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Query: UMLS:C0033036 (
APC
)
10,214
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Although several observations show local T cell recognition of retinal Ag, there has been no direct demonstration that the
APC
were retinal derived, rather than recruited. In this study, CD45(+) cells isolated from immunologically quiescent murine retina were tested in vitro for functional evidence of Ag presentation to naive and Ag-experienced CD4 T cells specific for beta-galactosidase. Because CD45(+) cells from brain have been reported to be efficient
APC
, they were included for comparison. Measures of activation included changes in CD4, CD25, CD44, CD45RB, CD62L, CD69, caspase-3 activation, CFSE dilution, size, number of cells recovered, and cytokine production. Retinal CD45(+) cells gave no evidence of Ag-dependent TCR ligation in naive T cells, unlike splenic
APC
and CD45(+) cells from brain, which supported potent responses. Instead, addition of retinal CD45(+) cells to cocultures of naive 3E9 T cells plus splenic
APC
reduced the yield of activated T cells and cytokine production by limiting T cell activation at early time points. Ag-experienced T cells responded weakly to Ag presented by retinal CD45(+) cells. Activating the retinal cells with IFN-gamma, anti-CD40, or LPS incrementally increased their
APC
activity. Addition of neutralizing Abs to
TGF-beta
did not reveal suppressed retinal
APC
activity. Because retina lacks tissue equivalents of meninges and choroid plexus, rich sources of dendritic cells in brain, cells from retina may better represent the
APC
activity of fresh, adult CNS parenchymal and perivascular cells. The activity of the retinal CD45(+) cells appears to be directed to limiting T cell responses.
...
PMID:The antigen-presenting activity of fresh, adult parenchymal microglia and perivascular cells from retina. 1515 73
The highly coordinated interaction of
TGF-beta
and Wnt signaling pathways is critical for normal development. However, the effects of
TGF-beta
on
APC
and beta-catenin, two key mediators of Wnt signaling in epithelial cells, have been largely unknown. We determined the effect of
TGF-beta
on
APC
and beta-catenin expression in Mv1Lu, a nontransformed epithelial cell line, in which
TGF-beta
signaling causes a G(1) cell cycle arrest. We found that
TGF-beta
rapidly reduced APC protein levels through a post-transcriptional mechanism. Further,
TGF-beta
increased beta-catenin mRNA and protein levels, and increased beta-catenin nuclear accumulation. Finally, retrovirus-mediated overexpression of beta-catenin discernibly enhanced the ability of
TGF-beta
to induce a G(1) cell cycle arrest. This is the first report demonstrating that
TGF-beta
mimics the effect of Wnt signaling on beta-catenin in Mv1Lu cells, and that reduction of
APC
and nuclear accumulation of beta-catenin have cooperative effects on mechanisms that mediate
TGF-beta
-induced cell cycle arrest.
...
PMID:TGF-beta targets the Wnt pathway components, APC and beta-catenin, as Mv1Lu cells undergo cell cycle arrest. 1528 Jun 61
The study of the epithelium of the adult mammalian intestine touches upon many modern aspects of biology. The epithelium is in a constant dialogue with the underlying mesenchyme to control stem cell activity, proliferation in transit-amplifying compartments, lineage commitment, terminal differentiation and, ultimately, cell death. There are spatially distinct compartments dedicated to each of these events. The Wnt,
TGF-beta
, BMP, Notch, and Par polarity pathways are the major players in homeostatic control of the adult epithelium. Several hereditary cancer syndromes deregulate these same signaling cascades through mutational (in)activation. Moreover, these mutations often also occur in sporadic tumors. Thus symmetry exists between the roles that these signaling pathways play in physiology and in cancer of the intestine. This is particularly evident for the Wnt/
APC
pathway, for which the mammalian intestine has become one of the most-studied paradigms. Here, we integrate recent knowledge of the molecular inner workings of the prototype signaling cascades with their specific roles in intestinal epithelial homeostasis and in neoplastic transformation of the epithelium.
...
PMID:Signaling pathways in intestinal development and cancer. 1547 57
The study of hereditary tumor syndromes has laid a solid foundation toward understanding the genetic basis of cancer. One of the latest examples comes from the study of tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC). As a member of the phakomatoses, TSC is characterized by the appearance of benign tumors, most notably in the central nervous system, kidney, heart, lung, and skin. While classically described as "hamartomas," the pathology of the lesions has features suggestive of abnormal cellular proliferation, size, differentiation, and migration. Occasionally, tumors progress to become malignant (i.e., renal cell carcinoma). The genetic basis of this disease has been attributed to mutations in one of two unlinked genes, TSC1 and TSC2. Cells undergo bi-allelic inactivation of either gene to give rise to tumors in a classic tumor suppressor "two-hit" paradigm. The functions of the TSC1 and TSC2 gene products, hamartin and tuberin, respectively, have remained ill defined until recently. Genetic, biochemical, and biologic analyses have highlighted their role as negative regulators of the mTOR signaling pathway. Tuberin, serving as a substrate of AKT and AMPK, mediates mTOR activity by coordinating inputs from growth factors and energy availability in the control of cell growth, proliferation, and survival. Emerging evidence also suggests that the TSC 1/2 complex may play a role in modulating the activity of beta-catenin and
TGFbeta
. These findings provide novel functional links between the TSC genes and other tumor suppressors responsible for Cowden's disease (PTEN), Peutz-Jeghers syndrome (LKB1), and familial polyposis (
APC
). Common sporadic cancers such as prostate, lung, colon, endometrium, and breast have ties to these genes, highlighting the potential role of the TSC proteins in human cancers. Rapamycin, a specific mTOR inhibitor, has potent antitumoral activities in preclinical models of TSC and is currently undergoing phase I/II clinical studies.
...
PMID:The tuberous sclerosis complex genes in tumor development. 1556 17
In order to understand the role of mismatch repair (MMR) gene in colorectal carcinogenesis,microsatellite instability (MSI) status of 16 microsatellite loci of 62 adenomas from 59 patients, including sporadic and familial adeonmatous polyposis (FAP) adenomas were detected by microdissection-PCR-SSLP, and protein expressions of beta-catenin, P53, and BAX, etc. were assayed by immunohistochemistry. Results were as following: (1)The overall MSI alteration rate of the 16 loci was 14.4%. Different adenomas from the same patient showed different microsatellite alterations at the same loci; (2)All of the five FAP patients were MSI-L, three of which showed MSI at the locus of hMSH3; (3)The membrane expression rate of beta-catenin in adenomas and accompanied carcinomas was 42.9% and 11.4%, respectively (P<0.001); (4)Microsatellite alterations of the microsatellite loci of TP53, D5S346, TCF4(A)(9), TGFbetaRII(GT)(3) and TGFbetaRII(A)(10) were associated with the changes of their protein expressions. It could be concluded the following: (1)Microsatellite instability existed even in the early stage (adenomas) of colorectal tumorigenesis. The alterations of chromosome 1p,
APC
genes, and the
TGFbeta
signal transduction pathway could also be deduced; (2)In the progression of adenoma to carcinoma, the staining of beta-catenin would be transferred from membrane to cytoplasm and then nucleus, and the cytoplasm stain was stronger in carcinoma than that in adenomas. The abnormality of the signal transduction pathway of
APC
-beta-catenin-TCF4 could be concluded.
...
PMID:[Microsatellite instability and relative gene expressions in sporadic and familial adenomatous polyposis adenomas]. 1562 58
We tested the hypothesis that immature
APC
, whose NF-kappaB-signaling pathway and thus maturation was blocked by the proteosome inhibitor benzyloxycarbonyl-isoleucyl-glutamyl(O-tert-butyl)-alanyl-leucinal (PSI), could be a source of Ag-specific regulatory T (Treg) cells. DO11.10 CD4(+) T cells that were incubated with Ag- and PSI-pulsed
APC
proliferated poorly, produced less IL-2, IFN-gamma, and IL-10 in secondary cultures, and inhibited the response of both naive and memory CD4(+) T cells stimulated by Ag-pulsed
APC
. The generation of PSI-
APC
Treg cells required IL-10 production by
APC
. PSI-
APC
Treg cell inhibition required cell-cell contact but not IL-10 or
TGF-beta
. Addition of IL-2 did not reverse, but Ab to CTLA-4 did reverse partially the inhibitory effect. Depletion of CD25(+) T cells before initial culture with PSI-
APC
did not affect Treg generation. PSI-
APC
Treg cells expressed high levels of Foxp3, inhibited proliferation of naive DO11.10 T cells in vivo, and abrogated colitis driven by a memory Th1 response to bacterial-associated Ag. We conclude that NF-kappaB-blocked, immature
APC
are able to induce the differentiation of Treg cells that can function in vitro and in vivo in an Ag-specific manner.
...
PMID:Generation of antigen-specific, Foxp3-expressing CD4+ regulatory T cells by inhibition of APC proteosome function. 1572 88
While there is no reliable serum biomarker for the diagnosis and monitoring of patients with gastric cancer, we tested the potential diagnostic and prognostic values of detecting methylation changes in the serum of gastric cancer patients. DNA was extracted from the pretherapeutic serum of 60 patients with confirmed gastric adenocarcinoma and 22 age-matched noncancer controls. Promoter hypermethylation in 10 tumour-related genes (
APC
, E-cadherin, GSTP1, hMLH1, MGMT, p15, p16, SOCS1, TIMP3 and
TGF-beta
RII) was determined by quantitative methylation-specific PCR (MethyLight). Preferential methylation in the serum DNA of gastric cancer patients was noted in
APC
(17%), E-cadherin (13%), hMLH1 (41%) and TIMP3 (17%) genes. Moreover, patients with stages III/IV diseases tended to have higher concentrations of methylated
APC
(P = 0.08), TIMP3 (P = 0.005) and hMLH1 (P = 0.03) in the serum. In all, 33 cancers (55%) had methylation detected in the serum in at least one of these four markers, while three normal subjects had methylation detected in the serum (specificity 86%). The combined use of
APC
and E-cadherin methylation markers identified a subgroup of cancer patients with worse prognosis (median survival 3.3 vs 16.1 months, P = 0.006). These results suggest that the detection of DNA methylation in the serum may carry both diagnostic and therapeutic values in gastric cancer patients.
...
PMID:Potential diagnostic and prognostic values of detecting promoter hypermethylation in the serum of patients with gastric cancer. 1594 35
Tumor affects myelopoiesis by inhibiting the process of differentiation/maturation of antigen-presenting cells from their myeloid precursors and by stimulating an accumulation of immature myeloid cells in cancer patients and tumor-bearing mice. These immature myeloid cells can contribute greatly to tumor progression and promote tumor evasion from immune attack: i) by inhibiting development of adaptive immune responses against tumor in lymphoid organs; ii) by migrating into tumor site and differentiating there into highly immune suppressive tumor-associated macrophages. Immature myeloid cells and tumor-associated macrophages utilize different JAK/STAT signaling pathways and different mechanisms to control T cell responses, which include increased production of
TGF-beta
, reactive oxygen species, peroxynitrites, as well as enhanced L-arginine metabolism. Understanding of precise mechanisms, which tumors use to affect differentiation of
APC
from myeloid cell precursors and inhibit T cell responses, could help to develop new approaches for cancer therapy and substantially improve efficiency of existing cancer vaccination strategies.
...
PMID:Role of immature myeloid cells in mechanisms of immune evasion in cancer. 1604 43
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), which is characterized by the increased production of autoantibodies and defective T cell responses, can be induced in mice by immunization with a human anti-DNA mAb that expresses a major Id, designated 16/6Id. A peptide based on the sequence of the CDR1 of the 16/6Id (human CDR1 (hCDR1)) ameliorated the clinical manifestations of SLE and down-regulated, ex vivo, the 16/6Id-induced T cell proliferation. In this study, we examined the mechanism responsible for the hCDR1-induced modulation of T cell functions related to the pathogenesis of SLE. We found that injection of hCDR1 into BALB/c mice concomitant with their immunization with 16/6Id resulted in a marked elevation of
TGF-beta
secretion 10 days later. Addition of
TGF-beta
suppressed the 16/6Id-stimulated T cell proliferation similarly to hCDR1. In addition, we provide evidence that one possible mechanism underlying the hCDR1- and
TGFbeta
-induced inhibition of T cell proliferation is by down-regulating the expression, and therefore the functions, of a pair of key cell adhesion receptors, LFA-1 (alphaLbeta2) and CD44, which operate as accessory molecules in mediating
APC
-T cell interactions. Indeed, T cells of mice treated with hCDR1 showed a
TGF-beta
-induced suppression of adhesion to the LFA-1 and CD44 ligands, hyaluronic acid and ICAM-1, respectively, induced by stromal cell-derived factor-1alpha and PMA. The latter suppression is through the inhibition of ERK phosphorylation. Thus, the down-regulation of SLE-associated responses by hCDR1 treatment may be due to the effect of the up-regulated
TGF-beta
on the expression and function of T cell adhesion receptors and, consequently, on T cell stimulation, adhesion, and proliferation.
...
PMID:The inhibition of autoreactive T cell functions by a peptide based on the CDR1 of an anti-DNA autoantibody is via TGF-beta-mediated suppression of LFA-1 and CD44 expression and function. 1630 30
B cells are typically characterized by their ability to produce Abs, including autoantibodies. However, B cells possess additional immune functions, including the production of cytokines and the ability to function as a secondary
APC
. As with T cells, the B cell population contains functionally distinct subsets capable of performing both pathogenic and regulatory functions. Recent studies indicate that regulatory B cells develop in several murine models of chronic inflammation, including inflammatory bowel disease, rheumatoid arthritis, and experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis. The regulatory function may be directly accomplished by the production of regulatory cytokines IL-10 and
TGF-beta
and/or by the ability of B cells to interact with pathogenic T cells to dampen harmful immune responses. In this review, we make a case for the existence of regulatory B cells and discuss the possible developmental pathways and functional mechanisms of these B cells.
...
PMID:A case for regulatory B cells. 1639 50
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