Therapeutic activation of V alpha 24(+)V beta 11(+) NKT cells in human subjects results in highly coordinated secondary activation of acquired and innate immunity


Autoria(s): Nieda, M; Okai, M; Tazbirkova, A; Lin, H; Yamaura, A; Ide, K; Abraham, R; Juji, T; Macfarlane, DJ; Nicol, AJ
Contribuinte(s)

S. J. Shathi

Data(s)

01/01/2004

Resumo

Human Valpha24(+)Vbeta11(+) natural killer T (NKT) cells are a distinct CD1d-restricted lymphoid subset specifically and potently activated by alpha-galactosylceramide (alpha-GalCer) (KRN7000) presented by CD1 d on antigen-presenting cells. Preclinical models show that activation of Valpha24(+)Vbeta11(+) NKT cells induces effective antitumor immune responses and potentially important secondary immune effects, including activation of conventional T cells and NK cells. We describe the first clinical trial of cancer immune therapy with alpha-GalCer-pulsed CD1d-expressing dendritic cells. The results show that this therapy has substantial, rapid, and highly reproducible specific effects on Valpha24(+)Vbeta11(+) NKT cells and provide the first human in vivo evidence that Valpha24(+)Vbeta11(+) NKT cell stimulation leads to activation of both innate and acquired immunity, resulting in modulation of NK, T-, and B-cell numbers and increased serum interferon-gamma. We present the first clinical evidence that Valpha24(+)Vbeta11(+) NKT cell memory produces faster, more vigorous secondary immune responses by innate and acquired immunity upon restimulation.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:70407

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

American Society of Hematology

Palavras-Chave #Hematology #Killer T-cells #Pulsed Dendritic Cells #Alpha-galactosylceramide #Salmonella Infection #Glycolipid Antigens #Cutting Edge #Ifn-gamma #In-vitro #Liver #Mice #C1 #320205 Transplantation Immunology #730102 Immune system and allergy
Tipo

Journal Article