Search results for "Lymphocyte T CD4"
showing 3 items of 3 documents
Pronostic role of CD4 T lymphocyte infiltrates in breast cancers
2017
Tumor escape to immune system surveillance is one of the reasons why human cancer achieves to grow. In my research team, we aim to study CD4 T cell populations and their functions in the context of cancer. My work was precisely to determine if the results obtained in mice could be transposable in humans, in the context of breast cancer. . We first unraveled that tumor infiltrating Th17 cells could inhibit effector and cytotoxic functions of Th1 and CD8 T cells in an ectonucleotidase-dependent manner. Finally, we showed that high tumor infiltration in IL-17+ cells were significantly associated with a worse clinical prognosis for breast cancer patients. Then, we aim to prevent Th17 cell diffe…
Étude de la régulation transcriptionnelle des lymphocytes Th9
2017
CD4 helper T cells support a wide range of functions due to their ability to differentiate into different effector subsets depending on the antigen encountered and the cytokine environment in which they are. Current knowledge on the differentiation of helper T cells highlights the existence of complex transcriptional networks specific to each T helper subset. In 2008, IL-9 secreting CD4 T cells (Th9) are identified as a new helper T cell subtype. Differentiated in the presence of IL-4 and TGF-β, Th9 cells secrete IL-9 and IL-21, and contribute to the development of autoimmune and allergic diseases. Th9 lymphocytes also exhibit strong anti-tumor properties.The transcriptional network of the …
Effects of adjuvants of the cholera toxin family on CD4 + T cell responses in a murine model of intrarectal immunization with rotavirus-like particles
2011
Mucosal immunization is an important goal of vaccine development to protect against pathogens that use mucosa as portals of entry. However, the use of non-replicating antigens requires the addition of adjuvants.Cholera-like enterotoxins, cholera toxin (CT) from Vibrio cholerae and the heat-labile enterotoxin (LT) from toxinogenic strains of E. coli, as well as the mutant LR-192G and their B subunits (CTB and LTB) have been shown to increase immune responses against unrelated co-administered antigens by mucosal routes. However, their mechanism of action is very complex and not completely understood and differences exist between holotoxins and B subunits and within molecules, differences exis…