Search results for "CD8"
showing 10 items of 682 documents
Uptake of Leishmania major by dendritic cells is mediated by Fcγ receptors and facilitates acquisition of protective immunity
2006
Uptake of Leishmania major by dendritic cells (DCs) results in activation and interleukin (IL)-12 release. Infected DCs efficiently stimulate CD4- and CD8- T cells and vaccinate against leishmaniasis. In contrast, complement receptor 3-dependent phagocytosis of L. major by macrophages (MPhi) leads exclusively to MHC class II-restricted antigen presentation to primed, but not naive, T cells, and no IL-12 production. Herein, we demonstrate that uptake of L. major by DCs required parasite-reactive immunoglobulin (Ig)G and involved FcgammaRI and FcgammaRIII. In vivo, DC infiltration of L. major-infected skin lesions coincided with the appearance of antibodies in sera. Skin of infected B cell-de…
Quantitation of antigen-reactive T cells in peripheral blood by IFNgamma-ELISPOT assay and chromium-release assay: a four-centre comparative trial
2000
The ELISPOT assay is increasingly being used for the monitoring of the induction of antigen-reactive T cells in cancer vaccination trials. In order to evaluate the reliability of T cell frequency analysis with the ELISPOT assay, a comparative study was performed in four European laboratories. Six samples from healthy subjects were analyzed for the frequency of influenza-reactive CD8+ T cells in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) by IFNgamma-ELISPOT assay. In addition, one laboratory determined cytotoxic T cell precursor (CTL) frequencies in these samples by limiting dilution chromium-release assay (LDA), and three laboratories performed a variant of the LDA, the multiple microculture…
Identification of T cell epitopes by the use of rapidly generated mRNA fragments.
2004
Abstract Although the number of defined T cell epitopes of clinically relevant antigens is constantly increasing, there is still an enormous need to identify further peptides, processed from new antigens or presented by rare HLA molecules, respectively. Here we introduce a novel two-step approach for the rapid identification of T cell epitopes. It was established in the CMV infection model. From the peripheral blood of healthy donors sharing HLA-A1 according to HLA serotyping we isolated CD8 + T lymphocytes and generated dendritic cells (DCs). DCs were electroporated with CMV pp65 mRNA and tested for recognition by autologous CD8 + T lymphocytes in IFN-γ ELISPOT assays. In all 10 CMV-seropo…
Skin Dendritic Cells in Murine Cutaneous Leishmaniasis
2002
Studies of the immunopathogenesis of Leishmania major-induced murine cutaneous leishmaniasis provide a framework for understanding the evolution of L. major infection of skin in humans and the foundation for rationale vaccine design. Experiments in which infection is initiated with "suprap hysiologic" numbers of parasites clearly identify Th-derived type I cytokines as essential participants in macrophage activation and macrophage nitric oxide production as prerequisite for parasite control. Dendritic cells, rather than macrophages, appear to be responsible for L. major-specific Th priming in these studies. Recent studies of murine cutaneous leishmaniasis in a model system in which infectio…
Beta-Catenin mediates tumor-induced immunosuppression by inhibiting cross-priming of CD8(+) T cells
2014
Tumors activate -catenin in DCs to suppress CD8 immunity by inhibiting cross-priming; -catenin-suppressed CD8 immunity could be rescued by enhancing cross-priming. Whereas CD8(+) T cells are essential for anti-tumor immunity, tumors often evade CD8(+) T cell surveillance by immunosuppression. As the initiators of antigen-specific immune responses, DCs are likely to play a central role in regulating the balance between immunity and tolerance to tumor antigens and are specialized in their ability to cross-present exogenous tumor antigens on MHC class I molecules to initiate CD8(+) T cell immunity. However, it remains unclear whether and how tumors modulate DC functions to suppress CD8(+) T ce…
CD4 blockade directly inhibits mouse and human CD4+ T cell functions independent of Foxp3+ Tregs
2013
CD4(+) helper T cells orchestrate protective immunity against pathogens, yet can also induce undesired pathologies including allergies, transplant rejection and autoimmunity. Non-depleting CD4-specific antibodies such as clone YTS177.9 were found to promote long-lasting T cell tolerance in animal models. Thus, CD4 blockade could represent a promising therapeutic approach for human autoimmune diseases. However, the mechanisms underlying anti-CD4-induced tolerance are incompletely resolved. Particularly, multiple immune cells express CD4 including Foxp3(+) regulatory T cells (Tregs) and dendritic cells (DCs), both controlling the activation of CD4(+)Foxp3(-) helper T cells. Utilizing mixed le…
Tumor associated antigens in human renal cell carcinoma: MHC restricted recognition by cytotoxic T lymphocytes.
1996
Based on previous studies in human melanoma leading to the molecular cloning of genes encoding peptide antigens recognized by MHC-restricted cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) we extended our efforts to renal cancer systems established in tissue culture. In two patients we obtained stable CD8+ CTL clones with high cytolytic activity for the corresponding autologous tumor cell line in vitro. Neither autologous EBV-transformed B lymphocytes or PHA-activated PBL nor natural killer targets K562 were lysed by these CTL clones. MZ1257-RCC CTL5-30 lysed autologous tumor cells as well as normal kidney cell cultures in an HLA-A2 restricted fashion. Further specificity analysis showed cross reactivity wit…
Active suppression induced by cutaneous exposure to bacterial superantigen is prevented by interleukin-12 treatmentin vivo
1998
Exposure to the bacterial superantigen staphylococcal enterotoxin B (SEB) leads to inhibition of several immune responses and the induction of regulatory cells. The aim of this study was to characterize these regulatory cells further and to investigate the effect of interleukin-12 (IL-12) on superantigen-induced suppression. For this purpose BALB/c mice were injected subcutaneously with low doses of SEB that did not deplete the SEB-reactive V beta T cells. Intravenous transfer of unseparated local-draining lymph node cells from these SEB-treated animals suppressed the proliferative response of mononuclear spleen cells of naive syngeneic recipients for at least 3 weeks. The regulatory cells …
Human intestinal Vdelta1+ lymphocytes recognize tumor cells of epithelial origin.
1996
gammadelta T cells can be grouped into discrete subsets based upon their expression of T cell receptor (TCR) variable (V) region families, their tissue distribution, and their specificity. Vdelta2+ T cells constitute the majority of gammadelta T cells in peripheral blood whereas Vdelta1+T cells reside preferentially in skin epithelium and in the intestine. gammadelta T cells are envisioned as first line host defense mechanisms capable of providing a source of immune effector T cells and immunomodulating cytokines such as interleukin (IL) 4 or interferon (IFN) gamma. We describe here the fine specificity of three distinct gammadelta+ tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) obtained from patient…
Liver-primed memory T cells generated under noninflammatory conditions provide anti-infectious immunity.
2013
SummaryDevelopment of CD8+ T cell (CTL) immunity or tolerance is linked to the conditions during T cell priming. Dendritic cells (DCs) matured during inflammation generate effector/memory T cells, whereas immature DCs cause T cell deletion/anergy. We identify a third outcome of T cell priming in absence of inflammation enabled by cross-presenting liver sinusoidal endothelial cells. Such priming generated memory T cells that were spared from deletion by immature DCs. Similar to central memory T cells, liver-primed T cells differentiated into effector CTLs upon antigen re-encounter on matured DCs even after prolonged absence of antigen. Their reactivation required combinatorial signaling thro…