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Query: UMLS:C0033036 (APC)
10,214 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

T lymphocytes recruited into the skin can experience several different outcomes. On the one hand, they may be recruited by adhesion molecules and chemoattractants to enter the perivascular space, but never undergo activation. Other T cells undergo activation and further differentiation under the influence of the cutaneous milieu. These activated lymphocytes then coordinate specific and non-specific immune responses characteristic of inflamed tissue. We have explored two models for studying the activation and function of skin infiltrating T lymphocytes (SIL's). In the first model, we have identified a family of Langerhans cell-related professional dendritic antigen presenting cells that exist in the epidermis and dermis of normal skin, atopic skin, and mycosis fungoides skin. These have APC abilities to activate freshly recruited resting blood T cells that are distinct from another family of macrophage-related cells abnormally present in sunburned or psoriatic skin. In the second model, we examined the function of cells that have already been recruited into the skin of patients with psoriasis and mycosis fungoides. Lesional psoriasis and mycosis fungoides T cells exhibited a variety of T cell receptor gene rearrangements, conclusively demonstrating that heterogeneous populations of T lymphocytes exist in inflamed human skin. From psoriasis, clones were identified that were particularly effective at inducing normal keratinocytes to assume "psoriatic" phenotypic features and functions. Thus, lesional psoriatic SIL's could induce HLA-DR, ICAM, and CDw60 on normal keratinocytes. In addition, psoriatic SIL's induced increased keratinocyte proliferation and cytokine profile changes characteristic of psoriatic epidermis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Skin-infiltrating lymphocytes in normal and disordered skin: activation signals and functional roles in psoriasis and mycosis fungoides-type cutaneous T cell lymphoma. 129 60

Human myoblasts, cultured from muscle and purified to greater than 95%, were investigated for their capacity to act as facultative APC. The myoblasts reacted with antidesmin mAb and had the capacity to fuse into multinucleated myotubes in appropriate medium. The expression of HLA class I, HLA-DR, HLA-DP, HLA-DQ, intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1/CD54), lymphocyte function-associated (LFA) molecules LFA-1 (CD11a/CD18), LFA-2 (CD2), and LFA-3 (CD58) was investigated by FACS analysis before and after induction for various times with human rIFN-gamma, TNF-alpha, or both. Without cytokine induction, myoblasts expressed only HLA-class I and LFA-3. IFN-gamma alone or in combination with TNF-alpha induced the expression of HLA-DR and ICAM-1 reaching a plateau after 48 h, followed by HLA-DP and even later HLA-DQ. TNF-alpha alone induced only ICAM-1. The functional capacity of myoblasts to present Ag to CD4+ T cells was investigated using autologous T cell lines specific for tuberculin, tetanus toxoid, and human myelin basic protein. Noninduced myoblasts or myoblasts treated with TNF-alpha alone could not present any of these Ag to the T cells. However, myoblasts treated with IFN-gamma induced Ag-specific proliferation. In the presence of relevant Ag, myoblasts were killed by the T cells as observed by microscopy and measured by 51Cr release. Ag-specific T cell proliferation and myoblast killing was inhibited in the presence of anti-DR mAb. These results suggest that human myoblasts may act as facultative APC during local immune reactions in muscle.
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PMID:Human myoblasts as antigen-presenting cells. 135 32

Bacterial enterotoxin superantigens bind directly to HLA class II molecules (HLA-DR) expressed on both APC and activated human T cells, and simultaneously bind to certain V beta chains of the TCR. In this report, we compared early T cell signaling events in human alloantigen-stimulated T cells when activated by HLA-DR ligation through antibody cross-linking or by direct enterotoxin superantigen binding. Both types of stimuli induced tyrosine phosphorylation of phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C gamma 1 (PLC gamma 1) and an increase in intracellular calcium concentration; however, superantigen-induced signaling was stronger than class II ligation alone. Antibody-mediated ligation of HLA-DR with CD3 resulted in augmented PLC gamma 1 activation and increased calcium mobilization, consistent with a mechanism of superantigen activity through a combination of class II and CD3/Ti signals. In addition, down-modulation of CD3 receptors with antibody demonstrated that superantigen-induced signaling events were CD3-dependent. Superantigen signaling was also class II-dependent, in that resting T cells were not responsive to direct enterotoxin stimulation. To address how early signal transducing activity correlated with T cell responsiveness, alloantigen-primed T cells were activated with immobilized class II-specific mAb or soluble superantigen. Both HLA-DR mAb-stimulated T cells and enterotoxin-treated T cells proliferated strongly in response to co-stimulation by a combination of CD28 receptor engagement and PMA addition. In addition, superantigen-induced growth was induced by CD28 receptor ligation with antibody or the B7 counter-receptor expressed on Chinese hamster ovary cells. Taken together, these results indicate that class II molecules expressed on activated T cells are directly coupled to the PLC gamma 1 signal transduction pathway, and that coligation of HLA-DR with CD3 augments T cell signaling comparable to that induced by enterotoxin superantigen. Thus, we suggest that superantigen-induced early signaling responses in activated T cells may be due in part to class II transmembrane signals induced when HLA-DR and V beta are ligated in cis.
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PMID:Superantigen and HLA-DR ligation induce phospholipase-C gamma 1 activation in class II+ T cells. 138 26

We have analyzed the ability of T cells to recognize peptides corresponding in sequence to an allogeneic HLA-DR molecule, in context of syngeneic MHC. PBMC from a responder with the HLA-DR beta 1*1101/DR beta 1*1201 genotype were stimulated in vitro with a mixture of four synthetic peptides derived from the first domain of the DR beta 1*0101 chain (amino acid residue 1-20, 21-42, 43-62, and 66-90). An alloreactive T cell line, TCL-LS, which proliferates only in response to peptide 21-42 presented by HLA-DR beta 1*1101, was obtained. The blastogenic response of the line was inhibited by anti-HLA-DR and CD4 antibodies but was not affected by antibodies to HLA-DQ, HLA-DP, HLA-ABC, and CD8. In the presence of irradiated, autologous APC, TCL-LS displayed specific proliferative responses to stimulating cells obtained from individuals carrying the DR beta 1*0101 allele. In the absence of autologous APC, TCL-LS recognized HLA-DR1 on allogeneic cells only when expressed together with HLA-DR beta 1*1101, the restrictive element. This indicates that TCL-LS recognizes processed HLA-DR1 molecule presented as nominal Ag. Study of TCR-V beta gene repertoire expressed by TCL-LS showed that only two V beta genes were used (V beta 13.2 and V beta 12). Two T cell clones (TCC) derived from this line, TCC-A5 and B4, exhibited a similar pattern of reactivity and expressed V beta 13.2. These results indicate that T cells recognizing peptides, which are derived from the breakdown of allogeneic MHC class II proteins and are presented by self-HLA-DR molecules, participate in allorecognition.
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PMID:T cell recognition of allopeptides in context of syngeneic MHC. 153 Jul 97

In order to elucidate the role of HLA class II molecules in generation of self-nonself discrimination of human T cells, we have analyzed T cell functions in an HLA class II-negative severe combined immunodeficiency patient. Patient PBL expressed no HLA-DR, -DQ, and -DP antigens as judged by immunofluorescence using mAb, and failed to elicit MLR responses from unrelated controls. Patient PBL contained mature T cells (CD3+ TCR alpha beta+) of the CD4 and CD8 subset, showing an apparently normal TCR diversity, as judged by use of anti-V beta 5, -V beta 6, -V beta 8, -V beta 12, and -V alpha 2 mAb. Patient PBL proliferated in response to anti-TCR/CD3 mAb and PHA, but not against recall Ag, despite immunization, and mounted proliferative, but not cytotoxic, responses against allogeneic cells. To find out whether the MLR responses were a consequence of self-nonself discrimination, the patient HLA-DR and -DQ genotype was determined using sequence specific oligonucleotide probes, revealing DRB1*0401 DQB1*0301 alleles, and MLR were set up against a panel of HLA-DR4 DQw3 stimulators matched or mismatched for DRB1*0401 DQB1*0301. Results showed no MLR against DRB1*0401 DQB1*0301 stimulators, but significant responses against stimulators expressing DRB1*0408 and/or DQB1*0302 alleles. Moreover, the DRB1*0401 DQB1*0301 APC reconstituted proliferation of patient PBL against PPD; this response was completely blocked by an anti-IL-2R (p55) mAb and partially also by anti-HLA-DR and -DQ mAb, indicating recognition of these molecules as restriction element presenting Ag--i.e., as self--by patient T cells. In conclusion, the novel demonstration of self-nonself discrimination by T cells from an HLA class II-negative SCID patient suggests that it may not be absolutely dependent on regular HLA class II expression within the differentiation environment in humans.
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PMID:Allorecognition and T cell repertoire selection in severe combined immunodeficiency lacking HLA class II antigens. 153 39

Staphylococcal enterotoxins (SE) are known to stimulate a large proportion of T cells. SE bind to MHC-class II molecules on APC and a particular segment of certain TCR V beta and V gamma gene products. Resting human T cells do not express HLA class II Ag and therefore cannot present SE to T cells. Activated human T cells, however, do express HLA-DR, -DP, and -DQ Ag and could consequently serve as APC for SE. As such, local immune responses to SE might be regulated and/or abrogated by SE-mediated T-T cell interactions leading to T cell destruction. We have investigated if such SE-mediated T-T cell interactions can occur in vitro using human cytolytic TCR-alpha beta+ and TCR-gamma delta+ T cell clones. We demonstrate that the TCR-alpha beta+ T cell clones can efficiently present staphylococcal enterotoxin A (SEA) to each other: T cell clones coated with SEA are lysed by SEA-reactive T cell clones but not by a SEA-nonreactive T cell clone. Furthermore, the SEA-reactive TCR-alpha beta+ clones (but not the SEA-nonreactive clone) destruct themselves in the presence of SEA at low concentrations of SEA (less than 0.01 microgram/ml). Also, SEA-coated T cell clones can induce proliferative responses although such responses are much weaker than those induced when B cells are used as stimulator cells. In contrast, the SEA-reactive TCR-gamma delta+ T cell clones are resistant to autokilling in the presence of SEA and they do not lyse SEA-coated TCR-gamma delta+ targets. However, such targets can be lysed by TCR-alpha beta+ effector cells. These results indicate that TCR-gamma delta+ cells are relatively resistant to lysis and that during local nonspecific immune responses triggered by SE, which induces HLA-class II expression by the responding T cells, SE-mediated T-T cell interactions may play a role in the regulation and/or abrogation of these immune responses.
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PMID:Staphylococcal enterotoxin-mediated human T-T cell interactions. 153 87

Prothymosin alpha (ProT alpha) is an acidic polypeptide with potentiating effects on HLA-DR-restricted in vitro cellular immune response systems such as T cell proliferative responses to soluble proteins and cellular auto- or alloantigens. Experiments were performed to investigate the effect of ProT alpha on MHC class II Ag expression in human monocytes, murine splenocytes, and tumor cell lines at both protein and molecular levels. RIA and immunofluorescence analysis revealed that ProT alpha enhances HLA-DR surface Ag expression whereas Northern blot analysis demonstrated that ProT alpha causes significant accumulation of MHC class II mRNA. The enhancing effect of ProT alpha was demonstrated convincingly using precultured human peripheral monocytes, which are known to express decreased amounts of surface HLA-DR Ag, and HLA-DR-positive human cell lines. Moreover, ProT alpha was shown to induce HLA-DR Ag expression in a priori HLA-DR-negative tumor cells. Furthermore, ProT alpha was shown to be active in vivo. Splenocytes from mice pretreated with ProT alpha expressed more surface Ilpha Ag and contained more I alpha-specific mRNA. These findings suggest that ProT alpha may be important in the regulation of the immune response by enhancing MHC class II Ag expression in APC.
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PMID:Prothymosin alpha enhances human and murine MHC class II surface antigen expression and messenger RNA accumulation. 154 15

Recent attention has focused on the role keratinocytes (KC) may play in the induction of T cell-mediated inflammatory responses in skin, particularly because KC, when activated by immunologic stimuli, express MHC class II Ag and secrete immunomodulatory cytokines. We tested the capacity of normal human KC that were stimulated with PMA to induce PBMC proliferation. PMA-treated, but not untreated, KC induced proliferation of allogeneic as well as autologous PBMC; in addition, when purified CD4+ or CD8+ T cells were used as responders, each subset proliferated. PBMC proliferation was not due to direct action of PMA on PBMC, nor to contamination of KC cultures with Langerhans cells (LC) or dermal APC. Pretreatment with different protein kinase C inhibitors abrogated the capacity of PMA-stimulated KC to induce proliferation. Paraformaldehyde-fixed PMA-KC stimulated PBMC proliferation, whereas supernatants from PMA-treated KC failed to do so, indicating that a membrane-associated activity on PMA-KC contributes to the induction of PBMC proliferation. PMA induced intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) expression on KC; furthermore, mAb against ICAM-1 or against its ligand lymphocyte function-associated Ag (LFA-1) (CD11a/CD18) significantly, but incompletely, reduced the stimulatory capacity of PMA-treated KC, indicating that ICAM-1/LFA-1 interaction contributed to PBMC proliferation. IFN-gamma or TNF-alpha also induced ICAM-1 on KC, but these KC failed to stimulate proliferation, suggesting that PMA induces additional signals from KC, which act in concert with ICAM-1 to promote proliferation. Finally, mAb against HLA-ABC or HLA-DR did not inhibit proliferation. We conclude that PMA can activate KC to stimulate T cell proliferation in a MHC-independent fashion. This activation is mediated by protein kinase C and in part by the induction of ICAM-1 expression on KC.
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PMID:Phorbol myristate acetate-activated keratinocytes stimulate proliferation of resting peripheral blood mononuclear lymphocytes via a MHC-independent, but protein kinase C- and intercellular adhesion molecule-1-dependent, mechanism. 167 Sep 43

One hundred thirteen HSV-specific CD4+ T cell clones were established from the PBL of a healthy person and their functional heterogeneity was investigated. All clones proliferated in response to stimulation with HSV in the presence of autologous APC. Among those, 48 clones showed cytotoxic activity to HSV-infected autologous EBV-transformed lymphoblastoid cell line, but not to HSV-infected autologous fibroblasts, HSV-infected allogeneic cells, or K562 cells (group 1). Five clones showed cytotoxicity against HSV-infected autologous cells as well as HSV-infected allogeneic cells and K562 cells (group 2). The cytotoxicity of these clones was found to be mediated by the direct killing but not by the "innocent bystander" killing of target cells. Sixty clones showed no cytotoxic activity, however, among these, 23 revealed HLA-unrestricted and nonspecific cytotoxicity in the presence of PHA in culture (group 3), and the remaining 37 did not show any cytotoxic activity even in the presence of PHA (group 4). The cytotoxic patterns of these clones did not change in activated and resting phases, suggesting that the difference in cytotoxic ability does not depend on cell cycles. The cytotoxic activity of group 1 was inhibited by addition of anti-HLA-DR or anti-CD3 mAb to the culture, whereas these mAb had no effect on the cytotoxicity of group 2. All four groups of clones had helper activity for anti-HSV antibody production by autologous B cells. Moreover it was found that all groups of clones simultaneously produced IL-2, IL-4, and IFN-gamma after culture with APC followed by HSV Ag stimulation. The surface phenotype of all clones was uniformly CD2+, CD3+, CD4+, CD8-, CD29+, CD45RA-, but expression of Leu 8 was varied. These data therefore indicate that HSV-specific human CD4+ T cells are classified into at least four groups according to the presence and specificity of cytotoxicity, i.e., Th cells with HSV-specific and HLA-class II-restricted cytotoxicity, Th cells with HLA-unrestricted and nonspecific cytotoxicity, Th cells with lectin-dependent cytotoxicity, and Th cells without cytotoxic activity. The present finding of functional heterogeneity among virus-specific human CD4+ T cells might shed light on the pathogenesis of CD4+ T cell immunodeficiency, such as human retrovirus infections.
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PMID:Functional heterogeneity among herpes simplex virus-specific human CD4+ T cells. 167 4

Monocyte/macrophages (MM) were isolated from HIV-1 seronegative individuals, infected with HIV-1 and examined for their ability to infect autologous T lymphocytes with and without concomitant presentation of exogenous Ag. HIV-1-infected MM presented tetanus toxin (TT) and streptokinase to T cells (as measured by [3H]thymidine incorporation) comparable to presentation by uninfected MM. In these studies, it was observed that HIV-1-infected MM without additional exogenous Ag stimulated autologous T lymphocytes, however, to a lesser degree than with TT and streptokinase. Virus production in T cells appeared to be relative to the degree of stimulation with the highest levels of stimulation and infection observed when T cells were exposed to HIV-1-infected TT-presenting MM. Studies were carried out to examine some of the restricting elements in MM-mediated infection of T lymphocytes with and without TT presentation. Antibodies to CD4, as well as soluble immunopurified gp120, blocked cell-mediated infection indicating that infection of T cells was through the CD4 molecule as has been demonstrated with cell-free virus. In addition, soluble gp120 inhibited Ag presentation by HIV-1-infected and uninfected MM. mAb to MHC class II Ag HLA-DR and -DP blocked T cell infection by HIV-1-infected MM with and without presentation of TT. No effect was observed with mAb to MHC class I Ag. These results indicate that virus transmission to T lymphocytes can be mediated by HIV-1-infected MM and that these cells maintain their function as APC. Activation of T cells appears to be important in the process of T cell infection in this system inasmuch as antibodies that block Ag presentation and thus a T cell proliferative signal inhibit infection.
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PMID:HIV-1 transmission and function of virus-infected monocytes/macrophages. 169 Feb 36


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