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Query: EC:2.7.10.1 (
ERK
)
95,504
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We studied how the interaction between human dendritic cells (DC) and Toxoplasma gondii influences the generation of cell-mediated immunity against the parasite. We demonstrate that viable, but not killed, tachyzoites of T. gondii altered the phenotype of immature DC. DC infected with viable parasites up-regulated the expression of
CD40
, CD80, CD86, and HLA-DR and down-regulated expression of
CD115
. These changes are indicative of DC activation induced by T. gondii. Viable and killed tachyzoites had contrasting effects on cytokine production. DC infected with viable T. gondii rather than DC that phagocytosed killed parasites induced secretion of high amounts of IFN-gamma by T cells from T. gondii-seronegative donors. IFN-gamma production in response to DC infected with viable parasites required CD28 and CD40 ligand (CD40L) signaling. In addition, this IFN-gamma response was dependent in part on IL-12 secretion. Production of IL-12 p70 occurred after interaction between T cells and DC infected with viable T. gondii, but not after incubation of T cells with DC plus killed tachyzoites. IL-12 synthesis was inhibited by blockade of CD40L signaling. IL-12-independent IFN-gamma production required CD80/CD86-CD28 interaction and, to a lesser extent,
CD40
-CD40L signaling. Taken together, T. gondii-induced activation of human DC is associated with T cell production of IFN-gamma through
CD40
-CD40L-dependent release of IL-12 and through CD80/CD86-CD28 and
CD40
-CD40L signaling that mediate IFN-gamma secretion even in the absence of bioactive IL-12.
...
PMID:Human dendritic cells discriminate between viable and killed Toxoplasma gondii tachyzoites: dendritic cell activation after infection with viable parasites results in CD28 and CD40 ligand signaling that controls IL-12-dependent and -independent T cell production of IFN-gamma. 1090 56
The acquisition of genetic abnormalities in human B-lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) culminates in the clonal expansion of bone marrow (BM)-derived leukemic blasts. However, the response of leukemic cells to signals transduced by the BM microenvironment is not completely understood. The present study describes a new human B-lineage ALL cell line designated BLIN-4 (B LINeage-4). BLIN-4 cells respond to multiple cytokines/human BM stromal cell-derived molecules. One subline (BLIN-4E) undergoes cell death in the absence of BM stromal cells or cytokines and slowly proliferates on human BM stromal cells supplemented with interleukin (IL)-7 +
FLT3
-ligand. Another subline (BLIN-4L) slowly proliferates in the absence of cytokines and BM stromal cells and shows robust proliferation on BM stromal cells supplemented with IL-7 +
FLT3
-ligand. Although human BM stromal cells are comparable with IL-7 +
FLT3
-ligand in supporting proliferation of BLIN-4L cells, neutralizing antibody experiments demonstrate that BLIN-4L expansion on BM stromal cells is IL-7/
FLT3
-ligand independent. BLIN-4L could also respond to human thymic stromal lymphopoietin. BLIN-4E and BLIN-4L have the identical immunoglobulin heavy chain rearrangement and a CD10(+)/CD19(+)/CD20(-)/CD22(+)/
CD40
(+)/mu heavy chain(-) phenotype. The original BM leukemic blasts harbored a ring chromosome 4 with a low percentage of cells also having either trisomy 8 or trisomy 18. The BLIN-4 sublines maintained the ring chromosome 4, but the trisomy 8 and trisomy 18 segregated into BLIN-4E and BLIN-4L, respectively. Thus, the BLIN-4 sublines exhibit biological characteristics consistent with a potential evolution in B-lineage ALL involving subclones with decreasing requirements on the BM microenvironment.
...
PMID:Clonal variation in the B-lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemia response to multiple cytokines and bone marrow stromal cells. 1143 69
In cultures, and in tissues as well, Hodgkin's and Reed-Sternberg (H-RS) cells and anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL) cells are known to express a variety of cytokines, including IL-1, -5, -6, -8, -9, TNF-alpha, GM-CSF, M-CSF, TGF-beta, CD70, CD80, and CD86. Various numbers of H-RS/ALCL cells may express cytokine receptors (R), such as CD30,
CD40
, IL-2R (CD25/CD122), IL-6R (CD126), IL-7R (CD127), TNF-R (CD120), TGF-beta-R (CD 105/endoglin), M-CSF-R (
CD115
), and SCF-R (CD117/c-kit receptor). All of these cytokines and cytokine receptors are implicated in the growth regulation of H-RS/ALCL cells, the histopathologic alterations in tissues, and the clinical manifestations in patients with Hodgkin's disease (HD) or ALCL. Many of these cytokines or cytokine receptors also play an important role in the pathogenesis of other types of lymphomas. In this review, we describe the cytokine or cytokine-receptor expression that is diacritic for H-RS/ALCL cells. The identification of such unique cytokine-cytokine receptor interactions is likely to explain the biologic property that distinguishes HD/ALCL from other types of lymphomas. These interactions include those of CD30L-CD30, CD40L-
CD40
, CD70-CD27, CD80/CD86- CD28, SCF-CD117, IL-9-IL-9R, and IL-7-IL-7R. The H-RS/ALCL cells express IL-9 and two cytokine receptors, CD30 and CD117, which are observed infrequently in NHLs. Although IL-7 expression is not restricted to H-RS/ALCL cells, the expression of IL-7 in conjunction with IL-9 and/or CD117 may be regarded as unique for HD/ALCL because of an unusual combination and a synergistic activity among these cytokines. The expression of CD70 and CD80/CD86 (as cytokines) may exert a unique effect in HD because of intimate contact between H-RS cells and CD27/CD28-positive T cells. The expression of these costimulators (CD70 and CD80/CD86) and other adhesion/constimulator molecules such as CD54 and CD58, along with the secretion of soluble cytokines such as IL-1, IL-6, IL-7, or TNFs by H-RS/ALCL cells, could result in the profound T-cell proliferation often seen in lymph nodes involved by HD and some ALCL. On the other hand, the expression of CD30L and CD40L by surrounding T cells may affect the proliferation of H-RS/ALCL cells. The cytokine-cytokine receptor interaction between H-RS cells and T cells via direct cell-cell contact is bidirectional, a situation not commonly seen in NHLs. Copyright 1995 S. Karger AG, Basel
...
PMID:Hodgkin's Disease and Anaplastic Large Cell Lymphoma Revisited. 1. unique cytokine and cytokine receptor profile distinguished from that of non-hodgkin's lymphomas. 1172 67
The ability of acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) cells to acquire dendritic cell (DC)-like characteristics in vitro with a rapid culture method based either on the phorbol ester PMA or calcium ionophores has been studied in comparison to conventional AML-DC cultures with the cytokines granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), interleukin-3 (IL-3), SCF,
FLT3
-L and IL-4. In all AML patients, antigen-presenting cells (APC) could be generated from leukaemic cells in 2 days by incubation with PMA or calcium ionophore (A23187 or ionomycin) in the presence as well as in the absence of IL-4. In 30 out of 36 patients APC could be generated after 2 weeks of culture in cytokine-enriched medium. AML-APC cultured with PMA or calcium ionophores immunophenotypically and functionally were at a more mature stage than those cultured in cytokine-enriched medium. The most mature APC were generated by calcium ionophore A23187 plus IL-4, as evidenced by the higher expression of
CD40
, CD80, CD86 and HLA-DR. Autologous T cell mediated cytotoxicity towards AML blast cells in vitro was observed in 2 cases tested. The persistence of cytogenetic abnormalities confirmed the leukaemic origin of the AML-APC. The generation of AML-APC was possible from freshly isolated as well as cryopreserved material. Our data show that generation of sufficient AML-APC by A23187 plus IL-4 is feasible, for vaccination purposes, in approximately 70% of AML specimens, offering a time-saving and cost-effective approach in preparing anti-leukaemia vaccines.
...
PMID:Rapid generation of antigen-presenting cells from leukaemic blasts in acute myeloid leukaemia. 1253 36
The mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) (also called extracellular signal-regulated kinase [
ERK
]) pathway has been implicated in malignant transformation and in the regulation of cellular growth and proliferation of several tumor types, but its expression and function in Hodgkin disease (HD) are unknown. We report here that the active phosphorylated form of MAPK/
ERK
is aberrantly expressed in cultured and primary HD cells. Inhibition of the upstream MAPK kinase (also called MEK) by the small molecule UO126 inhibited the phosphorylation of
ERK
and demonstrated a dose- and time-dependent antiproliferative activity in HD cell lines. UO126 modulated the levels of several intracellular proteins including B-cell lymphoma protein 2 (Bcl-2), myeloid cell leukemia-1 (Mcl-1) and caspase 8 homolog FLICE-inhibitory protein (cFLIP), and induced G2M cell-cycle arrest or apoptosis. Furthermore, UO126 potentiated the activity of apoliprotein 2/tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (APO2L/TRAIL) and chemotherapy-induced cell death. Activation of CD30,
CD40
, and receptor activator of nuclear kappabeta (RANK) receptors in HD cells by their respective ligands increased
ERK
phosphorylation above the basal level and promoted HD cell survival. UO126 inhibited basal and ligand-induced
ERK
phosphorylation, and inhibited ligand-induced cell survival of HD cell lines. These findings provide a proof-of-principle that inhibition of the MEK/
ERK
pathway may have therapeutic value in HD.
...
PMID:MEK/ERK pathway is aberrantly active in Hodgkin disease: a signaling pathway shared by CD30, CD40, and RANK that regulates cell proliferation and survival. 1268 28
Macrophages from Tpl2 knockout (Tpl2(-/-)) mice exhibit a defect in
ERK
activation by lipopolysaccharide (LPS). This impairs the nucleocytoplasmic transport of the tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) mRNA and prevents the induction of TNF-alpha by LPS. As a result, Tpl2(-/-) mice are resistant to LPS/D-galactosamine-induced shock. We demonstrate that Tpl2 is essential for
ERK
signals transduced by members of the TNF receptor superfamily, such as
CD40
and the TNF receptor 1. Thus,
ERK
activation was impaired in Tpl2(-/-) B cells and macrophages stimulated with agonistic
CD40
antibody or TNF-alpha, whereas the induction of other mitogen-activated protein kinases, such as JNK and p38, and the activation of NF-kappaB were unaffected. Tpl2 was recruited to a
CD40
/TRAF6 complex in response to
CD40
stimulation. Moreover, TRAF6, which when overexpressed activates
ERK
, failed to do so in Tpl2(-/-) cells. The selective signaling defect resulting from the inactivation of Tpl2 allowed us to demonstrate that
CD40
-mediated
ERK
activation contributes to immunoglobulin production but is not essential for B-cell proliferation.
...
PMID:Tpl2 transduces CD40 and TNF signals that activate ERK and regulates IgE induction by CD40. 1288 20
CD34+ cell-derived hematopoietic precursors amplified with
FLT3
-ligand, thrombopoietin and stem cell factor became, after a 6-day induction with GM-CSF, IL-4 and TGF-beta1, HLA-DR+, CD1a+, CD83-, CD86-, CD80- cells. A fraction of them expressed Langerin, Lag, and E-cadherin, resembling epidermal Langerhans cells (LC). TNF-alpha added for the last 3 days only marginally induced CD83 expression, but strikingly increased the proportion of immature Langerin+CD83- LC. Langerin+CD83+ and Langerin+CD83- cells were functionally distinct, the former internalizing less efficiently Langerin than the latter. Both CD1a-CD14- and CD1a-CD14+ cells sorted from
FLT3
-ligand, thrombopoietin and stem cell factor cultures responded to TNF-alpha by an increase of Langerin+ cells. Thus, TNF-alpha rescued LC precursors irrespective of their commitment to the monocytic lineage. When added to GM-CSF, IL-4 and TGF-beta1 containing-cultures, LPS or IL-1beta also induced significant numbers of Langerin+CD83- immature cells displaying a low allostimulatory activity, while
CD40
-ligand largely promoted highly allostimulatory Langerin-CD83+ cells. Altogether, these data show that in contrast to
CD40
-ligand, which induced LC maturation even in presence of TGF-beta1, nonspecific proinflammatory factors such as TNF-alpha, IL-1 or LPS, essentially induced immature LC generation, and little cell activation in the presence of TGF-beta1.
...
PMID:TNF-alpha induces the generation of Langerin/(CD207)+ immature Langerhans-type dendritic cells from both CD14-CD1a and CD14+CD1a- precursors derived from CD34+ cord blood cells. 1288 72
CD40
, a member of the tumor necrosis factor receptor superfamily, is frequently expressed in carcinomas where its stimulation results in induction of apoptosis when de novo protein synthesis is inhibited. The requirement of protein synthesis inhibition for efficient killing suggests that
CD40
transduces potent survival signals capable of suppressing its pro-apoptotic effects. We have found that inhibition of
CD40
signaling on the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) and
ERK
MAPK but not on the p38 MAPK axis disrupts this balance and sensitizes carcinoma cells to
CD40
-mediated cell death. The
CD40
-mediated PI3K and
ERK
activities were found to converge on the regulation of protein synthesis in carcinoma cells via a pathway involving the activation of p90 ribosomal S6 kinase (p90Rsk) and p70S6 kinases, upstream of the translation elongation factor eEF2. In addition,
CD40
ligation was found to mediate a PI3K- and mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR)-dependent phosphorylation of 4E-BP1 and its subsequent dissociation from the mRNA cap-binding protein eIF4E as well as an
ERK
-dependent phosphorylation of eIF4E, thus promoting translation initiation. Concomitantly, the antiapoptotic protein cFLIP was found to be induced in CD40 ligand-stimulated carcinoma cells in a PI3K-,
ERK
-, and mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR)-dependent manner and down-regulation of cFLIPS expression sensitized to
CD40
-mediated carcinoma cell death. These data underline the significance of the PI3K and
ERK
pathways in controlling the balance between
CD40
-mediated survival and death signals through the regulation of the protein synthesis machinery. Pharmacological agents that target this machinery or its upstream kinases could, therefore, be exploited for
CD40
-based tumor therapy.
...
PMID:Inhibition of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase- and ERK MAPK-regulated protein synthesis reveals the pro-apoptotic properties of CD40 ligation in carcinoma cells. 1458 87
Bordetella bronchiseptica establishes persistent infection of the murine respiratory tract. We hypothesize that long-term colonization is mediated in part by bacteria-driven modulation of dendritic cells (DCs) leading to altered adaptive immune responses. Bone marrow-derived DCs (BMDCs) from C57BL/6 mice infected with live B. bronchiseptica exhibited high surface expression of MHCII, CD86, and CD80. However, B. bronchiseptica-infected BMDCs did not exhibit significant increases in
CD40
surface expression and IL-12 secretion compared with BMDCs treated with heat-killed B. bronchiseptica. The B. bronchiseptica type III secretion system (TTSS) mediated the increase in MHCII, CD86, and CD80 surface expression, while the inhibition of
CD40
and IL-12 expression was mediated by adenylate cyclase toxin (ACT). IL-6 secretion was independent of the TTSS and ACT. These phenotypic changes may result from differential regulation of MAPK signaling in DCs. Wild-type B. bronchiseptica activated the
ERK
1/2 signaling pathway in a TTSS-dependent manner. Additionally, ACT was found to inhibit p38 signaling. These data suggest that B. bronchiseptica drive DC into a semimature phenotype by altering MAPK signaling. These semimature DCs may induce tolerogenic immune responses that allow the persistent colonization of B. bronchiseptica in the host respiratory tract.
...
PMID:Bordetella type III secretion and adenylate cyclase toxin synergize to drive dendritic cells into a semimature state. 1526 27
TNF receptor (TNFR) superfamily members,
CD40
, and BAFFR play critical roles in B cell survival and differentiation. Genetic deficiency in a novel adaptor molecule, Act1, for
CD40
and BAFF results in a dramatic increase in peripheral B cells, which culminates in lymphadenopathy and splenomegaly, hypergammaglobulinemia, and autoantibodies. While the B cell-specific Act1 knockout mice displayed a similar phenotype with less severity, the pathology of the Act1-deficient mice was mostly blocked in
CD40
-Act1 and BAFF-Act1 double knockout mice.
CD40
- and BAFF-mediated survival is significantly increased in Act1-deficent B cells, with stronger IkappaB phosphorylation, processing of NF-kappaB2 (p100/p52), and activation of JNK,
ERK
, and p38 pathways, indicating that Act1 negatively regulates
CD40
- and BAFF-mediated signaling events. These findings demonstrate that Act1 plays an important role in the homeostasis of B cells by attenuating
CD40
and BAFFR signaling.
...
PMID:Act1, a negative regulator in CD40- and BAFF-mediated B cell survival. 1548 34
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