Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0033036 (APC)
10,214 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

OX40 ligand (OX40L), a member of the TNF family, was shown to be capable of signaling both the cells on which it is expressed and those expressing OX40, its cognate receptor. Here we show that OX40L is expressed on dendritic cells (DC), the most efficient APC to prime naive T cells. The expression and the functional activity of OX40L were examined by means of mAbs used to stain or cross-link OX40L on 1) freshly isolated human blood DC (bDC) and 2) monocyte-derived DC at different stages of differentiation. These were derived from monocytes cultured either with IL-4 and granulocyte-macrophage CSF (IL-4-Mo-DC) or with IL-4 and granulocyte-macrophage CSF plus TNF-alpha. Both types of Mo-DC expressed OX40L after stimulation through CD40; ligation of OX40L on activated IL-4-Mo-DC enhanced by 4- to 35-fold their cytokine production (TNF-alpha, IL-12 p40, IL-1 beta, and IL-6) and increased CD80, CD86, CD54, and CD40 expression. Stimulation of activated IL-4-Mo-DC through OX40L strikingly enhanced their maturation as evidenced by CD83 up-regulation, CD115 (CSF-1R) down-regulation, and typical morphologic changes. OX40L was constitutively expressed on a subset of bDC, and its ligation slightly enhanced CD40L-stimulated IL-12 production. OX40L was down-regulated after overnight culture and spontaneously reexpressed on a subset of mature bDC (CD83high, CD33high, CD11chigh, CD5+). Thus, the expression of OX40L on DC suggests a physiologic role of this molecule during T cell priming by virtue of its ability to costimulate both T cell and DC activation and differentiation.
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PMID:Expression and function of OX40 ligand on human dendritic cells. 937 71

The study of liver dendritic cells (DC) and their progenitors is restricted by the small numbers that can be isolated or propagated from normal hepatic tissue. We examined the ex vivo growth, phenotype, and function of these cells after the administration to mice of the recently cloned hemopoietic growth factor flt3 ligand (FL), which is highly effective in mobilizing stem/progenitor cells. FL treatment (10 microg/day for 10 days) resulted in a mean 14-fold increase in the absolute number of nonparenchymal cells recovered from collagenase-digested livers compared with the control value. Culture of these nonparenchymal cells in granulocyte-macrophage CSF (GM-CSF; 1000 U/ml) resulted in the early formation of proliferating cell clusters and maximal release (within 4-5 days) of markedly increased numbers of nonadherent, low buoyant density cells per liver. Maximal release of low buoyant density cells propagated from control livers was at the later time of 6 to 8 days. Cells from both sources were DEC-205+, CD11c+, MHC class II+, CD80(low) (i.e., low level of CD80), CD86(low) and CD40(low). This immature phenotype was linked to poor T cell allostimulatory activity, indicative of DC progenitors. Propagation of cells from livers of FL-treated mice in GM-CSF and IL-4 resulted in a more mature DC phenotype and function. Maturational changes were also observed following exposure of the GM-CSF-stimulated progenitors to type 1 collagen for 3 additional days. The ability of FL to boost production of large numbers of liver DC progenitors provides opportunities for the further study of these important APC in normal liver immunobiology and in immune-mediated hepatic disorders.
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PMID:In vivo administration of flt3 ligand markedly stimulates generation of dendritic cell progenitors from mouse liver. 937 22

We describe a subset of peripheral CD14+ cells, coexpressing the CD34 progenitor marker and able to migrate across endothelial cell monolayers. On culture with granulocyte-macrophage-CSF, this population differentiated into dendritic cells expressing CD83, CD80, HLA-DR(bright), CD86, and CD54. These dendritic cells were immunostimulatory, in that they induced proliferation of allogenic and tetanus toxoid-specific T lymphocytes. The CD14+ CD34+ population expressed higher levels of platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule-1 (PECAM-1) and alpha4beta1 integrin than the CD14+ CD34- counterpart, being dull positive for other integrins. Using stably transfected PECAM-1+, VCAM-1+, or ICAM-1+ cells, we found that PECAM-1 and, to a lesser extent, VCAM-1, could support transmigration of CD14+ CD34+ cells, whereas the alphaL-ICAM-1 interaction was involved in cell adhesion. PECAM-1-driven transmigration was conceivably dependent on a haptotactic gradient, as it was reduced by 80% across NIH3T3 cells transfected with the PECAM-1-delta cyto deletion mutant. This mutant lacks the cytoplasmic tail and displays a reduced tendency to localize at the intercellular junctions, thus failing to form a molecular junctional gradient. Once differentiated, dendritic cells derived from CD14+ CD34+ precursors retained their transendothelial migratory capability, using both PECAM-1 and ICAM-1 for transmigration. We suggest that a subset of CD14+ CD34+ circulating leukocytes can localize to peripheral tissues and differentiate into functional dendritic cells, thus representing a functional reservoir of potential APC. PECAM-1, constitutively expressed on vascular endothelium, is likely to play a relevant role in the egress of this population from the bloodstream.
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PMID:CD14+ CD34+ peripheral blood mononuclear cells migrate across endothelium and give rise to immunostimulatory dendritic cells. 951 Jan 66

Human peripheral blood monocytes activated by GM-CSF plus IL-4 have recently been found to exhibit characteristics of putative dendritic cells (DC). These cytokine-activated monocytes (CAM) may express novel activation Ag that contribute significantly to their antigen presentation potency. To examine that possibility, mAb specific for CAM were derived. Seven mAb that stained CAM but not unactivated monocytes and other peripheral blood mononuclear cell types were identified. Further screening with a panel of cell lines identified two CAM-specific mAb. The first mAb, 2.1D10, was found to be mannose-receptor specific. A second mAb, 6.3B7, immunoprecipitated a 190-kDa Ag. It stained neither activated B cells nor the putative peripheral blood precursor DC population. Furthermore, 6.3B7 did not recognize determinants in asparagine-linked carbohydrate chains or in sialic acid-containing structures. These mAb against CAM membrane proteins may provide new insights into the requirements for optimal antigen presentation by macrophages and other APC types.
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PMID:Monoclonal antibodies against human dendritic cell-like peripheral blood monocytes activated by granulocyte/macrophage-colony-stimulating factor plus interleukin 4. 951 3

Cholera toxin (CT) is a potent mucosal immunogen and adjuvant that can strongly prime mucosal T cells. The present study was undertaken to investigate the effects of CT on the expression and functional activity of the costimulatory molecules B7.1 and B7.2 on macrophages and the relationship of these effects to the mucosal adjuvanticity of CT. Bone marrow macrophages (BMM) were generated by culturing bone marrow with macrophage CSF or granulocyte-macrophage CSF. After treatment with either CT alone or IFN-gamma alone, B7.2 expression on BMM was moderately up-regulated and was further increased when BMM were treated with both CT and IFN-gamma together. Interestingly, CT had no effect on B7.1 expression despite the close relationship between these two molecules. Up-regulation of B7.2 expression by CT was mediated by intracellular cAMP production, in that CT-B subunit had no effect and dibutyryl cAMP could mimic the effect. CT increased functional costimulatory activity of macrophages for both anti-CD3-stimulated and allostimulated T cells, an increase that was blocked by anti-B7.2, but not anti-B7.1, Ab. B7.2 expression by Mac1+ Peyer's patch cells was increased after intraluminal exposure to CT in vivo. Treatment of mice with anti-B7.2 Ab in vivo inhibited both the mucosal adjuvanticity and the immunogenicity of CT. We conclude that CT enhances the costimulatory activity of mucosal APC by differentially up-regulating B7.2 expression, an effect that appears to be important for its mucosal adjuvanticity and immunogenicity.
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PMID:The mucosal adjuvanticity of cholera toxin involves enhancement of costimulatory activity by selective up-regulation of B7.2 expression. 954 69

We have cloned a novel human CC-chemokine, alternative macrophage activation-associated CC-chemokine (AMAC)-1. The isolated cDNA clone (803 bp) shows a single open reading frame of 267-bp coding for 89 amino acid residues; mature AMAC-1 protein is predicted to consist of 69 amino acids with a m.w. of 7855. Sequence alignment and 3D-modeling show the typical structural characteristics of CC-chemokines with special features in the receptor-activating domain. AMAC-1 is most closely related to MIP-1 alpha with a cDNA and protein sequence homology of 55% and 59%, respectively. However, the expression pattern of AMAC-1 is directly opposite to that of MIP-1 alpha. While MIP-1 alpha is induced by classical macrophage mediators such as LPS and is inhibited by IL-4 and glucocorticoids, AMAC-1 is specifically induced in macrophages by alternative macrophage mediators such as IL-4, IL-13, and IL-10. Expression of AMAC-1 is inhibited by IFN-gamma while glucocorticoids exert a slightly positive synergistic effect in combination with IL-4. Peripheral blood monocytes do not express AMAC-1; time course experiments show that monocyte-to-macrophage differentiation is a prerequisite for AMAC-1 expression. Expression of AMAC-1 by granulocyte-macrophage CSF/IL-4-induced, monocyte-derived dendritic cells is complex; in mature adherent dendritic cells, however, only minor AMAC-1 mRNA expression was found. In vivo, AMAC-1 is expressed by alveolar macrophages from healthy persons, smokers, and asthmatic patients. In conclusion, AMAC-1 is a novel CC-chemokine whose expression is induced in alternatively activated macrophages by Th2-associated cytokines; thus, AMAC-1 may be involved in the APC-dependent T cell development in inflammatory and immune reactions.
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PMID:Alternative macrophage activation-associated CC-chemokine-1, a novel structural homologue of macrophage inflammatory protein-1 alpha with a Th2-associated expression pattern. 957 May 61

Dendritic cells (DCs) effectively process exogenous and endogenous Ag and present peptide in the context of both class I and class II molecules. We have demonstrated that peripheral blood DCs efficiently degrade synthetic class I peptides at their cell surface within minutes as determined by analyzing DC supernatants by HPLC. Fragments were verified as bona fide cleavage products by direct sequencing using collision-induced dissociation tandem mass spectrometry. The predominant degradative activities were 1) not secreted but associated with activity at the plasma membrane, 2) ecto-orientated, 3) not induced by peptide-specific interactions, and 4) not associated with nonspecific uptake. Sequence analysis indicated that both N- and C-terminal as well as endoproteolytic events were occurring at the cell surface. The primary exoproteolytic event was identified as CD13 or CD13-like activity through inhibition studies and could be inhibited by ubiquitin and metal-chelating agents. Endoproteolytic events could be inhibited in the presence of DTT, but the precise nature of this enzyme is still undetermined. Compared with the starting monocyte population, DCs cultured in the presence of granulocyte-macrophage CSF/IL-4 exhibited the highest degradative rate (4.3 nmol/min), followed by cultured monocytes (2.9 nmol/min) and freshly isolated monocytes (1.0 nmol/min). In addition to increased enzymatic activity, a change in substrate specificity was noted. Results are discussed with respect to APC loading, and alternatives are offered for circumventing such degradation.
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PMID:Rapid extracellular degradation of synthetic class I peptides by human dendritic cells. 978 Jan 72

Bone marrow-derived dendritic cells (BmDC) are potent APC and can promote antitumor immunity in mice when pulsed with tumor Ag. This study aimed to define the culture conditions and maturation stages of BmDC that enable them to optimally function as APC in vivo. BmDC cultured under various conditions (granulocyte-macrophage CSF (GM-CSF) or GM-CSF plus IL-4 alone or in combination with Flt3 ligand, TNF-alpha, LPS, or CD40 ligand (CD40L)) were analyzed morphologically, phenotypically, and functionally and were tested for their ability to promote prophylactic and/or therapeutic antitumor immunity. Each of the culture conditions generated typical BmDC. Whereas cells cultured in GM-CSF alone were functionally immature, cells incubated with CD40L or LPS were mature BmDC, as evident by morphology, capacity to internalize Ag, migration into regional lymph nodes, IL-12 secretion, and alloantigen or peptide Ag presentation in vitro. The remaining cultures exhibited intermediate dendritic cell maturation. The in vivo Ag-presenting capacity of BmDC was compared with respect to induction of both protective tumor immunity and immunotherapy of established tumors, using the poorly immunogenic squamous cell carcinoma, KLN205. In correspondence to their maturation stage, BmDC cultured in the presence of CD40L exhibited the most potent immunostimulatory effects. In general, although not entirely, the capacity of BmDC to induce an antitumor immune response in vivo correlated to their degree of maturation. The present data support the clinical use of mature, rather than immature, tumor Ag-pulsed dendritic cells as cancer vaccines and identifies CD40L as a potent stimulus to enhance their in vivo Ag-presenting capacity.
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PMID:Generation of tumor immunity by bone marrow-derived dendritic cells correlates with dendritic cell maturation stage. 988 83

N-acetyl-L-cysteine (NAC) is an antioxidant molecule endowed with immunomodulatory properties. To investigate the effect of NAC on the induction phase of T cell responses, we analyzed its action on human dendritic cells (DC) derived from adherent PBMC cultured with IL-4 and granulocyte-macrophage CSF. We first found that NAC inhibited the constitutive as well as the LPS-induced activity of the transcription factor NF-kappaB. In parallel, NAC was shown to down-regulate the production of cytokines by DC as well as their surface expression of HLA-DR, CD86 (B7-2), and CD40 molecules both at the basal state and upon LPS activation. NAC also inhibited DC responses induced by CD40 engagement. The inhibitory effects of NAC were not due to nonspecific toxicity as neither the viability of DC nor their mannose receptor-mediated endocytosis were modified by NAC. Finally, we found that the addition of NAC to MLR between naive T cells and allogeneic DC resulted in a profound inhibition of alloreactive responses, which could be attributed to a defect of DC as APC-independent T cell responses were not inhibited by NAC. Altogether, our results suggest that NAC might impair the generation of primary immune responses in humans through its inhibitory action on DC.
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PMID:N-acetyl-L-cysteine inhibits primary human T cell responses at the dendritic cell level: association with NF-kappaB inhibition. 1007 97

The CTL response to HIV-I can be vigorous, but antigen presenting cell requirements have not been studied in detail. To approach this question, we have examined the dendritic cell populations that can be obtained from the blood of HIV-1 infected individuals. We studied 13 asymptomatic patients, who spanned a wide range of plasma viremia and CD4 counts. We show here that sizeable numbers of mature dendritic cells can be generated from nonproliferating progenitors in the blood of HIV + patients using a recently developed approach. The procedure involves two steps. The first step or 'priming' phase is a 7 day culture of T-cell depleted mononuclear cells in medium supplemented with GM-CSF and IL-4. The second step or 'differentiation' phase requires the exposure to monocyte conditioned medium. The yields of DCs from HIV + individuals were comparable to normal blood donors, 0.4 - 3 x 10(6) mature dendritic cells from 50 ml of blood. Strong APC function was evident for both the proliferation of allogeneic T-cells in the MLR, and the generation by syngeneic T-cells of class I restricted, CTL responses to influenza virus. A panel of dendritic cell restricted markers are expressed, including CD83, p55, and perinuclear CD68. By semi-quantitative PCR analysis, the cytokine derived cells did not express HIV-1 DNA. We suggest that these blood derived dendritic cells will be effective for studies of immune responses to HIV-1 antigens and may be considered as adjuvants for active immunotherapy.
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PMID:Dendritic cells generated from blood monocytes of HIV-1 patients are not infected and act as competent antigen presenting cells eliciting potent T-cell responses. 1020 44


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