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Query: UMLS:C0033036 (
APC
)
10,214
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
MHC class I
-restricted T cell epitopes lack immunogenicity unless aided by IFA or CFA. In an attempt to circumvent the known inflammatory side effects of IFA and CFA, we analyzed the ability of immunostimulatory CpG-DNA to act as an adjuvant for
MHC class I
-restricted peptide epitopes. Using the immunodominant CD8 T cell epitopes, SIINFEKL from OVA or KAVYNFATM (gp33) from lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus glycoprotein, we observed that CpG-DNA conveyed immunogenicity to these epitopes leading to primary induction of peptide-specific CTL. Furthermore, vaccination with the lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus gp33 peptide triggered not only CTL but also protective antiviral defense. We also showed that
MHC class I
-restricted peptides are constitutively presented by immature dendritic cells (DC) within the draining lymph nodes but failed to induce CTL responses. The use of CpG-DNA as an adjuvant, however, initiated peptide presenting immature DC progression to professional licensed
APC
. Activated DC induced cytolytic CD8 T cells in wild-type mice and also mice deficient of Th cells or CD40 ligand. CpG-DNA thus incites CTL responses toward
MHC class I
-restricted T cell epitopes in a Th cell-independent manner. Overall, these results provide new insights into CpG-DNA-mediated adjuvanticity and may influence future vaccination strategies for infectious and perhaps tumor diseases.
...
PMID:CpG-DNA activates in vivo T cell epitope presenting dendritic cells to trigger protective antiviral cytotoxic T cell responses. 1067 72
This study focuses on the specific CD4+ T cell requirement for optimal induction of cytotoxicity against MHC class II negative autologous tumors (AuTu) collected from patients with various types of cancer at advanced stages. CD4+ T cells were induced in cultures of cancer patients' malignant effusion-associated mononuclear cells with irradiated AuTu (mixed lymphocyte tumor cultures (MLTC)) in the presence of recombinant IL-2 and recombinant IL-7. Tumor-specific CD4+ T cells did not directly recognize the AuTu cells, but there was an MHC class II-restricted cross-priming by autologous dendritic cells (DCs), used as
APC
. CD8+ CTL, also induced during the MLTC, lysed specifically AuTu cells or DCs pulsed with AuTu peptide extracts (acid wash extracts (AWE)) in an
MHC class I
-restricted manner. Removal of CD4+ T cells or DCs from the MLTC drastically reduced the CD8+ CTL-mediated cytotoxic response against the AuTu. AWE-pulsed DCs preincubated with autologous CD4+ T cells were able, in the absence of CD4+ T cells, to stimulate CD8+ T cells to lyse autologous tumor targets. Such activated CD8+ T cells produced IL-2, IFN-gamma, TNF-alpha, and GM-CSF. The process of the activation of AWE-pulsed DCs by CD4+ T cells could be inhibited with anti-CD40 ligand mAb. Moreover, the role of CD4+ T cells in activating AWE-pulsed DCs was undertaken by anti-CD40 mAb. Our data demonstrate for the first time in patients with metastatic cancer the essential role of CD4+ Th cell-activated DCs for optimal CD8+ T cell-mediated killing of autologous tumors and provide the basis for the design of novel protocols in cellular adoptive immunotherapy of cancer, utilizing synthetic peptides capable of inducing T cell help in vivo.
...
PMID:Tumor-specific CD4+ T lymphocytes from cancer patients are required for optimal induction of cytotoxic T cells against the autologous tumor. 1072 53
Eosinophils are bone marrow-derived cells released into the circulation during hypersensitivity reactions and parasitic infections. Under normal conditions most eosinophils are tissue bound, where their physiologic role is unclear. During in situ analysis of the thymic microenvironment for CD11c+ dendritic cell subpopulations (
APC
critical in the process of thymic negative selection) a discrete population of CD11b/CD11c double-positive cells concentrated in the cortico-medullary region of young mice was detected. Thymic CD11c+ cells were isolated, and the CD11b+ subpopulation (CD44high, class IIlow, CD11cint) was identified as mature eosinophils based on: scatter characteristics, major basic protein mRNA expression, and eosinophilic granules. They are hypodense, release high levels of superoxide anion, and express CD25, CD69, and mRNA for IL-4 and IL-13, but not GM-CSF or IL-5, suggesting a distinct state of activation. Thymic eosinophils are preferentially recruited during the neonatal period; absolute numbers increased 10-fold between 7-14 days to reach parity with dendritic cells before diminishing. In a model of acute negative selection, eosinophil numbers were increased 2-fold 6 h after cognate peptide injection into
MHC class I
-restricted female H-Y TCR transgenic mice. In both peptide-treated female and negatively selecting male H-Y TCR mice, clusters of apoptotic bodies were associated with eosinophils throughout the thymus. Our data demonstrate a temporal and spatial association between eosinophil recruitment and class I-restricted selection in the thymus, suggesting an immunomodulatory role for eosinophils under nonpathological conditions.
...
PMID:CD11c+ eosinophils in the murine thymus: developmental regulation and recruitment upon MHC class I-restricted thymocyte deletion. 1092 79
Mice with targeted RelB mutations demonstrated an essential role for RelB in immune responses and in myeloid dendritic cell differentiation. Human studies suggested a more global transcriptional role in antigen presentation. Burkitt lymphoma cell lines were used as a model to examine the role of RelB in antigen presentation. After transient transfection of BJAB with RelB, strong nuclear expression of RelB-p50 heterodimers was associated with increased
APC
function and expression of CD40 and
MHC class I
. Antisense RelB in DG75 reduced antigen-presenting capacity and CD40-mediated up-regulation of MHC molecules. The data indicate that RelB transcriptional activity directly affects antigen presentation and CD40 synthesis. Stimulation of RelB transcriptional activity may provide a positive feedback loop for facilitating productive
APC
/T cell interactions.
...
PMID:RelB nuclear translocation regulates B cell MHC molecule, CD40 expression, and antigen-presenting cell function. 1102 42
The mechanisms that influence the polarization of CD4 T cells specific for allogeneic MHC class II molecules in vivo are still poorly understood. We have examined the pathway of alloreactive CD4 T cell differentiation in a situation in which only CD4 T cells could be activated in vivo. In this report we show that priming of adult mice with allogeneic
APC
, in the absence of
MHC class I
-T cell interactions, induces a strong expansion of type 2 cytokine-producing allohelper T cells. These alloantigen-specific CD4 T cells directly recognize native allogeneic MHC class II molecules on
APC
and secrete, in addition to the prototypic Th2 cytokines IL-4, IL-5, and IL-10, large amounts of TGF-beta. The default Th2-phenotype acquisition is not genetically controlled and occurred both in BALB/c and C57BL/6 mice. CD8 T cells are the principal cell type that controls CD4 T cell differentiation in vivo. Furthermore, we demonstrate that strong Th2 priming can be induced not only with allogeneic splenocytes but also with a low number of bone marrow-derived dendritic cells. Finally, using a passive transfer system, we provide direct evidence that CD8 T cell expansion in situ promotes alloreactive Th1 cell development principally by preventing their default development to the Th2 pathway in a mechanism that is largely IFN-gamma independent. Therefore, this work demonstrates that type 2 cytokine production represents a dominant pathway of alloreactive CD4 T cell differentiation in adult mice, a phenomenon that was initially thought to occur only during the neonatal period.
...
PMID:Dendritic cells prime in vivo alloreactive CD4 T lymphocytes toward type 2 cytokine- and TGF-beta-producing cells in the absence of CD8 T cell activation. 1104 27
The mechanism of cross-presentation enables professional APCs to induce CD8 T cell-mediated immune responses against exogenous Ags. Through this mechanism, APCs can induce either immunity against infectious pathogens or tolerance against self-Ag residing in extralymphatic locations. An unanswered question in this field concerns the identity of the cross-presenting
APC
. All major classes of professional APCs, particularly dendritic cells, macrophages, and B cells, have previously been shown to be able to cross-present Ags in vitro. In the present study, we have created transgenic mice where
MHC class I
expression is driven selectively in dendritic cells and provide direct in vivo evidence that dendritic cells are sufficient to cross-present exogenous self-Ags and induce Ag-specific cell division of CD8-positive T cells.
...
PMID:Dendritic cells are sufficient to cross-present self-antigens to CD8 T cells in vivo. 1116 Jan 80
Ig-like transcript 2 (ILT2)/leukocyte Ig-like receptor 1 (LIR1) is a receptor, specific for
MHC class I
molecules, that inhibits lymphoid and myeloid cells. Here, we analyzed the molecular and cellular mechanisms by which ILT2 modulates T cell activation in primary CTLs and transfected T cell lines. We found that cross-linking with the TCR and the activity of Src tyrosine kinase p56(lck) were required for phosphorylation of ILT2 and subsequent recruitment of Src homology protein 1. In contrast, ILT2 triggering resulted in reduced phosphorylation of TCRzeta and linker for activation of T cells, which led to reduced TCRzeta-ZAP70 complex formation, as well as extracellular signal-related kinase 1 and 2 activation. Furthermore, ILT2 inhibited both superantigen and anti-TCR Ab-induced rearrangement of the actin cytoskeleton. The inhibitory effect mediated by ILT2 is probably concentrated at the
APC
-T cell interface because both TCR and ILT2 were strongly polarized toward the
APC
upon engagement by their specific ligands. Thus, ILT2 inhibits both signaling and cellular events involved in the activation of T cells.
...
PMID:Ig-like transcript 2 (ILT2)/leukocyte Ig-like receptor 1 (LIR1) inhibits TCR signaling and actin cytoskeleton reorganization. 1116 Mar 12
The natural killer (NK) gene complex is a genomic region containing lectin-type receptor genes. We have established a contig of
PAC
and BAC clones comprising about 1 Mb of the centromeric part of the NK gene complex. This region extends from the LOX-1 gene, which encodes a receptor for oxidized LDL and was found within 100 kb telomeric of the STS marker D12S77, contains the CD94 and NKG2 NK receptor genes and reaches beyond D12S852 on the proximal side. In this part we have mapped the human LY49L gene, a homologue of the rodent Ly49 genes, which encode important
MHC class I
receptors for the regulation of NK cell activity in rodents. The LY49L gene is localized 100 to 200 kb centromeric of the NKG2 gene cluster and 300 to 400 kb telomeric of the STS marker D12S841. Genomic sequencing of the complete gene including promoter and intron sequences confirmed that the structure is similar to the mouse Ly49 genes. Screening of several cDNA libraries did not detect any transcripts of putative additional human LY49 genes. In addition, in the course of these studies several EST sequences were localized in the region, one immediately upstream of the LY49L gene.
...
PMID:The centromeric part of the human NK gene complex: linkage of LOX-1 and LY49L with the CD94/NKG2 region. 1119 5
Peptides bind cell surface MHC class II proteins to yield complexes capable of activating CD4(+) T cells. By contrast, protein Ags require internalization and processing by
APC
before functional presentation. Here, T cell recognition of a short peptide in the context of class II proteins occurred only after delivery of this ligand to mature endosomal/lysosomal compartments within
APC
. Functional and biochemical studies revealed that a central cysteine within the peptide was cysteinylated, perturbing T cell recognition of this epitope. Internalization and processing of the modified epitope by
APC
, was required to restore T cell recognition. Peptide cysteinylation and reduction could occur rapidly and reversibly before MHC binding. Cysteinylation did not disrupt peptide binding to class II molecules, rather the modified peptide displayed an enhanced affinity for MHC at neutral pH. However, once the peptide was bound to class II proteins, oxidation or reduction of cysteine residues was severely limited. Cysteinylation has been shown to radically influence T cell responses to
MHC class I
ligands. The ability of professional
APC
to reductively cleave this peptide modification presumably evolved to circumvent a similar problem in MHC class II ligand recognition.
...
PMID:Cysteinylation of MHC class II ligands: peptide endocytosis and reduction within APC influences T cell recognition. 1125 11
Human T suppressor cells (Ts), capable of preventing autologous T helper cells (Th) from reacting against xenogeneic pig endothelial cells and pig
APC
can be generated in vitro. Ts derive from a population of CD3(+)CD8(+)CD28(-) T lymphocytes and specifically recognize the
MHC class I
antigens of the
APC
used for in vitro immunization. To study the mechanism that underlies suppression, we investigated whether Ts inhibit the expression of costimulatory molecules in xenogeneic professional and semiprofessional
APC
. We found that Ts down-regulate Th-induced expression of CD86 in pig
APC
, and that this effect occurs at the level of transcription, as indicated by nuclear run-on and Northern blot assays. EMSA results revealed that inhibition of CD86 expression is mediated by inactivation of transcription factor NF-kappaB. Furthermore, transfection of pig
APC
with a vector expressing NF-kappaB p65 partially rescued Th-induced expression of the CD86 molecule. These results strongly support the concept that xenospecific Ts inhibit the
APC
function of xenogeneic cells by preventing activation of NF-kappaB.
...
PMID:Human xenospecific T suppressor cells inhibit T helper cell proliferation to porcine aortic endothelial cells, and NF-kappaB activity in porcine APC. 1133 70
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