0000000000448649

AUTHOR

Julie C. Ribot

0000-0002-7852-343x

showing 2 related works from this author

Bordeaux 2018: Wine, Cheese, and γδ T Cells

2019

The first ‘International γδ T cell conference’ took place in Denver, CO (USA) in 2004. Since then, a new meeting is held every two years. During each conference, all participants voted to choose between candidate bids for where to hold the next conference. At the conference held in London in 2016, a majority opted for the bid from a team proposing the 2018 event be held in Bordeaux, France – which is where we therefore gathered on 7-10th of June 2018. The meeting was an undisputed success and it gave us the opportunity to take stock of the increasing basic knowledge about γδ T cells as well as the rapidly expanding interest and activities developing using γδ T cells towards clinical applica…

0301 basic medicinelcsh:Immunologic diseases. AllergyOpinionrecent advancesT cellImmunologyReceptors Lymphocyte HomingLibrary scienceInfectionsLymphocyte Activation03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineBasic knowledgeongoing researchT-Lymphocyte SubsetsPolitical scienceNeoplasmsmedicineImmunology and AllergyAnimalsHumansgamma delta T cellsInflammationButyrophilinsReceptors Antigen T-Cell gamma-deltaCongresses as Topicfutures perspectives030104 developmental biologymedicine.anatomical_structureconference reportImmunotherapylcsh:RC581-607030215 immunologyFrontiers in Immunology
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Meningeal γδ T cell-derived IL-17 controls synaptic plasticity and short-term memory

2019

The notion of "immune privilege" of the brain has been revised to accommodate its infiltration, at steady state, by immune cells that participate in normal neurophysiology. However, the immune mechanisms that regulate learning and memory remain poorly understood. Here, we show that noninflammatory interleukin-17 (IL-17) derived from a previously unknown fetal-derived meningeal-resident γδ T cell subset promotes cognition. When tested in classical spatial learning paradigms, mice lacking γδ T cells or IL-17 displayed deficient short-term memory while retaining long-term memory. The plasticity of glutamatergic synapses was reduced in the absence of IL-17, resulting in impaired long-term poten…

0301 basic medicineT cellT-LymphocytesImmunologyCellShort-term memoryBiologyArticle03 medical and health sciencesGlutamatergicMice0302 clinical medicineImmune systemMeningesImmune privilegemedicineAnimalsMice KnockoutNeuronal PlasticityInterleukin-17Long-term potentiationGeneral MedicineMice Inbred C57BL030104 developmental biologymedicine.anatomical_structureMemory Short-TermSynaptic plasticityNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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