Search results for "T cell"

showing 10 items of 2228 documents

SARS-CoV-2 in patients with cancer: possible role of mimicry of human molecules by viral proteins and the resulting anti-cancer immunity

2021

AbstractA few reports suggest that molecular mimicry can have a role in determining the more severe and deadly forms of COVID-19, inducing endothelial damage, disseminated intravascular coagulation, and multiorgan failure. Heat shock proteins/molecular chaperones can be involved in these molecular mimicry phenomena. However, tumor cells can display on their surface heat shock proteins/molecular chaperones that are mimicked by SARS-CoV-2 molecules (including the Spike protein), similarly to what happens in other bacterial or viral infections. Since molecular mimicry between SARS-CoV-2 and tumoral proteins can elicit an immune reaction in which antibodies or cytotoxic cells produced against t…

Immunological cross-reactionMini ReviewShared epitopesmedicine.disease_causeBiochemistryVirusViral ProteinsImmunityNeoplasmsHeat shock proteinmedicineHumansCytotoxic T cellCancerDisseminated intravascular coagulationbiologySARS-CoV-2Molecular MimicryfungiImmunityCOVID-19CancerCell Biologymedicine.diseaseMolecular mimicrybiology.proteinCancer researchAntibodyCOVID-19 . SARS-CoV-2 . Cancer . Molecularmimicry . Shared epitopes . Immunological cross-reaction
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Costimulatory signalling potential of murine MHC class II‐positive T‐clone cells

1996

Activated human and rat T cells as well as mouse T-cell clones have been reported to synthesize and express major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II molecules. However, the capacity of class II+ antigen (Ag) presenting T cells to induce proliferation of Ag-specific cloned T cells has been controversial. We analysed whether the failure of some T-cell clones to proliferate in response to Ag presented by class II+ T cells is because of a lack of costimulatory cytokine production by the antigen-presenting cells (APC). As a model system the mouse class II+ cloned BI/O4.1 T cells were used as APC in order to activate the T cell clone KIII5. This T-helper 1 (Th1) type, GAT (synthetic copoly…

ImmunologyAntigen presentationCD1Antigen-Presenting CellsPolymerase Chain ReactionCell LineMiceInterleukin 21T-Lymphocyte SubsetsAnimalsImmunology and AllergyCytotoxic T cellIL-2 receptorAntigen-presenting cellMice Inbred C3HMHC class IICD40biologyHistocompatibility Antigens Class IIReceptors Interleukin-2Th1 CellsInterleukin-12Molecular biologyMice Inbred C57BLbiology.proteinInterleukin-2Cell DivisionSpleenSignal TransductionResearch ArticleImmunology
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Stalemating a clever opportunist: lessons from murine cytomegalovirus.

2003

Abstract Cytomegaloviruses and their specific hosts have come to an arrangement that avoids disease but allows the viruses to persist in the individual host and to spread in the host species. Recent work has uncovered some of the molecular details of this evolutionary “contract for mutual survival.” Cytomegaloviruses encode proteins, referred to as “immunoevasins,” which are specifically committed to subvert the immune defense of the host for evading virus elimination. In reply, the hosts have evolved countermeasures to overcome the viral immunoevasins and present antigenic peptides to an extent that is sufficient for confining virus replication to below a harmful level. Accordingly, cytome…

ImmunologyAntigen presentationCongenital cytomegalovirus infectionDown-RegulationDiseaseImmunodominanceBiologyCD8-Positive T-LymphocytesMajor histocompatibility complexInterferon-gammaMiceViral ProteinsViral Envelope ProteinsmedicineImmunology and AllergyCytotoxic T cellAnimalsImmunologic SurveillanceGlycoproteinsAntigen PresentationMembrane GlycoproteinsCytomegalic inclusion diseaseHistocompatibility Antigens Class IModels ImmunologicalGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseVirologyPeptide FragmentsProtein TransportViral replicationCytomegalovirus Infectionsbiology.proteinCarrier ProteinsHuman immunology
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Macrophages Escape Inhibition of Major Histocompatibility Complex Class I-Dependent Antigen Presentation by Cytomegalovirus

2000

ABSTRACTThe mouse cytomegalovirus (MCMV)m152- andm06-encoded glycoproteins gp40 and gp48, respectively, independently downregulate major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I surface expression during the course of productive MCMV infection in fibroblasts. As a result, presentation of an immediate-early protein pp89-derived nonapeptide toH-2Ld-restricted CD8+cytotoxic T cells is completely prevented in fibroblasts. Here we demonstrate that MCMV-infected primary bone marrow macrophages and the macrophage cell line J774 constitutively present pp89 peptides during permissive MCMV infection to cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL). In contrast to fibroblasts, expression of them152andm06genes in macr…

ImmunologyAntigen presentationCytomegalovirusBone Marrow CellsCD8-Positive T-LymphocytesMajor histocompatibility complexMicrobiologyCell LineImmediate-Early ProteinsMiceViral ProteinsViral Envelope ProteinsVirologyMHC class IAnimalsCytotoxic T cellAntigen-presenting cellAntigen PresentationMice Inbred BALB CMembrane GlycoproteinsbiologyAntigen processingMacrophagesHistocompatibility Antigens Class IMHC restrictionMolecular biologyInsect Sciencebiology.proteinPathogenesis and ImmunityCD8Journal of Virology
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Prophylactic and therapeutic intervention in IgE responses by biolistic DNA vaccination primarily targeting dendritic cells.

2005

Background Allergen gene transfer represents an alternative approach to specific immunotherapy with allergen extracts. Gene gun–mediated DNA immunization with plasmid vectors expressing a transgene under control of the promoter of the fascin gene (pFascin) allows for antigen production predominantly by dendritic cells and resulted in the generation of CD8 + cytotoxic T lymphocytes as well as in the development of a type 1 immune response. Objective We compared the in vivo efficiency of biolistic transfection with pFascin and plasmids containing the cytomegalovirus promoter (pCMV) in a mouse model of type I allergy. Methods BALB/c mice were sensitized with the model allergen β-galactosidase …

ImmunologyBiologyCD8-Positive T-LymphocytesImmunoglobulin EDNA vaccinationType 2 immune responseInterferon-gammaMiceImmune systemAntigenVaccines DNAImmunology and AllergyCytotoxic T cellAnimalsAntigen-presenting cellMice Inbred BALB CMicrofilament ProteinsVaccinationDendritic cellDendritic CellsBiolisticsImmunoglobulin EVirologyDesensitization ImmunologicImmunologybiology.proteinFemaleCarrier ProteinsThe Journal of allergy and clinical immunology
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Novel Paraoxonase 2-Dependent Mechanism Mediating the Biological Effects of the Pseudomonas aeruginosa Quorum-Sensing Molecule N-(3-Oxo-Dodecanoyl)-l…

2015

ABSTRACT Pseudomonas aeruginosa produces N -(3-oxo-dodecanoyl)- l -homoserine lactone (3OC12), a crucial signaling molecule that elicits diverse biological responses in host cells thought to subvert immune defenses. The mechanism mediating many of these responses remains unknown. The intracellular lactonase paraoxonase 2 (PON2) hydrolyzes and inactivates 3OC12 and is therefore considered a component of host cells that attenuates 3OC12-mediated responses. Here, we demonstrate in cell lines and in primary human bronchial epithelial cells that 3OC12 is rapidly hydrolyzed intracellularly by PON2 to 3OC12 acid, which becomes trapped and accumulates within the cells. Subcellularly, 3OC12 acid acc…

ImmunologyBlotting WesternHomoserineMitochondrionMicrobiologyCell LineHost-Parasite Interactionschemistry.chemical_compoundLactonesLactonaseHomoserineHumansImmunoprecipitationPseudomonas InfectionsChromatography High Pressure LiquidCellular Microbiology: Pathogen-Host Cell Molecular InteractionsMicroscopy ConfocalbiologyKinaseAryldialkylphosphataseQuorum SensingQuorum sensingCytosolInfectious DiseasesBiochemistrychemistryPseudomonas aeruginosabiology.proteinPhosphorylationParasitologyRNA InterferenceIntracellular
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Nitric Oxide Promotes Resistance to Tumor Suppression by CTLs

2006

Abstract Many human tumors express inducible NO synthetase (NOS2), but the roles of NO in tumor development are not fully elucidated. An important step during tumor development is the acquisition of apoptosis resistance. We investigated the dose-dependent effects of endogenously produced NO on apoptosis using ecdysone-inducible NOS2 cell lines. Our results show that short-term NOS2 expression enhances CD95-mediated apoptosis and T cell cytotoxicity dose dependently. Furthermore, we could show that during chronic exposure to NO, besides the primary cytotoxic NO effect, there is selection of cell clones resistant to NO that show cross-resistance to CD95-induced apoptosis and the killing by CT…

ImmunologyCellNitric Oxide Synthase Type IIApoptosisBiologyEndoplasmic ReticulumNitric OxideCell LineMalignant transformationParacrine signallingImmune systemNeoplasmsmedicineHumansImmunology and AllergyCytotoxic T cellfas ReceptorAutocrine signallingMitochondriamedicine.anatomical_structureGene Expression RegulationApoptosisCell cultureMitochondrial MembranesImmunologyCancer researchSignal TransductionT-Lymphocytes CytotoxicThe Journal of Immunology
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Recognition of human renal cell carcinoma and melanoma by HLA-A2-restricted cytotoxic T lymphocytes is mediated by shared peptide epitopes and up-reg…

1996

Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) have previously been isolated from peripheral blood of patients with renal cell carcinoma (RCC). The CD8-positive CTL line MZ1257-CTL-5 (CTL-5) has been shown to lyse autologous cultured RCC cells in an HLA-A2 restricted fashion. Allogeneic, HLA-A2-matched RCC and melanoma cell lines were also lysed by CTL-5, suggesting that melanoma and renal cancer share antigenic determinants. The aim of the study was to determine whether RCC and melanoma share peptide epitopes that are recognized by CTL-5 in the context of HLA-A2 molecules. Peptides were acideulated from various cell lines, separated by reversed phase high performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC), and as…

ImmunologyCellurologic and male genital diseasesEpitopeEpitopesInterferon-gammaAntigenMHC class IHLA-A2 AntigenmedicineTumor Cells CulturedCytotoxic T cellHumansInterferon gammaCarcinoma Renal CellMelanomaB-LymphocytesbiologyMelanomaGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseMolecular biologyUp-RegulationCTL*medicine.anatomical_structurebiology.proteinPeptidesmedicine.drugT-Lymphocytes CytotoxicScandinavian journal of immunology
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Genetic Variation Determines Mast Cell Functions in Experimental Asthma

2011

Abstract Mast cell-deficient mice are a key for investigating the function of mast cells in health and disease. Allergic airway disease induced as a Th2-type immune response in mice is employed as a model to unravel the mechanisms underlying inception and progression of human allergic asthma. Previous work done in mast cell-deficient mouse strains that otherwise typically mount Th1-dominated immune responses revealed contradictory results as to whether mast cells contribute to the development of airway hyperresponsiveness and airway inflammation. However, a major contribution of mast cells was shown using adjuvant-free protocols to achieve sensitization. The identification of a traceable ge…

ImmunologyCongenicCell CountInflammationImmunoglobulin EMiceMice CongenicTh2 CellsImmune systemmedicineAnimalsImmunology and AllergyMast CellsSensitizationAsthmaInflammationPolymorphism Geneticbiologymedicine.diseaseMast cellAsthmaInterleukin 33medicine.anatomical_structureImmunologybiology.proteinBronchial Hyperreactivitymedicine.symptomThe Journal of Immunology
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Enrichment of Immediate-Early 1 (m123/pp89) Peptide-Specific CD8 T Cells in a Pulmonary CD62LloMemory-Effector Cell Pool during Latent Murine Cytomeg…

2000

ABSTRACTInterstitial cytomegalovirus (CMV) pneumonia is a clinically relevant complication in recipients of bone marrow transplantation (BMT). Recent data for a model of experimental syngeneic BMT and concomitant infection of BALB/c mice with murine CMV (mCMV) have documented the persistence of tissue-resident CD8 T cells after clearance of productive infection of the lungs (J. Podlech, R. Holtappels, M.-F. Pahl-Seibert, H.-P. Steffens, and M. J. Reddehase, J. Virol. 74:7496–7507, 2000). It was proposed that these cells represent antiviral “standby” memory cells whose functional role might be to help prevent reactivation of latent virus. The pool of pulmonary CD8 T cells was composed of two…

ImmunologyCytomegalovirusPeptideCD8-Positive T-LymphocytesBiologyEffector cellMicrobiologyImmediate-Early ProteinsMiceInterleukin 21Latent VirusAntigenVirologyAnimalsCytotoxic T cellAntigens ViralLungAntigenic peptidechemistry.chemical_classificationMice Inbred BALB Cvirus diseasesVirologyVirus LatencyCytomegalovirus infectionchemistryInsect ScienceCytomegalovirus InfectionsImmunologyPathogenesis and ImmunityFemaleImmunologic MemoryJournal of Virology
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