523 resultados para adoptive kinship
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Treatment options for patients with high-risk acute myeloid leukemia (AML) include high-dose chemotherapy regimens in combination with allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, which takes advantage of the donor T-cell-mediated graft-versus-leukemia effect. Together with beneficial responses observed in assays targeted at leukemia-associated antigens (LAA), this encouraged research on cancer vaccines and adoptive cellular therapies in AML. The receptor for hyaluronic acid-mediated motility (RHAMM, CD168) was identified as one of the most promising LAA in AML. Thus far, little is known about in situ expression in leukemic bone marrow blasts or the prognostic role of RHAMM and its interaction partners in AML. We immunohistochemically analyzed the expression and prognostic significance of RHAMM on trephine bone marrow biopsies from 71 AML cases that had been evaluated for cytogenetics and presence of FLT3-internal tandem duplications and NPM1 mutations. Fifty-five patients (77%) were treated with curative intent, while 16 (23%) received the most appropriate supportive care. Twenty of 71 (28%) AML cases were considered RHAMM+. Receiver operating characteristic curves showed significant discriminatory power considering overall survival (OS) in AML patients treated curatively for RHAMM (p = 0.015). Multivariable analysis revealed that expression of RHAMM in >5% of leukemic blasts identifies a subgroup of curatively treated cases with adverse OS independent of failures to achieve complete remission. RHAMM not only represents a promising LAA with specific T-cell responses in AML but, if assessed in situ on blasts, also a probable prognostic factor.
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Coordinated interactions between T and B cells are crucial for inducing physiological B cell responses. Mutant mice in which tyrosine 136 of linker for activation of T cell (LAT) is replaced by a phenylalanine (Lat(Y136F)) exhibit a strong CD4(+) T cell proliferation in the absence of intended immunization. The resulting effector T cells produce high amounts of T(H)2 cytokines and are extremely efficient at inducing polyclonal B cell activation. As a consequence, these Lat(Y136F) mutant mice showed massive germinal center formations and hypergammaglobulinemia. Here, we analyzed the involvement of different costimulators and their ligands in such T-B interactions both in vitro and in vivo, using blocking antibodies, knockout mice, and adoptive transfer experiments. Surprisingly, we showed in vitro that although B cell activation required contact with T cells, CD40, and inducible T cell costimulator molecule-ligand (ICOSL) signaling were not necessary for this process. These observations were further confirmed in vivo, where none of these molecules were required for the unfolding of the LAT CD4(+) T cell expansion and the subsequent polyclonal B cell activation, although, the absence of CD40 led to a reduction of the follicular B cell response. These results indicate that the crucial functions played by CD40 and ICOSL in germinal center formation and isotype switching in physiological humoral responses are partly overcome in Lat(Y136F) mice. By comparison, the absence of CD80-CD86 was found to almost completely block the in vitro B cell activation mediated by Lat(Y136F) CD4(+) T cells. The role of CD80-CD86 in T-B cooperation in vivo remained elusive due to the upstream implication of these costimulatory molecules in the expansion of Lat(Y136F) CD4(+) T cells. Together, our data suggest that CD80 and CD86 costimulators play a key role in the polyclonal B cell activation mediated by Lat(Y136F) CD4(+) T cells even though additional costimulatory molecules or cytokines are likely to be required in this process.
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Based on provious (Hemelrijk 1998; Puga-González, Hildenbrant & Hemelrijk 2009), we have developed an agent-based model and software, called A-KinGDom, which allows us to simulate the emergence of the social structure in a group of non-human primates. The model includes dominance and affiliative interactions and incorporate s two main innovations (preliminary dominance interactions and a kinship factor), which allow us to define four different attack and affiliative strategies. In accordance with these strategies, we compared the data obtained under four simulation conditions with the results obtained in a provious study (Dolado & Beltran 2012) involving empirical observations of a captive group of mangabeys (Cercocebus torquatus)
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Purpose: Current experimental data suggest that CD4+CD25+Foxp3+regulatory T cells (Tregs) based immunotherapy would be of greatinterest to promote donor-specific immune tolerance in transplantation(Tx). Whether and how adoptive transfer of Tregs could be bestcombined with current immunosuppressive regimens in clinicalsettings remains to be defined. Using an experimental Tx model,we had previously shown that the transfer of antigen-specific Tregspromoted long-term skin allograft acceptance in lymphopenic mice,in the absence of any immunosuppressive drug. However, allograftsurvival was only slightly prolonged when Tregs were transferredalone into non-lymphopenic mice, suggesting that in more stringentconditions such as in clinical settings adjuvant therapies may beneeded to effectively control alloreactive T cells (Teff).Methods and Materials: Here we have investigated the effects ofvarious immunosuppressive drugs on the survival, proliferation andeffector function of Teff and Tregs in response to alloantigens in in vitroassays and in our in vivo Tx model.Results: Teff proliferation was inhibited in a dose-dependant mannerby rapamycin and cyclosporine A, while anti-CD154 only marginallyaffected Teff proliferation and survival in vitro. Rapamycin promotedapoptosis of Teff as compared to Tregs that were more resistant underthe same culture conditions. In vivo, the transfer of donor-specificTregs could be advantageously combined with rapamycin andanti-CD154 to significantly prolong MHC-mismatched skin allograftsurvival in non-lymphopenic recipients.Conclusion: Taken together, our data indicate thatimmunosuppressive drugs differentially target T-cell subsets and couldpromote Tregs expansion and/or function while controlling the Teff pool.
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Les cellules dendritiques sont des cellules du système immunitaire qui permettent d'instruire les lymphocytes T, autres cellules de ce système, pour mettre en place une réponse immunitaire adaptée afin de combattre et vaincre une infection. Ces cellules dendritiques vont reconnaître des motifs spécifiquement exprimés par des pathogènes par l'intermédiaire de récepteurs exprimés à leur surface. En détectant ces molécules, elles vont s'activer et subir diverses modifications pour pouvoir activer les lymphocytes T. Elles vont alors interagir avec les lymphocytes Τ et transférer les informations nécessaires pour que ces cellules s'activent à leur tour et produisent différentes protéines de façon à éliminer le pathogène. En fonction du type de pathogène, les informations transférées entre les cellules dendritiques et les lymphocytes seront différentes de manière à produire la réponse immunitaire la mieux adaptée pour supprimer l'élément infectieux. Dans le corps, les cellules dendritiques circulent continuellement afin de détecter les éléments étrangers. Quand elles reconnaissent une protéine étrangère, elles la phagocytent, c'est-à-dire qu'elles la mangent afin de pouvoir la présenter aux lymphocytes T. Mais quand elles phagocytent un élément étranger, elles peuvent également prendre des éléments du soi, comme par exemple quand elles phagocytent une cellule infectée par un virus. Les cellules dendritiques doivent alors être capables de différentier les molécules du soi et du non-soi de façon à ne pas induire une réponse en présentant un antigène du soi aux lymphocytes T. D'autant plus que lors de leur développement, les lymphocytes Τ qui sont capables de reconnaître le soi sont éliminés mais ce système n'est pas parfait et donc certains lymphocytes Τ auto-reactifs peuvent se trouver dans le corps. Il existe ainsi d'autres mécanismes en périphérie du site de développement pour inhiber ces lymphocytes Τ auto-reactifs. Ce sont les mécanismes de tolérance. Quand les lymphocytes Τ induisent une réponse aux antigènes du soi, cela résulte à des maladies auto-immunes. Dans mon projet de recherche, nous avons travaillé avec des lignées de cellules dendritiques, c'est-à-dire des cellules dendritiques semblables à celles que l'on peut trouver in vivo mais qui sont immortalisées, elles peuvent donc être cultiver et manipuler in vitro. Nous avons génétiquement modifiées ces lignées cellulaires pour qu'elles expriment des molécules immunosuppressives afin d'étudier comment induire une tolérance immunitaire, c'est-à-dire si l'expression de ces molécules permet d'éviter de générer une réponse immunitaire. Pour cela, nous avons utilisé des modèles murins de tumeurs et de maladies auto-immunes. Nous avons démontré que ces lignées de cellules dendritiques peuvent être un grand outil de recherche pour étudier les bénéfices de différentes molécules immuno-modulatrices afin d'induire une tolérance immunitaire à différents antigènes. - Les cellules dendritiques sont responsables de l'induction des réponses immunitaires adaptatives. Suite à une infection microbienne, les cellules dendritiques s'activent, elles induisent l'expression de molécules de costimulation à leur surface, sécrètent des cytokines et induisent la différentiation des cellules Τ effectrices et mémoires. De plus, les cellules dendritiques ont un rôle important dans l'induction et la maintenance de la tolérance immunitaire au niveau du thymus et en périphérie, en induisant l'anergie, la délétion ou la conversion des cellules Τ naïves en cellules régulatrices. Dans notre groupe, une nouvelle lignée de cellules dendritiques appelée MuTu a été crée par la culture de cellules dendritiques tumorales isolées à partir d'une rate d'une souris transgénique, dans laquelle l'expression de l'oncogène SV40 et du GFP sont sous le contrôle du promoteur CD1 le, et sont ainsi spécifiquement exprimés dans les cellules dendritiques. Ces nouvelles lignées appartiennent au sous-type des cellules dendritiques conventionnelles exprimant CD8a. Elles ont conservé leur capacité d'augmenter l'expression des marqueurs de costimulation à leur surface ainsi que le production de cytokines en réponse à des ligands des récepteurs Toll, ainsi que leur capacité à présenter des antigènes associés aux molécules du complexe majeur d'histocompatibilité (CMH) de classe I ou II pour activer la prolifération et la différentiation des lymphocytes T. En utilisant un système de transduction de lentivirus de seconde génération, ces nouvelles lignées de cellules dendritiques ont été génétiquement modifiées pour sur-exprimer des molécules immunosuppressives (IL-10, TGFP latent, TGFp actif, Activin A, Arginase 1, IDO, B7DC et CTLA4). Ces lignées permettent d'étudier de manière reproductible le rôle de ces molécules potentiellement tolérogènes sur les réponses immunitaires in vitro et in vivo. Ces lignées potentiellement tolérogènes ont été testées, tout d'abord, in vitro, pour leur capacité à inhiber l'activation des cellules dendritiques, à bloquer la prolifération des cellules Τ ou à modifier leur polarisation. Nos résultats démontrent qu'en réponse à une stimulation, la sur-expression des molécules costimulatrices et la sécrétion de molécules pro- inflammatoires est réduite quand les cellules dendritiques sur-expriment l'IL-10. La sur¬expression de TGFp sous sa forme active induit le développement de cellules régulatrices CD4+ CD25+ Foxp3+ et bloque la réponse CD8 cytotoxique tandis que la sur-expression de CTLA4 à la surface des cellules dendritiques inhibe une réponse Thl et induit des lymphocytes Τ anergiques. Ces lignées ont également été utilisées pour étudier l'induction de tolérance in vivo. Tout d'abord, nous avons étudié l'induction de tolérance dans un modèle de développement de tumeurs. En effet, quand les lignées tumorales sont transférées dans les lignées de souris C57BL/6, elles sont reconnues comme du non-soi du à l'expression de l'oncogène SV40 et du GFP et sont éliminées. Ce mécanisme d'élimination a été étudié en utilisant une lignée de cellules dendritiques modifiée pour exprimer la luciférase et qui a permis de suivre le développement des tumeurs par de l'imagerie in vivo dans des animaux vivants. Ces lignées de cellules dendritiques MuTu sont éliminées dans la souris C57BL/6 par les lymphocytes CD8 et l'action cytotoxique de la perforine. Après plusieurs injections, les cellules dendritiques sur-exprimant CTLA4 ou l'actif TGFp peuvent casser cette réponse immunitaire inhérente aux antigènes de la lignée et induire le développement de la tumeur dans la souris C57BL/6. Le développement tumoral a pu être suivi en mesurant la bioluminescence émise par des cellules dendritiques modifiées pour exprimer à la fois l'actif TGFp et la luciférase. Ces tumeurs ont pu se développer grâce à la mise en place d'un microenvironnement suppressif pour échapper à l'immunité en recrutant des cellules myéloïde suppressives, des lymphocytes CD4 régulateurs et en induisant l'expression d'une molécule inhibitrice PD-1 à la surface des lymphocytes CD8 infiltrant la tumeur. Dans un deuxième temps, ces lignées tolérogènes ont également été testées dans un modèle murin de maladies auto-immunes, appelé l'encéphalomyélite auto-immune expérimental (EAE), qui est un modèle pour la sclérose en plaques. L'EAE a été induite dans la souris par le transfert de cellules de ganglions prélevées d'une souris donneuse préalablement immunisée avec une protéine du système nerveux central, la glycoprotéine myéline oligodendrocyte (MOG) émulsifiée dans de l'adjuvant complet de Freund. La vaccination des souris donneuses et receveuses avec les cellules sur-exprimant l'actif TGFP préalablement chargées avec la protéine MOG bloque l'induction de l'EAE. Nous sommes actuellement en train de définir les mécanismes qui permettent de protéger la souris du développement de la maladie auto-immune. Dans cette étude, nous avons ainsi démontré la possibilité d'induire la tolérance in vivo et in vitro à différents antigènes en utilisant nos nouvelles lignées de cellules dendritiques et en les modifiant pour exprimer des molécules immunosuppressives. En conséquence, ces nouvelles lignées de cellules dendritiques représentent un outil pour explorer les bénéfices de différentes molécules ayant des propriétés immuno-modulatrices pour manipuler le système immunitaire vers un phénotype tolérogène. - Dendritic cells (DC) are widely recognized as potent inducers of the adaptive immune responses. Importantly, after microbial infections, DC become activated, induce co- stimulation, secrete cytokines and induce effector and memory Τ cells. DC furthermore play an important role in inducing and maintaining central and peripheral tolerance by inducing anergy, deletion or commitment of antigen-specific naïve Τ cells into regulatory Τ cells. In our group, stable MuTu DC lines were generated by culture of splenic DC tumors from transgenic mice expressing the SV40 large Τ oncogene and the GFP under DC-specific CDllc promoter. These transformed DC belong to the CD8a+ conventional DC subtype and have fully conserved their capacity to upregulate co-stimulatory markers and produce cytokines after activation with Toll Like Receptors-ligands, and to present Major Histocompatibility class-I or MHCII-restricted antigens to activate Τ cell expansion and differentiation. Using a second- generation lentiviral transduction system, these newly developed MuTu DC lines were genetically modified to overexpress immunosuppressive molecules (IL-10, latent TGFp, active TGFp, Activin A, Arginase 1, IDO, B7DC and CTLA4). This allows to reproducibly investigate the role of these potentially tolerogenic molecules on in vitro and in vivo immune responses. These potentially tolerogenic DC were tested in vitro for their ability to inhibit DC activation, to prevent Τ cell proliferation and to modify Τ cell polarization. Our results show that the upregulation of costimulatory molecules and the secretion of pro-inflammatory cytokines were reduced upon stimulation of DC overexpressing IL-10. The overexpression of active TGFP induced the development of CD4+ CD25+ Foxp3+ regulatory Τ cells and inhibited the cytotoxic CD8 Τ cell response as shown by using the OT-II Τ cell system whereas the surface expression of CTLA-4 on DC prevented the Thl response and prompted an anergic antigen-specific Τ cell response. These MuTu DC lines were also used in vivo in order to study the induction of tolerance. First we addressed the induction of tolerance in a model of tumorogenesis. The adoptively transferred tumor cell lines were cleared in C57BL/6 mice due to the foreign expression of SV40 LargeT and GFP. The mechanism of clearance of MuTu DC line into C57BL/6 mice was investigated by using luciferase-expressing DC line. These DC line allowed to follow, by in vivo imaging, the tumor development in living animals and determined that MuTu DC lines were eliminated in a perforin-mediated CD8 Τ cell dependent and CD4 Τ cell independent response. After multiple injections, DC overexpressing CTLA4 or active TGFp could break the immune response to these inherent antigens and induced DC tumorogenesis in wild type mice. The tumor outgrowth in C57BL/6 mice was nicely observed by double-transduced DC lines to express both luciferase and active TGFp. actTGFp-DC tumor was shown to recruit myeloid-derived suppressor cells, induce CD4+ CD25+ Foxp3+ regulatory Τ cells and induce the expression of the inhibitory receptor PD-1 on tumor- infiltrating CD8+ Τ cells in order to escape tumor immunity. Tolerogenic DC lines were also tested for the induction of tolerance in a murine model of autoimmune disease, the experimental autoimmune encephalitis (EAE) model for human multiple sclerosis. EAE was induced in C57BL/6 mice by the adoptive transfer of lymph node cells isolated from donor mice previously immunized by a protein specific to the central nervous system, the myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG) emulsified in the complete freund adjuvant. The vaccination of donor and recipient mice with MOG-pulsed actTGFP-DC line prevented EAE induction. We are still investigating how the active TGFP protect mice from EAE development. We generated tolerogenic DC lines inducing tolerance in vitro and in vivo. Thereby these MuTu DC lines represent a great tool to explore the benefits of various immuno-modulatory molecules to manipulate the immune system toward a tolerogenic phenotype.
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Modern cancer therapies should strive not only to eliminate malignant tissues but also to preserve healthy tissues and the patient's quality of life. Antigen-specific immunotherapy approaches are promising for either aspect since they are designed to only act against tissues expressing 1 or more specified tumour antigens. In order to develop successful vaccine and adoptive transfer protocols, longitudinal monitoring of cancer patients taking part in clinical trials is mandatory. Here, in vivo expansion of antigen-specific cells, as well as their ex vivo functional status represent important parameters to be analysed. To obtain results that most closely reflect the cells' in vivo status, functional assays must be carried out with as little in vitro culturing as possible. The present minireview discusses recent advances in these domains.
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SUMMARY : The recognition by recipient T cells of the allograft major histocompatibility complex (MHC)mismatched antigens is the primary event that ultimately leads to rejection. In the transplantation setting, circulating alloreactive CD4+ T cells play a central role in the initiation and the coordination of the immune response and can initiate the rejection of an allograft via three distinct pathways: the direct, indirect and the recently described semi-direct pathway. However, the exact role of individual CD4+ T-cell subsets in the development of allograft rejection is not clearly defined. Furthermore, besides pathogenic effector T cells, a new subset of T cells with regulatory properties, the CD4+CD25+Foxp3+ (Treg) cells, has come under increased scrutiny over the last decade. The experiments presented in this thesis were designed to better define the phenotype and functional characteristics of CD4+ T-cell subsets and Treg cells in vitro and in vivo in a marine adoptive transfer and skin transplantation model. As Treg cells play a key role in the induction and maintenance of peripheral transplantation tolerance, we have explored whether donor-antigen specific Treg cells could be expanded in vitro. Here we describe a robust protocol for the ex-vivo generation and expansion of antigen-specific Treg cells, without loss of their characteristic phenotype and suppressive function. In our in vivo transplantation model, antigen-specific Treg cells induced donor-specific tolerance to skin allografts in lymphopenic recipients and significantly delayed skin graft rejection in wild-type mice in the absence of any other immunosuppression. Naïve and memory CD4+ T cells have distinct phenotypes, effector functions and in vivo homeostatsis, and thus may play different roles in anti-donor immunity after transplantation. We have analyzed in vitro and in vivo primary alloresponses of naïve and cross-reactive memory CD4+ T cells. We found that the CD4+CD45RBlo memory T-cell pool was heterogeneous and contained cells with regulatory potentials, both in the CD4+CD25+ and CD4+CD25- populations. CD4+ T cells capable of inducing strong primary alloreactive responses in vitro and rejection of a first allograft in vivo were mainly contained within the CD45RBhi naïve CD4+ T-cell compartment. Taken together, the work described in this thesis provides new insights into the mechanisms that drive allograft rejection or donor-specific transplantation tolerance. These results will help to optimise current clinical immunosuppressive regimens used after solid organ transplantation and design new immunotherapeutic strategies to prevent transplant rejection. RÉSUMÉ : ROLE DES SOUS-POPULATIONS DE CELLULES T DANS LE REJET DE GREFFE ET L'INDUCTION DE TOLERANCE EN TRANSPLANTATION La reconnaissance par les cellules T du receveur des alloantigènes du complexe majeur d'histocompatibilité (CMIT) présentés par une greffe allogénique, est le premier événement qui aboutira au rejet de l'organe greffé. Dans le contexte d'une transplantation, les cellules alloréactives T CD4+ circulantes jouent un rôle central dans l'initiation et la coordination de 1a réponse immune, et peuvent initier le rejet par 3 voies distinctes : la voie directe, indirecte et la voie servi-directe, plus récemment décrite. Toutefois, le rôle exact des sous-populations de cellules T CD4+ dans les différentes étapes menant au rejet d'une allogreffe n'est pas clairement établi. Par ailleurs, hormis les cellules T effectrices pathogéniques, une sous-population de cellules T ayant des propriétés régulatrices, les cellules T CD4+CD25+Foxp3+ (Treg), a été nouvellement décrite et est intensément étudiée depuis environ dix ans. Les expériences présentées dans cette thèse ont été planifiées afin de mieux définir le phénotype et les caractéristiques fonctionnels des sous-populations de cellules T CD4+ et des Treg in vitro et in vivo dans un modèle marin de transfert adoptif de cellules et de transplantation de peau. Comme les cellules Treg jouent un rôle clé dans l'induction et le maintien de la tolérance périphérique en transplantation, nous avons investigué la possibilité de multiplier in vitro des cellules Treg avec spécificité antigénique pour le donneur. Nous décrivons ici un protocole reproductible pour la génération et l'expansion ex-vivo de cellules Treg avec spécificité antigénique, sans perte de leur phénotype caractéristique et de leur fonction suppressive. Dans notre modèle in vivo de transplantation de peau, ces cellules Treg pouvaient induire une tolérance spécifique vis-à-vis du donneur chez des souris lymphopéniques, et, chez des souris normales non-lymphopéniques ces Treg ont permis de retarder significativement le rejet en l'absence de tout traitement immunosuppresseur. Les cellules T CD4+ naïves et mémoires se distinguent par leur phénotype, fonction effectrice et leur homéostasie in vivo, et peuvent donc moduler différemment la réponse immune contre le donneur après transplantation. Nous avons analysé in vitro et in vivo les réponses allogéniques primaires de cellules T CD4+ naïves et mémoires non-spécifiques (cross-réactives). Nos résultats ont montré que le pool de cellules T CD4+CD45RB'° mémoires était hétérogène et contenait des cellules avec un potentiel régulateur, aussi bien parmi la sous-population de cellules CD4+CD25+ que CD4+CD25+. Les cellules T CD4+ capables d'induire une alloréponse primaire intense in vitro et le rejet d'une première allogreffe in vivo étaient essentiellement contenues dans le pool de cellules T CD4+CD45RBhi naïves. En conclusion, le travail décrit dans cette thèse amène un nouvel éclairage sur les mécanismes responsables du rejet d'une allogreffe ou de l'induction de tolérance en transplantation. Ces résultats permettront d'optimaliser les traitements immunosuppresseurs utilisés en transplantation clinique et de concevoir des nouvelles stratégies irnmuno-thérapeutiques pour prévenir le rejet de greffe allogénique.
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Memory and effector T cells have the potential to counteract cancer progression, but often fail to control the disease, essentially because of three main stumbling blocks. First, clonal deletion leads to relatively low numbers or low-to-intermediate T cell receptor (TCR) affinity of self/tumor-specific T cells. Second, the poor innate immune stimulation by solid tumors is responsible for inefficient priming and boosting. Third, T cells are suppressed in the tumor microenvironment by inhibitory signals from other immune cells, stroma and tumor cells, which induces T cell exhaustion, as demonstrated in metastases of melanoma patients. State-of-the-art adoptive cell transfer and active immunotherapy can partially overcome the three stumbling blocks. The reversibility of T cell exhaustion and novel molecular insights provide the basis for further improvements of clinical immunotherapy.
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The cancer-testis antigen NY-ESO-1 has been targeted as a tumor-associated antigen by immunotherapeutical strategies, such as cancer vaccines. The prerequisite for a T-cell-based therapy is the induction of T cells capable of recognizing the NY-ESO-1-expressing tumor cells. In this study, we generated human T lymphocytes directed against the immunodominant NY-ESO-1(157-165) epitope known to be naturally presented with HLA-A*0201. We succeeded to isolate autorestricted and allorestricted T lymphocytes with low, intermediate or high avidity TCRs against the NY-ESO-1 peptide. The avidity of the established CTL populations correlated with their capacity of lysing HLA-A2-positive, NY-ESO-1-expressing tumor cell lines derived from different origins, e.g. melanoma and myeloma. The allorestricted NY-ESO-1-specific T lymphocytes displayed TCRs with the highest avidity and best anti-tumor recognition activity. TCRs derived from allorestricted, NY-ESO-1-specific T cells may be useful reagents for redirecting primary T cells by TCR gene transfer and, therefore, may facilitate the development of adoptive transfer regimens based on TCR-transduced T cells for the treatment of NY-ESO-1-expressing hematological malignancies and solid tumors.
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CD4+CD3- cells are the predominant hematopoietic cells found in mouse fetal intestine. We prove their role as Peyer's patch (PP)-inducing cells by transfer into neonatal PP-deficient mice. To test the requirement of chemokines and adhesion molecules in induction of PP, we studied mice deficient in CXCR5 and/or alpha4beta1 integrin-mediated adhesion. CXCR5-/- mice have CD4+CD3- cells, which are inefficient in inducing PP formation. We show here that CXCR5/CXCL13 signaling activates alpha4beta1 integrin on CD4+CD3- cells. Blocking of beta1 integrin or VCAM-1, the ligand of alpha4beta1 integrin, inhibits PP formation. This study demonstrates the link between chemokine receptors and adhesion molecules that regulates stromal/hematopoietic cell interaction leading to PP formation.
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Cet article interroge les pratiques familiales transnationales dans la diaspora chinoise à partir d'une étude plurigénérationnelle de la communauté chinoise en Polynésie française. Il conceptualise la notion de « parenté flexible » afin d'examiner comment la famille est mise au service de stratégies d'accumulation de divers capitaux culturels, symboliques, économiques mais aussi juridiques. La parenté flexible recouvre l'ensemble des pratiques consistant à jouer sur l'agencement et la composition de la famille en vue de s'ajuster aux, et de bénéficier des différentiels entre régimes et conjonctures en situation transnationale.Flexible Kinship. Family Adjustments and Capital Accumulation within the Chinese Diaspora in French PolynesiaDrawing from a multigenerational study of the Chinese community in French Polynesia, this article deals with transnational family practices in the Chinese diaspora. It conceptualizes the notion of "flexible kinship" to examine how family is used to develop strategies to accumulate various types of capital (cultural, symbolic, economic, as well as legal). Flexible kinship covers a range of practices that consist in playing on the arrangement and composition of the family group with the aim of adjusting to and profiting from differentials in regimes and conjunctures in a transnational situation.
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Immune responses have the important function of host defense and protection against pathogens. However, the immune response also causes inflammation and host tissue injury, termed immunopathology. For example, hepatitis B and C virus infection in humans cause immunopathological sequel with destruction of liver cells by the host's own immune response. Similarly, after infection with lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) in mice, the adaptive immune response causes liver cell damage, choriomeningitis and destruction of lymphoid organ architecture. The immunopathological sequel during LCMV infection has been attributed to cytotoxic CD8(+) T cells. However, we now show that during LCMV infection CD4(+) T cells selectively induced the destruction of splenic marginal zone and caused liver cell damage with elevated serum alanin-transferase (ALT) levels. The destruction of the splenic marginal zone by CD4(+) T cells included the reduction of marginal zone B cells, marginal zone macrophages and marginal zone metallophilic macrophages. Functionally, this resulted in an impaired production of neutralizing antibodies against LCMV. Furthermore, CD4(+) T cells reduced B cells with an IgM(high)IgD(low) phenotype (transitional stage 1 and 2, marginal zone B cells), whereas other B cell subtypes such as follicular type 1 and 2 and germinal center/memory B cells were not affected. Adoptive transfer of CD4(+) T cells lacking different important effector cytokines and cytolytic pathways such as IFNγ, TNFα, perforin and Fas-FasL interaction did reveal that these cytolytic pathways are redundant in the induction of immunopathological sequel in spleen. In conclusion, our results define an important role of CD4(+) T cells in the induction of immunopathology in liver and spleen. This includes the CD4(+) T cell mediated destruction of the splenic marginal zone with consecutively impaired protective neutralizing antibody responses.
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Follicular Th (T(FH)) cells have emerged as a new Th subset providing help to B cells and supporting their differentiation into long-lived plasma cells or memory B cells. Their differentiation had not yet been investigated following neonatal immunization, which elicits delayed and limited germinal center (GC) responses. We demonstrate that neonatal immunization induces CXCR5(high)PD-1(high) CD4(+) T(FH) cells that exhibit T(FH) features (including Batf, Bcl6, c-Maf, ICOS, and IL-21 expression) and are able to migrate into the GCs. However, neonatal T(FH) cells fail to expand and to acquire a full-blown GC T(FH) phenotype, as reflected by a higher ratio of GC T(FH)/non-GC CD4(+) T cells in immunized adults than neonates (3.8 × 10(-3) versus 2.2 × 10(-3), p = 0.01). Following the adoptive transfer of naive adult OT-II CD4(+) T cells, OT-II T(FH) cells expand in the vaccine-draining lymph nodes of immunized adult but not infant recipients, whereas naive 2-wk-old CD4(+) OT-II cells failed to expand in adult hosts, reflecting the influence of both environmental and T cell-intrinsic factors. Postponing immunization to later in life increases the number of T(FH) cells in a stepwise manner, in direct correlation with the numbers of GC B cells and plasma cells elicited. Remarkably, adjuvantation with CpG oligonucleotides markedly increased GC T(FH) and GC B cell neonatal responses, up to adult levels. To our knowledge, this is the first demonstration that the T(FH) cell development limits early life GC responses and that adjuvants/delivery systems supporting T(FH) differentiation may restore adultlike early life GC B cell responses.
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Pneumolysin (PLY) is a key Streptococcus pneumoniae virulence factor and potential candidate for inclusion in pneumococcal subunit vaccines. Dendritic cells (DC) play a key role in the initiation and instruction of adaptive immunity, but the effects of PLY on DC have not been widely investigated. Endotoxin-free PLY enhanced costimulatory molecule expression on DC but did not induce cytokine secretion. These effects have functional significance as adoptive transfer of DC exposed to PLY and antigen resulted in stronger antigen-specific T cell proliferation than transfer of DC exposed to antigen alone. PLY synergized with TLR agonists to enhance secretion of the proinflammatory cytokines IL-12, IL-23, IL-6, IL-1β, IL-1α and TNF-α by DC and enhanced cytokines including IL-17A and IFN-γ by splenocytes. PLY-induced DC maturation and cytokine secretion by DC and splenocytes was TLR4-independent. Both IL-17A and IFN-γ are required for protective immunity to pneumococcal infection and intranasal infection of mice with PLY-deficient pneumococci induced significantly less IFN-γ and IL-17A in the lungs compared to infection with wild-type bacteria. IL-1β plays a key role in promoting IL-17A and was previously shown to mediate protection against pneumococcal infection. The enhancement of IL-1β secretion by whole live S. pneumoniae and by PLY in DC required NLRP3, identifying PLY as a novel NLRP3 inflammasome activator. Furthermore, NLRP3 was required for protective immunity against respiratory infection with S. pneumoniae. These results add significantly to our understanding of the interactions between PLY and the immune system.
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Este artículo presenta los resultados de la investigación sobre los adolescentes acogidos en familias extensas. Este proyecto se sitúa en la investigación cooperativa. La muestra está compuesta por 57 jóvenes acogidos y 79 técnicos expertos en protección de la infancia de ocho regiones españolas. Los resultados indican que los jóvenes acogidos tienen deseos diferenciales que demandan una respuesta específica que hemos concretado en la creación del «programa de apoyo para adolescentes de acogida». A continuación se mostrarán las principales características de este programa; se hará, también, una reflexión sobre sus aspectos fundamentales, es decir, la ayuda a los técnicos para que ellos puedan obtener un nuevo recurso de formación e intervención grupal introduciendo como método la promoción de la resiliencia.