treatments on cellular response to IFN-γ at a molecular level. Furthermore, we evaluated their immunoregulatory capacity using activated CD4+ T cells by analyzing T cell activation marker CD25 and the percentage of proliferating T cells after co-culturing the cells with MIAMI cells treated or not with TX or CQ. Results: RNAseq data indicate that the co-treatments alter both mRNA and protein levels of key genes responsible for MSCs' immune-regulatory properties. Interestingly, TX and CQ also altered some of the microRNAs targeting such key genes. In addition, while IFN-γ treatment alone increased the surface expression of PD-L1 and secretion of IDO, this increase was further enhanced with TX. An improvement in MIAMI cells' ability to decrease the activation and proliferation of T cells was also observed with TX, and to a lesser extent, CQ co-treatments. Conclusion: Altogether, this work suggests that both TX and CQ have a potential to enhance MIAMI cells' immunoregulatory properties. However, this enhancement is more pronounced with TX co-treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Myeloid cells activate iNKT cells to produce IL-4 in the thymic medulla.
- Author
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Haiguang Wang, Breed, Elise R., You Jeong Lee, Qian, Lily J., Jameson, Stephen C., and Hogquist, Kristin A.
- Subjects
T cell receptors ,DIPHTHERIA toxin ,BONE marrow ,T cells ,CELLS - Abstract
Interleukin-4 (IL-4) is produced by a unique subset of invariant natural killer T (iNKT) cells (NKT2) in the thymus in the steady state, where it conditions CD8
+ T cells to become "memory-like" among other effects. However, the signals that cause NKT2 cells to constitutively produce IL-4 remain poorly defined. Using histocytometry, we observed IL-4-producing NKT2 cells localized to the thymic medulla, suggesting that medullary signals might instruct NKT2 cells to produce IL-4. Moreover, NKT2 cells receive and require T cell receptor (TCR) stimulation for continuous IL-4 production in the steady state, since NKT2 cells lost IL-4 production when intrathymically transferred into CD1d-deficient recipients. In bone marrow chimeric recipients, only hematopoietic, not stromal, antigen-presenting cells (APCs), provided such stimulation. Furthermore, using different Cre-recombinase transgenic mouse strains to specifically target CD1d deficiency to various APCs, together with the use of diphtheria toxin receptor (DTR) transgenic mouse strains to deplete various APCs, we found that macrophages were the predominant cell to stimulate NKT2 IL-4 production. Thus, NKT2 cells appear to encounter and require different activating ligands for selection in the cortex and activation in the medulla. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Engineering γδT cells limits tonic signaling associated with chimeric antigen receptors.
- Author
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Fisher, Jonathan, Sharma, Roshan, Don, Dilu Wisidagamage, Barisa, Marta, Hurtado, Marina Olle, Abramowski, Pierre, Porter, Lucy, Day, William, Borea, Roberto, Inglott, Sarah, Anderson, John, and Pe'er, Dana
- Subjects
T cell receptors ,CHIMERIC antigen receptors ,T cells ,CELL analysis ,CANCER cells ,CELLS ,CYTOTOXIC T cells ,CYTOMETRY - Abstract
Taming tonic signaling: Adoptive transfer of T cells engineered to express a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) is an effective therapy for select lymphomas. The potency of this therapy can be limited by antigen-independent (tonic) signaling, which promotes progressive CAR-T cell inactivation. Fisher et al. used mass cytometry to analyze CAR-T cells and found that the process of increasing αβ T cell numbers during CAR-T cell production (expansion) was sufficient to increase tonic signaling in αβ T cells. In contrast, expansion of γδT cells did not alter their basal activity. When these cells were engineered to express a chimeric costimulatory receptor, they specifically recognized transformed, but not healthy, myeloid cell targets. These data demonstrate a strategy for engineering specific antitumor responses free of the complications associated with tonic signaling. Despite the benefits of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)–T cell therapies against lymphoid malignancies, responses in solid tumors have been more limited and off-target toxicities have been more marked. Among the possible design limitations of CAR-T cells for cancer are unwanted tonic (antigen-independent) signaling and off-target activation. Efforts to overcome these hurdles have been blunted by a lack of mechanistic understanding. Here, we showed that single-cell analysis with time course mass cytometry provided a rapid means of assessing CAR-T cell activation. We compared signal transduction in expanded T cells to that in T cells transduced to express second-generation CARs and found that cell expansion enhanced the response to stimulation. However, expansion also induced tonic signaling and reduced network plasticity, which were associated with expression of the T cell exhaustion markers PD-1 and TIM-3. Because this was most evident in pathways downstream of CD3ζ, we performed similar analyses on γδT cells that expressed chimeric costimulatory receptors (CCRs) lacking CD3ζ but containing DAP10 stimulatory domains. These CCR-γδT cells did not exhibit tonic signaling but were efficiently activated and mounted cytotoxic responses in the presence of CCR-specific stimuli or cognate leukemic cells. Single-cell signaling analysis enabled detailed characterization of CAR-T and CCR-T cell activation to better understand their functional activities. Furthermore, we demonstrated that CCR-γδT cells may offer the potential to avoid on-target, off-tumor toxicity and allo-reactivity in the context of myeloid malignancies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Are stem cells attacked in graft-versus-host disease?
- Author
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Sale, George E.
- Subjects
GRAFT versus host disease ,IMMUNOLOGIC diseases ,STEM cells ,HAIR follicles ,T cells ,CELLS - Abstract
The article presents information on related to attack on the stem cells in Graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). The author and colleagues and had noted a predilection for the rete ridge in GVHD, so in response to their paper, they tested this region as a target for GVHD. They suggested that some property of this region, perhaps the presence of stem cells or their early progeny, serves as a target for GVHD. Now other researchers have demonstrated that the parafollicular bulge of the hair follicle is the true site of stem cells within the hair follicle in mouse, providing not only the cells for the follicle in general, but the cells for the previous candidate site, the hair bulb. It is hoped that by studying specific cytolytic T cell markers and measures of proliferation in the early post-transplant period that some objective criteria may be found for the early diagnosis of GVHD.
- Published
- 1991
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49. Expansion deficiency of CAR‐T cells in patients with lymphoma and resolution by T cell purification.
- Author
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Chen, Lvzhe, Li, Shiqi, Wang, Meiling, Li, Yunyan, Xiong, Zhouxing, Zhang, Rui, Xu, Yanmin, Huang, Zixuan, Wang, Linling, Wang, Sanbin, Yang, Zhi, and Qian, Cheng
- Subjects
T cells ,CELLS ,CD19 antigen - Abstract
The article discusses the expansion deficiency of CAR-T cells in patients with lymphoma and resolution by T cell purification. Topics include how CD19-targeting chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cells have shown impressive efficiency in the treatment of relapsed and refractory B cell malignancies and expansion failure in some patients, especially in lymphoma patients.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Mesenchymal Stem Cells Derived and Cultured from Glioblastoma Multiforme Increase Tregs, Downregulate Th17, and Induce the Tolerogenic Phenotype of Monocyte-Derived Cells.
- Author
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Tumangelova-Yuzeir, Kalina, Naydenov, Emanuil, Ivanova-Todorova, Ekaterina, Krasimirova, Ekaterina, Vasilev, Georgi, Nachev, Sevdalin, and Kyurkchiev, Dobroslav
- Subjects
STEM cell culture ,GLIOBLASTOMA multiforme ,CELL morphology ,CELLS ,T cells ,MESENCHYMAL stem cells - Abstract
Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) possess immunosuppressive properties and have been described in the tumor microenvironment of glioblastoma multiforme (GBM). This manuscript has two major topics—first, to describe isolated and cultured MSCs derived from GBM (GB-MSCs) and second, to examine their in vitro immunosuppressive capacity. Our results display cells with morphology and phenotype, clonogenic ability, and osteogenic potential, typical for MSCs. Furthermore, the cultured cells show intracellular expression of the neural markers Nestin and GFAP. They express PD-L1 and secrete TGFβ, CCL-2, PGE2, IL-6, and sVEGF. Coculturing of GB-MSCs with PBMCs isolated from healthy donors results in a decreased percentage of Th17 lymphocytes and an increased percentage of Tregs. Regarding the impact of GB-MSCs on monocytes, we establish an augmented expression of CD14 and CD86 along with diminished expression of HLA-DR and CD80, which is associated with tolerogenic phenotype monocyte-derived cells. In conclusion, our results describe in detail GBM-derived and cultured cells that meet the criteria for MSCs but at the same time express Nestin and GFAP. GB-MSCs express and secrete suppressive molecules, influencing in vitro T cells and monocytes, and are probably another factor involved in the immune suppression exerted by GBM. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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