936 resultados para cell-to-cell transfer
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PURPOSE: Local breast cancer relapse after breast-saving surgery and radiotherapy is associated with increased risk of distant metastasis formation. The mechanisms involved remain largely elusive. We used the well-characterized 4T1 syngeneic, orthotopic breast cancer model to identify novel mechanisms of postradiation metastasis. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: 4T1 cells were injected in 20 Gy preirradiated mammary tissue to mimic postradiation relapses, or in nonirradiated mammary tissue, as control, of immunocompetent BALB/c mice. Molecular, biochemical, cellular, histologic analyses, adoptive cell transfer, genetic, and pharmacologic interventions were carried out. RESULTS: Tumors growing in preirradiated mammary tissue had reduced angiogenesis and were more hypoxic, invasive, and metastatic to lung and lymph nodes compared with control tumors. Increased metastasis involved the mobilization of CD11b(+)c-Kit(+)Ly6G(high)Ly6C(low)(Gr1(+)) myeloid cells through the HIF1-dependent expression of Kit ligand (KitL) by hypoxic tumor cells. KitL-mobilized myeloid cells homed to primary tumors and premetastatic lungs, to give rise to CD11b(+)c-Kit(-) cells. Pharmacologic inhibition of HIF1, silencing of KitL expression in tumor cells, and inhibition of c-Kit with an anti-c-Kit-blocking antibody or with a tyrosine kinase inhibitor prevented the mobilization of CD11b(+)c-Kit(+) cells and attenuated metastasis. C-Kit inhibition was also effective in reducing mobilization of CD11b(+)c-Kit(+) cells and inhibiting lung metastasis after irradiation of established tumors. CONCLUSIONS: Our work defines KitL/c-Kit as a previously unidentified axis critically involved in promoting metastasis of 4T1 tumors growing in preirradiated mammary tissue. Pharmacologic inhibition of this axis represents a potential therapeutic strategy to prevent metastasis in breast cancer patients with local relapses after radiotherapy. Clin Cancer Res; 18(16); 4365-74. ©2012 AACR.
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SUMMARY Radiotherapy is commonly and efficiently used to treat solid cancer in the clinic. Experimental evidence however suggests that radiation can promote tumor progression by inducing chronic modifications of the tumor microenvironment. Clinically, these observations are highly relevant to aggressive tumoral lesions relapsing after radiation therapy, a leading cause of patients' death. The investigation and understanding of the biological mechanisms implicated in the malignant progression of post-radiation relapses are therefore of major importance. Here we used a syngeneic (immunocompetent) breast cancer orthotopic xenograft model, to show that local irradiation of the mammary gland promotes the appearance of an invasive and metastatic tumor phenotype. Previous studies in our laboratory revealed that inhibition of tumor-induced angiogenesis and consequent increase in tumor hypoxia promotes metastasis formation through the activation of pro-invasive programs in the tumor cells. Our results extend these observations suggesting that mammary gland irradiation induces the recruitment of CD11b+ cells to both the primary tumor and the lungs at pre-metastatic stages through the hypoxia-dependent induction of Kit-ligand (KITL) expression in primary tumors. Abrogation of KITL expression in tumor cells prevented CD11 b+ cells accumulation in both the primary tumor and lungs and significantly reduced metastases of tumors growing in irradiated mammary gland. Importantly, irradiated mammary gland enhanced tumor-induced mobilization of circulating CD11b+cKit+ myelomonocytic cells through a HIF1- and KITL-dependent process. By cell transfer experiments, mobilized circulating CD11b+cKit+ cells were shown to supply both tumor- and lungs infiltrating CD11b+ cells. Using a blocking antibody against cKit (the KITL receptor), the mobilization of CD11b+cKit+ ceils was prevented as well as lung metastases derived from tumors growing in irradiated mammary gland. Taken together, these results indicate that tumors growing in a pre-irradiated mammary gland partially promote their malignant progression through the distant mobilization of circulating myelomonocytic precursor cells. They identify KITL inhibition and/or cKit receptor neutralization as potentially promising therapeutic approaches for post-radiation relapses. RESUME La radiothérapie est largement utilisée comme traitement de choix de nombreux types de cancers. L'agressivité des récidives tumorales observée en clinique après radiothérapie suggère cependant que le recours à l'irradiation pourrait dans certains cas accélérer la progression tumorale. De récents travaux expérimentaux ont en effet permis d'appuyer cette hypothèse, en montrant notamment l'effet néfaste des modifications chroniques de l'environnement induites par l'irradiation sur la progression tumorale. A l'aide d'un modèle murin syngénique orthotopique de cancer de sein, nous avons pu montrer que l'irradiation locale de la glande mammaire facilite l'invasion et la dissémination métastatique des cellules tumorales en favorisant le recrutement de cellules myéloïdes CD11 b+ vers la tumeur primaire et les poumons à un stade pré-métastatique. Comme mécanisme impliqué dans le recrutement des cellules CD11b+, nous avons pu observer après irradiation locale de la glande mammaire une expression augmentée de Kit-ligand (KITL) dans la tumeur (induite par l'hypoxie) ainsi que la mobilisation de cellules myéloïdes circulantes exprimant le récepteur cKit et précurseurs des cellules CD11b+ infiltrant la tumeur et les poumons. En empêchant la mobilisation par la tumeur de cellules circulantes cKit+ par des approches à la fois génétique et pharmacologique nous avons pu prévenir l'accumulation de cellules myéloïdes CD11 b+ dans la tumeur primaire et les poumons ainsi que la dissémination métastatique induites par' l'irradiation de la glande mammaire. De façon générale, ces résultats montrent que la progression agressive des tumeurs qui se développent dans un environnement irradié repose à la fois sur l'expression tumorale de KITL et la mobilisation de cellules myéloïdes précurseurs cKit*. Ils auront permis d'identifier KITL et/ou cKit comme des cibles thérapeutiques potentielles intéressantes pour le traitement des récidives tumorales après radiothérapie.
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During the past decades, anticancer immunotherapy has evolved from a promising therapeutic option to a robust clinical reality. Many immunotherapeutic regimens are now approved by the US Food and Drug Administration and the European Medicines Agency for use in cancer patients, and many others are being investigated as standalone therapeutic interventions or combined with conventional treatments in clinical studies. Immunotherapies may be subdivided into "passive" and "active" based on their ability to engage the host immune system against cancer. Since the anticancer activity of most passive immunotherapeutics (including tumor-targeting monoclonal antibodies) also relies on the host immune system, this classification does not properly reflect the complexity of the drug-host-tumor interaction. Alternatively, anticancer immunotherapeutics can be classified according to their antigen specificity. While some immunotherapies specifically target one (or a few) defined tumor-associated antigen(s), others operate in a relatively non-specific manner and boost natural or therapy-elicited anticancer immune responses of unknown and often broad specificity. Here, we propose a critical, integrated classification of anticancer immunotherapies and discuss the clinical relevance of these approaches.
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Protease-sensitive macromolecular prodrugs have attracted interest for bio-responsive drug delivery to sites with up-regulated proteolytic activities such as inflammatory or cancerous lesions. Here we report the development of a novel polymeric photosensitizer prodrug (T-PS) to target thrombin, a protease up-regulated in synovial tissues of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients, for minimally invasive photodynamic synovectomy. In T-PS, multiple photosensitizer units are tethered to a polymeric backbone via short, thrombin-cleavable peptide linkers. Photoactivity of the prodrug is efficiently impaired due to energy transfer between neighbouring photosensitizer units. T-PS activation by exogenous and endogenous thrombin induced an increase in fluorescence emission by a factor of 16 after in vitro digestion and a selective fluorescence enhancement in arthritic lesions in vivo, in a collagen-induced arthritis mouse model. In vitro studies on primary human synoviocytes showed a phototoxic effect only after enzymatic digestion of the prodrug and light irradiation, thus demonstrating the functionality of T-PS induced PDT. The developed photosensitizer prodrugs combine the passive targeting capacity of macromolecular drug delivery systems with site-selective photosensitizer release and activation. They illuminate lesions with pathologically enhanced proteolytic activity and induce cell death, subsequent to irradiation.
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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 fourth "Melanoma Bridge Meeting" took place in Naples, December 3-6th, 2014. The four topics discussed at this meeting were: Molecular and Immunological Advances, Combination Therapies, News in Immunotherapy, and Tumor Microenvironment and Biomarkers. Until recently systemic therapy for metastatic melanoma patients was ineffective, but recent advances in tumor biology and immunology have led to the development of new targeted and immunotherapeutic agents that prolong progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS). New therapies, such as mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway inhibitors as well as other signaling pathway inhibitors, are being tested in patients with metastatic melanoma either as monotherapy or in combination, and all have yielded promising results. These include inhibitors of receptor tyrosine kinases (BRAF, MEK, and VEGFR), the phosphatidylinositol 3 kinase (PI3K) pathway [PI3K, AKT, mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR)], activators of apoptotic pathway, and the cell cycle inhibitors (CDK4/6). Various locoregional interventions including radiotherapy and surgery are still valid approaches in treatment of advanced melanoma that can be integrated with novel therapies. Intrinsic, adaptive and acquired resistance occur with targeted therapy such as BRAF inhibitors, where most responses are short-lived. Given that the reactivation of the MAPK pathway through several distinct mechanisms is responsible for the majority of acquired resistance, it is logical to combine BRAF inhibitors with inhibitors of targets downstream in the MAPK pathway. For example, combination of BRAF/MEK inhibitors (e.g., dabrafenib/trametinib) have been demonstrated to improve survival compared to monotherapy. Application of novel technologies such sequencing have proven useful as a tool for identification of MAPK pathway-alternative resistance mechanism and designing other combinatorial therapies such as those between BRAF and AKT inhibitors. Improved survival rates have also been observed with immune-targeted therapy for patients with metastatic melanoma. Immune-modulating antibodies came to the forefront with anti-CTLA-4, programmed cell death-1 (PD-1) and PD-1 ligand 1 (PD-L1) pathway blocking antibodies that result in durable responses in a subset of melanoma patients. Agents targeting other immune inhibitory (e.g., Tim-3) or immune stimulating (e.g., CD137) receptors and other approaches such as adoptive cell transfer demonstrate clinical benefit in patients with melanoma as well. These agents are being studied in combination with targeted therapies in attempt to produce longer-term responses than those more typically seen with targeted therapy. Other combinations with cytotoxic chemotherapy and inhibitors of angiogenesis are changing the evolving landscape of therapeutic options and are being evaluated to prevent or delay resistance and to further improve survival rates for this patient population. This meeting's specific focus was on advances in combination of targeted therapy and immunotherapy. Both combination targeted therapy approaches and different immunotherapies were discussed. Similarly to the previous meetings, the importance of biomarkers for clinical application as markers for diagnosis, prognosis and prediction of treatment response was an integral part of the meeting. The overall emphasis on biomarkers supports novel concepts toward integrating biomarkers into contemporary clinical management of patients with melanoma across the entire spectrum of disease stage. Translation of the knowledge gained from the biology of tumor microenvironment across different tumors represents a bridge to impact on prognosis and response to therapy in melanoma.
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Drug transporting membrane proteins are expressed in various human tissues and blood-tissue barriers, regulating the transfer of drugs, toxins and endogenous compounds into or out of the cells. Various in vitro and animal experiments suggest that P-glycoprotein (P-gp) forms a functional barrier between maternal and fetal blood circulation in the placenta thereby protecting the fetus from exposure to xenobiotics during pregnancy. The multidrug resistance-associated protein 1 (MRP1) is a relatively less studied transporter protein in the human placenta. The aim of this study series was to study the role of placental transporters, apical P-gp and basal MRP1, using saquinavir as a probe drug, and to study transfer of quetiapine and the role of P-gp in its transfer in the dually perfused human placenta/cotyledon. Furthermore, two ABCB1 (encoding P-gp) polymorphisms (c.3435C>T, p.Ile1145Ile and c.2677G>T/A, p.Ala893Ser/Thr) were studied to determine their impact on P-gp protein expression level and on the transfer of the study drugs. Also, the influence of the P-gp protein expression level on the transfer of the study drugs was addressed. Because P-gp and MRP1 are ATP-dependent drug-efflux pumps, it was studied whether exogenous ATP is needed for the function of ATP-dependent transporter in the present experimental model. The present results indicated that the addition of exogenous ATP was not necessary for transporter function in the perfused human placental cotyledon. Saquinavir and quetiapine were both found to cross the human placenta; transplacental transfer (TPTAUC %) for saquinavir was <0.5% and for quetiapine 3.7%. Pharmacologic blocking of P-gp led to disruption of the blood-placental barrier (BPB) and increased the placental transfer of P-gp substrate, saquinavir, into the fetal circulation by 6- to 8-fold. In reversed perfusions P-gp, MRP1 and possibly OATP2B1 had a negligible role in the fetal-to-maternal transfer of saquinavir. The TPTAUC % of saquinavir was about 100-fold greater from the fetal side to the maternal side compared with the maternal-to-fetal transfer. P-gp activity is not likely to modify the placental transfer of quetiapine. Higher P-gp protein expression levels were associated with the variant allele 3435T, but no correlation was found between the TPTAUC % of saquinavir and placental P-gp protein expression. The present results indicate that P-gp activity drastically affects the fetal exposure to saquinavir, and suggest that pharmacological blockade of the P-gp activity during pregnancy may pose an increased risk for adverse fetal outcome. The blockade of P-gp activity could be used in purpose to obtain higher drug concentration to the fetal side, for example, in prevention (to decrease virus transfer to fetal side) or in treating sick fetus.
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The transposition of the São Francisco River is considered one of the greatest engineering works in Brazil of all time since it will cross an extensive agricultural region of continental dimensions, involving environmental impacts, water, soil, irrigation, water payment and other multidisciplinary themes. Taking into account its importance, this subject was incorporated into a discipline of UFSCar (Federal University of São Carlos - Brazil) named "Pollution and Environmental Impacts". It was noted strong reaction against the project, even before the presentation. To allow a critical analysis, the first objective was to compile the main technical data and environmental impacts. The second objective was to detect the three most important aspects that cause reaction, concluding for the following reasons: assumption that the volume of water to be transferred was much greater than it actually is proposed in the project; lack of knowledge about similar project already done in Brazil; the idea that the artificial canal to be built was much broader than that proposed by the project. The participants' opinion about "volume to be transferred" was raised quantitatively four times: 2-undergraduate students; 1-graduate; 1-outside community. The average resulted 14 times larger than that proposed in the project, significant according to t-test. It was concluded that the reaction to water transfer project is due in part to the ignorance combined with a preconceived idea that tend to overestimate the magnitude of environmental impacts.
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As a T cell-dependent phenomenon, oral tolerance is not expected to depend necessarily on native configuration of antigens. We investigated the induction of oral tolerance with modified ovalbumin (Ova). Oral administration of heat-denatured (HD-Ova) and cyanogen bromide-degraded ovalbumin was less effective than native Ova in inducing oral tolerance in B6D2F1 mice. HD-Ova was effective in suppressing delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) reactions but did not suppress specific antibody formation. Injection of Ova directly into the stomach, but not into the ileum or cecum, suppressed subsequent immunization to DTH reactions. Gavage with protease inhibitors (aprotinin or ovomucoid) before gavage with Ova was ineffective in blocking tolerance induction. Treatment with hydroxyurea to destroy cycling cells 24 h before gavage with Ova blocked oral tolerance induction and also the possibility to passively transfer tolerance to naive recipients with the serum of mice gavaged with Ova 1 h before. The implications of these findings about oral tolerance induction are discussed
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Gene therapy is an active field that has progressed rapidly into clinical trials in a relatively short time. The key to success for any gene therapy strategy is to design a vector able to serve as a safe and efficient gene delivery vehicle. This has encouraged the development of nonviral DNA-mediated gene transfer techniques such as liposomes. Many liposome-based DNA delivery systems have been described, including molecular components for targeting given cell surface receptors or for escaping from the lysosomal compartment. Another recent technology using cationic lipids has been evaluated and has generated substantial interest in this approach to gene transfer.
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La réparation endovasculaire (EVAR) est une technique minimalement invasive permettant de traiter l’anévrisme de l’aorte abdominale (AAA) par l’entremise d’un stent- graft (SG). L’utilisation d’EVAR est actuellement limitée par de fréquentes complications liées à une guérison inadéquate autour de l’implant. Ce manque de guérison est principalement dû au type de recouvrement polymérique des SG, au milieu pro-apoptotique des AAA et à l’accès réduit aux nutriments et à l’oxygène après EVAR. L’objectif de cette thèse consistait à concevoir un revêtement bioactif permettant d’inhiber l’apoptose et stimuler la croissance des cellules musculaires lisses vasculaires (CMLV), pour ainsi favoriser la guérison des tissus vasculaires autour des SG. La chondroïtine-4-sulfate (CS) a d’abord été choisie, car elle a été identifiée comme un médiateur important de la réparation vasculaire. Il a été démontré que la CS en solution influence directement la résistance à l’apoptose des CMLV, en plus de favoriser la différenciation myofibroblastique chez les fibroblastes. Dans le cadre de ce projet, un premier revêtement à base de CS et de collagène a été créé. Bien que le revêtement permettait d’induire une résistance à l’apoptose chez les CMLV, il se désintégrait trop rapidement dans des conditions aqueuses. Une nouvelle méthodologie a donc été adaptée afin de greffer la CS directement sur des surfaces aminées, à l’aide d’un système utilisant un carbodiimide. Dans le but d’accroître la croissance des CMLV à la surface des revêtements, le facteur de croissance de l’épiderme (EGF) a ensuite été sélectionné. En plus de ses propriétés mitogéniques et chimiotactiques, l’EGF stimule la production d’éléments de la matrice extracellulaire, comme le collagène et la fibronectine. De plus, l’activation du récepteur de l’EGF inhibe également l’apoptose des CMLV. L’EGF a donc été greffé sur la CS. Le revêtement de CS+EGF a démontré une bonne uniformité et bioactivité sur des surfaces de verre aminé. iii iv Dans une 3ème étape, afin de permettre de transposer ce revêtement bioactif sur des implants, plusieurs méthodes permettant de créer des groupements d’amines primaires sur les biomatériaux polymériques comme le PET ou le ePTFE ont été étudiées. La polymérisation par plasma a été choisie pour créer le revêtement CS+EGF à la surface de PET. Une fois de plus, celui-ci a permis d’inhiber l’apoptose des CMLV, dans des conditions pro-apoptotiques, et de favoriser la croissance des cellules. Le revêtement de CS et d’EGF, déposé sur des surfaces aminées, possède des caractéristiques biologiques intéressantes et semble donc prometteur pour favoriser une meilleure guérison autour des SG.
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La transmission mère-enfant du VIH-1 (TME) représente le principal mode d’infection chez l’enfant et se produit durant la grossesse (in utero, IU), l’accouchement (intrapartum, IP) ou l’allaitement (postpartum, PP). Les mécanismes qui sous-tendent le passage du VIH-1 à travers le placenta et les muqueuses intestinales du nouveau-né sont encore très peu décrits. « Dendritic cell-specific ICAM-grabbing non-integrin » (DC-SIGN) et son homologue DC-SIGN « related » (DC-SIGNR) sont des récepteurs d’antigènes exprimés au niveau du placenta et capables de capter et de transmettre le VIH-1 aux cellules adjacentes. Ils pourraient donc participer au passage trans placentaire du VIH-1 et le polymorphisme génétique affectant l’expression ou modifiant l’interaction avec le virus aurait une influence sur la TME du VIH-1. Afin d’explorer cette hypothèse, nous avons procédé à une analyse exhaustive du polymorphisme de DC-SIGN et DC-SIGNR dans la population du Zimbabwe. Par la suite, nous avons déterminé l’association entre le polymorphisme de DC-SIGN et DC-SIGNR et la TME du VIH-1 dans une cohorte d’enfants nés de mères VIH-positives à Harare, au Zimbabwe. Enfin, nous avons défini l’impact fonctionnel des mutations associées. Les enfants homozygotes pour les haplotypes H1 et H3 dans le gène de DC-SIGNR sont 4 à 6 fois plus à risque de contracter le VIH-1 par voie IU et IP. H1 et H3 contiennent la mutation du promoteur p-198A et la mutation de l’intron 2, int2-180A, et des études fonctionnelles nous ont permis de démontrer que p-198A diminue l’activité transcriptionnelle du promoteur de DC-SIGNR et l’expression des transcrits d’ARNm dans le placenta, alors que int2-180A modifie le répertoire d’isoformes de DC-SIGNR vers une proportion diminuée d’isoformes membranaires. Les enfants porteurs des haplotypes H4 et H6 de DC-SIGN sont 2 à 6 fois plus à risque de contracter le VIH-1 par voie IU. Ces haplotypes contiennent deux mutations du promoteur (p-336T/C et p-201C/A) et quatre mutations codant pour un changement d’acide aminé dans l’exon 4 (R198Q, E214D, R221Q ou L242V) associées à un risque augmenté de transmission IU, IP et PP du VIH-1. Des études fonctionnelles ont démontré que les mutations du promoteur diminuent l’expression de DC-SIGN dans les macrophages placentaires. Toutefois, l’exposition IU au VIH-1 module le niveau d’expression de DC-SIGN, résultant en des niveaux d’expression similaires entre les macrophages des porteurs des allèles sauvages et mutés. Les mutations de l’exon 4 augmentent l’affinité de DC-SIGN pour le VIH-1 et sa capacité à capturer et à transmettre le virus aux lymphocytes T, favorisant possiblement la dissémination du VIH-1 à travers le placenta. L’association entre les mutations de DC-SIGN et la transmission IP et PP du VIH-1 suggèrent qu’il aurait aussi un rôle à jouer dans les muqueuses intestinales de l’enfant. Notre étude démontre pour la première fois l’implication de DC-SIGN et DC-SIGNR dans la TME du VIH-1. L’augmentation des capacités de capture et de transmission de DC-SIGN résulte en une susceptibilité accrue de l’enfant à l’infection au VIH-1 et concorde avec un rôle dans la dissémination transplacentaire. Toutefois, la diminution préférentielle des transcrits membranaires de DC-SIGNR au placenta augmente la TME du VIH-1 et laisse croire à son implication via un autre mécanisme. Ces mécanismes pourraient aussi s’appliquer à d’autres pathogènes reconnus par DC-SIGN et DC-SIGNR et transmis de la mère à l’enfant.
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Spleen or spleen plus bone marrow cells from (BALB/c x C57Bl/6)F1 donors were transferred into BALB/c recipients 21 days before skin or cardiac transplantation. Prolonged graft survival was observed on recipients treated with the mixture of donor-derived cells as compared to those treated with spleen cells alone. We evaluated the expression of CD45RB and CD44 by splenic CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells 7 and 21 days after donor cell transfer. The populations of CD8(+)CD45RB(low) and CD8(+)CD44(high) cells were significantly decreased in mice pre-treated with donor spleen and bone marrow cells as compared to animals treated with spleen cells only, although these cells expanded in both groups when compared to an earlier time-point. No differences were observed regarding CD4+ T cell population when recipients of donor-derived cells were compared. An enhanced production of IL-10 was observed seven days after transplantation in the supernatants of spleen cell cultures of mice treated with spleen and bone marrow cells. Taken together these data suggest that donor-derived bone marrow cells modulate the sensitization of the recipient by semi-allogeneic spleen cells in part by delaying the generation of activated/memory CD8(+) T cells leading to enhanced graft survival. (c) 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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Subcutaneous heat-coagulated egg white implants (EWI) induce chronic, intense local eosinophilia in mice, followed by asthma-like responses to airway ovalbumin challenge. Our goal was to define the mechanisms of selective eosinophil accumulation in the EWI model. EWI carriers were challenged i.p. with ovalbumin and the contributions of cellular immunity and inflammatory mediators to the resulting leukocyte accumulation were defined through cell transfer and pharmacological inhibition protocols. Eosinophil recruitment required Major Histocompatibility Complex Class It expression, and was abolished by the leukotriene B4 (LTB4) receptor antagonist CP 105.696, the 5-lipoxygenase inhibitor BWA4C and the 5-lipoxygenase activating protein inhibitor MK886. Eosinophil recruitment in EWI carriers followed transfer of: a) CD4(+) (but not CD4(-)) cells, harvested from EWI donors and restimulated ex vivo; b) their cell-free supernatants, containing LTB4. Restimulation in the presence of MK886 was ineffective. CC chemokine receptor ligand (CCL)5 and CCL2 were induced by ovalbumin challenge in vivo. mRNA for CCL17 and CCL11 was induced in ovalbumin-restimulated CD4(+) cells ex vivo. MK886 blocked induction of CCL17 Pretreatment of EWI carriers with MK886 eliminated the effectiveness of exogenously administered CCL11, CCL2 and CCL5. In conclusion, chemokine-producing, ovalburnin-restimulated CD4(+) cells initiate eosinophil recruitment which is strictly dependent on LTB4 production. (C) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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Low-energy muon-transfer cross sections and rates in collisions of muonic atoms with hydrogen isotopes are calculated using a six-state close-coupling approximation to coordinate-space Faddeev-Hahn-type equations. In the muonic case satisfactory results are obtained for all hydrogen isotopes and the experimentaly observed strong isotopic dependence of transfer rates is also reproduced. A comparison with results of other theoretical and available experimental works is presented. The present model also leads to good transfer cross sections in the well-understood problem of antihydrogen formation in antiproton-positronium collision.