Search results for "Adoptive"
showing 10 items of 182 documents
B Lymphocyte-Deficiency in Mice Causes Vascular Dysfunction by Inducing Neutrophilia
2021
B lymphocytes have been implicated in the development of insulin resistance, atherosclerosis and certain types of hypertension. In contrast to these studies, which were performed under pathological conditions, the present study provides evidence for the protective effect of B lymphocytes in maintaining vascular homeostasis under physiological conditions. In young mice not exposed to any known risk factors, the lack of B cells led to massive endothelial dysfunction. The vascular dysfunction in B cell-deficient mice was associated with an increased number of neutrophils in the circulating blood. Neutrophil depletion in B cell-deficient mice resulted in the complete normalization of vascular f…
Augmented Passive Transfer of Contact Sensitivity in Severe Combined Immunodeficiency Mice and Its Dependence of Vβ8<sup>+</sup> Cells in…
1993
The passive transfer of contact sensitivity using picryl chloride immune cells from H-2 syngenic BALB/c donors was analyzed in severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) mice which lack functional T and B lymphocytes. H-2-restricted and antigen-specific contact sensitivity was transferred to SCID mice, and comparison between the level of contact sensitivity and the number of transferred cells showed a significantly more efficient transfer to SCID than to BALB/c mice. The cells passively transferring contact sensitivity were shown to carry the Vβ8 phenotype. Moreover, chromium-labeled cells from BALB/c PC1-primed donors localize normally in peripheral lymphoid organs, and an increased percentag…
Coexpression of TGF-β1 and IL-10 Enables Regulatory T Cells to Completely Suppress Airway Hyperreactivity
2008
Abstract In allergic airway disease, Treg may play an important role in the modulation of airway hyperreactivity (AHR) and inflammation. We therefore investigated the therapeutic potential of Treg in an Ag-dependent murine asthma model. We here describe that AHR can be completely suppressed by adoptive transfer of Treg overexpressing active TGF-β1. Using mice with impaired TGF-β signaling in T cells, we could demonstrate that TGF-β signaling in recipient effector T cells or transferred Treg themselves is not required for the protective effects on AHR. However, the expression of IL-10 by Treg was found to be essential for the suppression of AHR, since Treg overexpressing active TGF-β1 but de…
A Critical Regulatory Role of Leucin Zipper Transcription Factor c-Maf in Th1-Mediated Experimental Colitis
2004
Abstract In this study, we investigated the role of c-Maf, a transcription factor known to induce IL-4 production, in inflammatory bowel diseases and experimental colitis. Although Crohn′s disease (CD) is associated with low IL-4 production by T-bet-expressing Th1 cells in the lamina propria, surprisingly a higher expression of c-Maf in these cells was found as compared with control patients. The relevance of this finding was further evaluated in an animal model of CD induced by adoptive transfer of CD4+CD62L+ T cells in RAG-deficient mice. In this Th1-mediated model, an increase of c-Maf-expressing T lymphocytes in the lamina propria over time was observed. Interestingly, adoptive transfer…
Phenotype, Function, and Safety of a p53 TCR Bicistronic GMP-Suitable Retroviral Construct.
2006
Abstract Malignant transformation of normal cells is frequently correlated with the involvement of so called tumor-associated antigens (TAA). Such proteins, that are often overexpressed in tumor cells, can be recognized by cytotoxic CD8+ T cells (CTL) if presented as peptides on MHC (Major-Histocompatibility-Complex)-class I molecules. Due to self-tolerance mechanisms, the peripheral T cell repertoire is devoid of efficient TAA-specific, tumor-reactive CTL with high affinity, limiting the successful development of antigen-specific immunotherapeutic strategies based on such tumor-reactive T cells. The aim of this project is the preclinical development of an adoptive immunotherapy against p53…
In Vitro Priming to Tumor-Associated Proteins
1997
Cancer can be cured in mice by adoptive transfer of T cells specific for the malignant cells or by vaccination to tumor-specific antigens. The application of immunotherapy to the treatment of human cancer hinges on the identification of human tumor antigens to which specific immunity can be elicited.
p53 Immunotherapy of Cancer
2012
Mutation and overexpression of the p53 tumor suppressor protein are the most common genetic alterations in human cancers. Peptides derived from non-mutated (wild type, wt) and mutated p53-molecules, processed and presented in the context of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules by tumor cells for T-cell recognition, could serve as broad targets for cancer immunotherapy. Isolating p53-reactive T lymphocytes in healthy donors or patients has been hampered by the fact that most individuals display a peripheral p53-reactive T-cell repertoire that is devoid of high-avidity MHC class I-restricted cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL). Only low-avidity T lymphocytes are left due to self-toleran…
Redirected EBV-Specific Stem Cell-Memory and Central-Memory CD8+ T Lymphocytes Exhibit Effective and Sustained Antileukemic Immunity to Acute Myeloid…
2014
Abstract Introduction: Adoptive cellular therapy (ACT) of donor-derived cytolytic T lymphocytes (CTL) directed to leukemia or herpesvirus has proven promising to improve antiviral and antileukemic immunity in patients following allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (AHSCT). However, durable clinical responses are often hampered by detrimental graft-versus host (GvH) reactivity and limited persistence of transferred, fully differentiated antileukemic effector T cells (TEFF). We thus explored memory and tumoricidal features of in vitro generated EBV-specific stem cell-memory T cells (TSCM) and central-memory T (TCM) cells, T cell-receptor (TCR) redirected to primary acute myeloid…
Animal models of intestinal inflammation: new insights into the molecular pathogenesis and immunotherapy of inflammatory bowel disease
2000
Inflammatory bowel diseases (IBDs) in humans are complex chronic inflammatory disorders of largely unknown cause. Several mouse models that in some respects resemble human IBDs have recently been developed and have provided new insights into immunoregulatory processes in the gut. Both genetic and environmental factors have been shown to be involved in chronic intestinal inflammation. In most of the models CD4+ T lymphocytes have been identified as central mediators of inflammation. Inappropriate activation of T(H)1-dominated cytokine pathways upon contact with luminal bacterial antigens and lack of tolerance appear to be crucial for intestinal pathology. We present a brief overview of impor…
2014
Introduction We and others recently showed that IL-17-producing Th17 cells are highly unstable in their phenotype and swiftly upregulate T-bet and Th1-associated cytokines in the inflamed CNS of mice with EAE [1] . This inherent plasticity was recently associated with IL-23, IFN-γ or IL-12 signalling on effector T cells [2] , [3] . Aim To understand the role of IFN-γ and IL-27 signaling for plasticity of Th17 cells in vivo. Methods We use mice lacking the IFN-γ receptor 2 chain specifically in T cells (CD4cre × IFNγR2FL/FL) as well as blocking antibodies for IFN-γ and IL-27-p28 and knockout mice for IL-27-EBI3. Further we use IL-17 reporter mice to sort Th17 cells prior adoptive transfer. W…