984 resultados para Humoral rejection


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Over the past decade, various implantable devices have been developed to treat diseases that were previously difficult to manage such diabetes, chronic pain, and neurodegenerative disorders. However, translation of these novel technologies into clinical practice is often difficult because fibrotic encapsulation and/or rejection impairs device function after body implantation. Ideally, cells of the host tissue should perceive the surface of the implant being similar to the normal extracellular matrix. Here, we developed an innovative approach to provide implant surfaces with adhesive protein micropatterns. The patterns were designed to promote adhesion of fibroblasts and macrophages by simultaneously suppressing fibrogenic activation of both cell types. In a rat model, subcutaneously implanted silicone pads provided with the novel micropatterns caused 6-fold lower formation of inflammatory giant cells compared with clinical grade, uncoated, or collagen-coated silicone implants. We further show that micropatterning of implants resulted in 2-3-fold reduced numbers of pro-fibrotic myofibroblast by inhibiting their mechanical activation. Our novel approach allows controlled cell attachment to implant surfaces, representing a critical advance for enhanced biointegration of implantable medical devices.

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Genetic color polymorphism is widespread in nature. There is an increasing interest in understanding the adaptive value of heritable color variation and trade-off resolution by differently colored individuals. Melanin-based pigmentation is often associated with variation in many different life history traits. These associations have recently been suggested to be the outcome of pleiotropic effects of the melanocortin system. Although pharmacological research supports that MC1R, a gene with a major role in vertebrate pigmentation, has important immunomodulatory effects, evidence regarding pleiotropy at MC1R in natural populations is still under debate. We experimentally assessed whether MC1R-based pigmentation covaries with both inflammatory and humoral immune responses in the color polymorphic Eleonora's falcon. By means of a cross-fostering experiment, we disentangled potential genetic effects from environmental effects on the covariation between coloration and immunity. Variation in both immune responses was primarily due to genetic factors via the nestlings' MC1R-related color genotype/phenotype, although environmental effects via the color morph of the foster father also had an influence. Overall, dark nestlings had lower immune responses than pale ones. The effect of the color morph of the foster father was also high, but in the opposite direction, and nestlings raised by dark eumelanic foster fathers had higher immune responses than those raised by pale foster fathers. Although we cannot completely discard alternative explanations, our results suggest that MC1R might influence immunity in this species. Morph-specific variation in immunity as well as pathogen pressure may therefore contribute to the long-term maintenance of genetic color polymorphism in natural populations.

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Staphylococcus aureus is a major cause of serious infections in humans and animals and a vaccine is becoming a necessity. Lactococcus lactis is a non-pathogenic bacterium that can be used as a vector for the delivery of antigens. We investigated the ability of non-living L. lactis heterologously expressing S. aureus clumping factor A (ClfA) and fibronectin-binding protein A (FnbpA), alone or together, to elicit an immune response in rats and protect them from S. aureus experimental infective endocarditis (IE). L. lactis ClfA was used for immunization against S. aureus Newman (expressing ClfA but not FnbpA), while L. lactis ClfA, L. lactis FnbpA, as well as L. lactis ClfA/FnbpA, were used against S. aureus P8 (expressing ClfA and FnbpA). Vaccination of rats with L. lactis ClfA elicited antibodies that inhibited binding of S. aureus Newman to fibrinogen, triggered the production of IL-17A and conferred protection to 13/19 (68%) of the animals from IE (P<0.05). Immunization with L. lactis ClfA, L. lactis FnbpA or L. lactis ClfA/FnbpA also produced antibodies against the target proteins, but these did not prevent binding of S. aureus P8 to fibrinogen or fibronectin and did not protect animals against S. aureus P8 IE. Moreover, immunization with constructs containing FnbpA did not increase IL-17A production. These results indicate that L. lactis is a valuable antigen delivery system able to elicit efficient humoral and cellular responses. However, the most appropriate antigens affording protection against S. aureus IE are yet to be elucidated.

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Avec plus de 100000 transplantations d'organes solides (TOS) par année dans le monde, la transplantation d'organes reste actuellement l'un des meilleurs traitements disponibles pour de nombreuses maladies en phase terminale. Bien que les médicaments immunosuppresseurs couramment utilisés soient efficaces dans le contrôle de la réponse immune engendrant le rejet aigu d'une greffe, la survie du greffon à long terme ainsi que la présence d'effets secondaires indésirables restent un enjeu considérable en clinique. C'est pourquoi il est nécessaire de trouver de nouvelles approches thérapeutiques innovantes permettant de contrôler la réponse immunitaire et ainsi d'améliorer les résultats à long terme. L'utilisation des lymphocytes T régulateurs (Treg), suppresseurs naturels de la réponse inflammatoire, a fait l'objet de nombreuses études ces dix dernières années, et pourrait être considérée comme un moyen intéressant d'améliorer la tolérance immunologique de la greffe. Cependant, l'un des obstacles de l'utilisation des Treg comme agent thérapeutique est leur nombre insuffisant non seulement en conditions normales, mais en particulier lors d'une forte réponse immune avec expansion de cellules immunitaires alloréactives. En raison des limitations techniques connues pour l'induction des Treg ex-vivo ou in vitro, nous avons dédié la première partie du travail de thèse à la détermination de l'efficacité de l'induction des Treg in vivo grâce à l'utilisation d'un complexe protéique IL-2/JES6-1 (IL2c). Nous avons montré que l'expansion des Treg par IL2c permettait d'augmenter la survie du greffon sur un modèle murin de transplantation de peau avec mismatch entre le donneur et le receveur pour le complexe majeur d'histocompatibilité (CMH). De plus, nous avons vu qu'en combinant IL2c à une inhibition à court terme de la voie de co-stimulation CD40L-CD40 (anti-CD154/MRl, administré au moment de la transplantation) pour empêcher l'activation des lymphocytes T, il est possible d'induire une tolérance robuste à long terme. Finalement, nos résultats soulignent l'importance de cibler une voie de co-stimulation bien particulière. En effet, l'utilisation d'IL2c combinée au blocage de la co-stimulation CD28-B7.1/2 (CTLA-4 Ig) n'induit qu'une faible prolongation de la survie de la greffe et n'induit pas de tolérance. L'application chez l'humain des traitements induisant la tolérance dans des modèles expérimentaux murins ou de primates n'a malheureusement pas montré de résultats probants en recherche clinique ; une des principales raisons étant la présence de lymphocytes B et T mémoires provenant du systeme d immunité acquise. C est pourquoi nous avons testé si la combinaison d'IL2c et MR1 améliorait la survie de la greffe dans des souris pré¬sensibilisées. Nous avons trouvé qu'en présence de lymphocytes B et T mémoires alloréactifs, l'utilisation d'IL2c et MR1 permettait une amélioration de la survie de la greffe de peau des souris immunocompétentes mais comparé aux souris receveuses naïves, aucune tolérance n'a pu être induite. Toutefois, l'ajout d'un traitement anti-LFA-1 (permettant de bloquer la circulation des lymphocytes T activées) a permis d'améliorer de manière significative la survie de la greffe. Cependant, le rejet chronique, dû à la présence de lymphocytes B activés/mémoires et la production d'anticorps donneur-spécifiques, n'a pas pu être évité. Cibler l'activation des lymphocytes T est la stratégie immunothérapeutique prépondérente après une TOS. C'est pourquoi dans la deuxième partie de cette thèse nous nous sommes intéressés au système de signalisation d'un récepteur des lymphocytes T qui dépend de la paracaspase Malti en tant que nouvelle stratégie immunosuppressive pour le contrôle des lymphocytes T alloréactifs. Nous avons montré que bien que l'inhibition de la signalisation du lymphocyte T en aval de Malti induise une tolérance envers un greffon de peau avec incompatibilités antigéniques mineures, cela ne permet cependant qu'une régulation partielle de l'alloréponse contre des antigènes du CMH. Nous nous sommes aussi intéressés spécifiquement à l'activité protéolytique de Malti. L'inhibition constitutive de l'activité protéolytique de Malti chez les souris Malti-ki s'est révélée délétère pour l'induction de la tolérance car elle diminue la fonction des Treg et augmente l'alloréactivité des cellules Thl. Cependant, lors de l'utilisation d'un inhibiteur peptidique de l'activité protéase de Malti in vitro, il a été possible d'observer une atténuation de l'alloéactivité des lymphocytes T ainsi qu'un maintien de la population des Treg existants. Ces résultats nous laissent penser que des études plus poussées sur le rôle de la signalisation médiée par Malti seraient à envisager dans le domaine de la transplantation. En résumé, les résultats obtenus durant cette thèse nous ont permis d'élucider certains mécanismes immunologiques propres à de nouvelles stratégies thérapeutiques potentielles dont le but est d'induire une tolérance lors de TOS. De plus, ces résultats nous ont permis de souligner l'importance d'utiliser des modèles davantage physiologiques contenant, notamment en tenant compte des lymphocytes B et T mémoires alloréactifs. -- Organ transplantation remains the best available treatment for many forms of end-stage organ diseases, with over 100,000 solid organ transplantations (SOT) occurring worldwide eveiy year. Although the available immunosuppressive (IS) drugs are efficient in controlling acute immune activation and graft rejection, the off-target side effects as well as long-term graft and patient survival remain a challenge in the clinic. Hence, innovative therapeutic approaches are needed to improve long-term outcome across immunological barriers. Based on extensive experimental data obtained over the last decade, it is tempting to consider immunotherapy using Treg; the natural suppressors of overt inflammatory responses, in promoting transplantation tolerance. The first hurdle for the therapeutic use of Treg is their insufficient numbers in non- manipulated individuals, in particular when facing strong immune activation and expanding alloreactive effector cells. Because of the limitations associated with current protocols aiming at ex-vivo expansion or in vitro induction of Treg, the aim of the first part of this thesis was to determine the efficacy of direct in vivo expansion of Treg using the IL-2/JES6- 1 immune complex (IL2c). We found that whilst IL2c mediated Treg expansion alone allowed the prolonged graft survival of fìlli MHC-mismatched skin grafts, its combination with short-term CD40L-CD40 co-stimulation blockade (anti-CD 154/MR1) to inhibit T cell activation administered at the time of transplantation was able to achieve long-term robust tolerance. This study also highlighted the importance of combining Treg based therapies with the appropriate co-stimulation blockade as a combination of IL2c and CD28-B7.1/2 co- stimulation blockade (CTLA-4 Ig) only resulted in slight prolongation of graft survival but not tolerance. The translation of tolerance induction therapies modelled in rodents into non-human primates or into clinical trials has seldom been successful. One main reason being the presence of pre-existing memory T- and B-cells due to acquired immunity in humans versus laboratory animals. Hence, we tested whether IL2c+MRl could promote graft survival in pre-sensitized mice. We found that in the presence of alloreactive memory T- and B-cells, IL2c+MRl combination therapy could prolong MHC-mismatched skin graft survival in immunocompetent mice but tolerance was lost compared to the naïve recipients. The addition of anti-LF A-1 treatment, which prevents the trafficking of memory T cells worked synergistically to significantly further enhance graft survival. However, late rejection mediated by activated/memory B cells and persistent donor-specific alloantibodies still occurred. Immunotherapeutic strategies targeting the activation of T cells are the cornerstone in the current immunosuppressive management after SOT. Therefore, in the next part of this thesis we investigated the paracaspase Malti-dependent T-cell receptor signalling as a novel immunosuppressive strategy to control alloreactive T cells in transplantation. We observed that although the inhibition of Malti downstream T signalling lead to tolerance of a minor H- mismatch skin grafts, it was however not sufficient to regulate alloresponses against MHC mismatches and only prolonged graft survival. Furthermore, we investigated the potential of more selectively targeting the protease activity of Malti. Constitutive inhibition of Malti protease activity in Malti-ki mice was detrimental to tolerance induction as it diminished Treg function and increased Thl alloreactivity. However, when using a small peptide inhibitor of Malti proteolytic activity in vitro, we observed an attenuation of alloreactive T cells and sparing of the pre-existing Treg pool. This indicates that further investigation of the role of Malti signalling in the field of transplantation is required. Collectively, the findings of this thesis provide immunological mechanisms underlying novel therapeutic strategies for the promotion of tolerance in SOT. Moreover, we highlight the importance of testing tolerance induction therapies in more physiological models with pre-existing alloreactive memory T and B cells.

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Background The MPER region of the HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein gp41 is targeted by broadly neutralizing antibodies. However, the localization of this epitope in a hydrophobic environment seems to hamper the elicitation of these antibodies in HIV infected individuals. We have quantified and characterized anti-MPER antibodies by ELISA and by flow cytometry using a collection of mini gp41-derived proteins expressed on the surface of 293T cells. Longitudinal plasma samples from 35 HIV-1 infected individuals were assayed for MPER recognition and MPER-dependent neutralizing capacity using HIV-2 viruses engrafted with HIV-1 MPER sequences. Results Miniproteins devoid of the cysteine loop of gp41 exposed the MPER on 293T cell membrane. Anti-MPER antibodies were identified in most individuals and were stable when analyzed in longitudinal samples. The magnitude of the responses was strongly correlated with the global response to the HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein, suggesting no specific limitation for anti-MPER antibodies. Peptide mapping showed poor recognition of the C-terminal MPER moiety and a wide presence of antibodies against the 2F5 epitope. However, antibody titers failed to correlate with 2F5-blocking activity and, more importantly, with the specific neutralization of HIV-2 chimeric viruses bearing the HIV-1 MPER sequence; suggesting a strong functional heterogeneity in anti-MPER humoral responses. Conclusions Anti-MPER antibodies can be detected in the vast majority of HIV-1 infected individuals and are generated in the context of the global anti-Env response. However, the neutralizing capacity is heterogeneous suggesting that eliciting neutralizing anti-MPER antibodies by immunization might require refinement of immunogens to skip nonneutralizing responses.

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The series of events leading to tertiary lymphoid organ (TLO) formation in mucosal organs following tissue damage remain unclear. Using a virus-induced model of autoantibody formation in the salivary glands of adult mice, we demonstrate that IL-22 provides a mechanistic link between mucosal infection, B-cell recruitment, and humoral autoimmunity. IL-22 receptor engagement is necessary and sufficient to promote differential expression of chemokine (C-X-C motif) ligand 12 and chemokine (C-X-C motif) ligand 13 in epithelial and fibroblastic stromal cells that, in turn, is pivotal for B-cell recruitment and organization of the TLOs. Accordingly, genetic and therapeutic blockade of IL-22 impairs and reverses TLO formation and autoantibody production. Our work highlights a critical role for IL-22 in TLO-induced pathology and provides a rationale for the use of IL-22-blocking agents in B-cell-mediated autoimmune conditions.

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The term proteome is used to define the complete set of proteins expressed in cells or tissues of an organism at a certain timepoint. Respectively, proteomics is used to describe the methods, which are used to study such proteomes. These methods include chromatographic and electrophoretic techniques for protein or peptide fractionation, mass spectrometry for their identification, and use of computational methods to assist the complicated data analysis. A primary aim in this Ph.D. thesis was to set-up, optimize, and develop proteomics methods for analysing proteins extracted from T-helper (Th) lymphocytes. First, high-throughput LC-MS/MS and ICAT labeling methods were set-up and optimized for analysing the microsomal fraction proteins extracted from Th lymphocytes. Later, iTRAQ method was optimized to study cytokine regulated protein expression in the nuclei of Th lymphocytes. High-throughput LC-MS/MS analyses, like ICAT and iTRAQ, produce large quantities of data and robust software and data analysis pipelines are needed. Therefore, different software programs used for analysing such data were evaluated. Moreover, a pre-filtering algorithm was developed to classify good-quality and bad-quality spectra prior to the database searches. Th-lymphocytes can differentiate into Th1 or Th2 cells based on surrounding antigens, co-stimulatory molecules, and cytokines. Both subsets have individual cytokine secretion profiles and specific functions. Th1 cells participate in the cellular immunity against intracellular pathogens, while Th2 cells have important role in the humoral immunity against extracellular parasites. An abnormal response of Th1 and Th2 cells and imbalance between the subsets are charasteristic of several diseases. Th1 specific reactions and cytokines have been detected in autoimmune diseases, while Th2 specific response and cytokine profile is common in allergy and asthma. In this Ph. D. thesis mass spectrometry-based proteomics was used to study the effects of Th1 and Th2 promoting cytokines IL-12 and IL-4 on the proteome of Th lymphocytes. Characterization of microsomal fraction proteome extracted from IL-12 treated lymphobasts and IL-4 stimulated cord blood CD4+ cells resulted in finding of cytokine regulated proteins. Galectin-1 and CD7 were down-regulated in IL-12 treated cells, while IL-4 stimulation decreased the expression of STAT1, MXA, GIMAP1, and GIMAP4. Interestingly, the transcription of both GIMAP genes was up-regulated in Th1 polarized cells and down-regulated in Th2 promoting conditions.

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Oral mucosa is a frequent site of primary herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) infection, whereas intraoral recurrent disease is very rare. Instead, reactivation from latency predominantly results in asymptomatic HSV shedding to saliva or recurrent labial herpes (RLH) with highly individual frequency. The current study aimed to elucidate the role of human oral innate and acquired immune mechanisms in modulation of HSV infection in orolabial region. Saliva was found to neutralize HSV-1, and to protect cells from infection independently of salivary antibodies. Neutralization capacity was higher in saliva from asymptomatic HSV-seropositive individuals compared to subjects with history of RLH or seronegative controls. Neutralization was at least partially associated with salivary lactoferrin content. Further, lactoferrin and peroxidase-generated hypothiocyanite were found to either neutralize HSV-1 or interfere with HSV-1 replication, whereas lysozyme displayed no anti-HSV-1 activity. Lactoferrin was also shown to modulate HSV-1 infection by inhibiting keratinocyte proliferation. RLH susceptibility was further found to be associated with Th2 biased cytokine responses against HSV, and a higher level of anti- HSV-IgG with Th2 polarization, indicating lack of efficiency of humoral response in the control of HSV disease. In a three-dimensional cell culture, keratinocytes were found to support both lytic and nonproductive infection, suggesting HSV persistence in epithelial cells, and further emphasizing the importance of peripheral immune control of HSV. These results suggest that certain innate salivary antimicrobial compounds and Th1 type cellular responses are critically important in protecting the host against HSV disease, implying possible applications in drug, vaccine and gene therapy design.

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UNLABELLED: We compared the HIV-1-specific cellular and humoral immune responses elicited in rhesus macaques immunized with two poxvirus vectors (NYVAC and ALVAC) expressing the same HIV-1 antigens from clade C, Env gp140 as a trimeric cell-released protein and a Gag-Pol-Nef polyprotein as Gag-induced virus-like particles (VLPs) (referred to as NYVAC-C and ALVAC-C). The immunization protocol consisted of two doses of the corresponding poxvirus vector plus two doses of a combination of the poxvirus vector and a purified HIV-1 gp120 protein from clade C. This immunogenicity profile was also compared to that elicited by vaccine regimens consisting of two doses of the ALVAC vector expressing HIV-1 antigens from clades B/E (ALVAC-vCP1521) plus two doses of a combination of ALVAC-vCP1521 and HIV-1 gp120 protein from clades B/E (similar to the RV144 trial regimen) or clade C. The results showed that immunization of macaques with NYVAC-C stimulated at different times more potent HIV-1-specific CD4(+) T-cell responses and induced a trend toward higher-magnitude HIV-1-specific CD8(+) T-cell immune responses than did ALVAC-C. Furthermore, NYVAC-C induced a trend toward higher levels of binding IgG antibodies against clade C HIV-1 gp140, gp120, or murine leukemia virus (MuLV) gp70-scaffolded V1/V2 and toward best cross-clade-binding IgG responses against HIV-1 gp140 from clades A, B, and group M consensus, than did ALVAC-C. Of the linear binding IgG responses, most were directed against the V3 loop in all immunization groups. Additionally, NYVAC-C and ALVAC-C also induced similar levels of HIV-1-neutralizing antibodies and antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) responses. Interestingly, binding IgA antibody levels against HIV-1 gp120 or MuLV gp70-scaffolded V1/V2 were absent or very low in all immunization groups. Overall, these results provide a comprehensive survey of the immunogenicity of NYVAC versus ALVAC expressing HIV-1 antigens in nonhuman primates and indicate that NYVAC may represent an alternative candidate to ALVAC in the development of a future HIV-1 vaccine. IMPORTANCE: The finding of a safe and effective HIV/AIDS vaccine immunogen is one of the main research priorities. Here, we generated two poxvirus-based HIV vaccine candidates (NYVAC and ALVAC vectors) expressing the same clade C HIV-1 antigens in separate vectors, and we analyzed in nonhuman primates their immunogenicity profiles. The results showed that immunization with NYVAC-C induced a trend toward higher HIV-1-specific cellular and humoral immune responses than did ALVAC-C, indicating that this new NYVAC vector could be a novel optimized HIV/AIDS vaccine candidate for human clinical trials.

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BACKGROUND: Successful lung transplantation for patients with pulmonary fibrosis from telomerase mutations may be limited by systemic complications of telomerase dysfunction, including myelosuppression, cirrhosis, and malignancy. We describe clinical outcomes in 14 lung transplant recipients with telomerase mutations. METHODS: Subjects underwent lung transplantation between February 2005 and April 2014 at 5 transplant centers. Data were abstracted from medical records, focusing on outcomes reflecting post-transplant treatment effects likely to be complicated by telomerase mutations. RESULTS: The median age of subjects was 60.5 years (interquartile range = 52.0-62.0), 64.3% were male, and the mean post-transplant observation time was 3.2 years (SD ± 2.9). A mutation in telomerase reverse transcriptase was present in 11 subjects, a telomerase RNA component mutation was present in 2 subjects, and an uncharacterized mutation was present in 1 subject. After lung transplantation, 10 subjects were leukopenic and 5 did not tolerate lymphocyte anti-proliferative agents. Six subjects developed recurrent lower respiratory tract infections, 7 developed acute cellular rejection (A1), and 4 developed chronic lung allograft dysfunction. Eight subjects developed at least 1 episode of acute renal failure and 10 developed chronic renal insufficiency. In addition, 3 subjects developed cancer. No subjects had cirrhosis. At data censorship, 13 subjects were alive. CONCLUSIONS: The clinical course for lung transplant recipients with telomerase mutations is complicated by renal disease, leukopenia with intolerance of lymphocyte anti-proliferative agents, and recurrent lower respiratory tract infections. In contrast, cirrhosis was absent, acute cellular rejection was mild, and development of chronic lung allograft dysfunction was comparable to other lung transplant recipients. Although it poses challenges, lung transplantation may be feasible for patients with pulmonary fibrosis from telomerase mutations.

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Mendelovici (forthcoming) has recently argued that (1) tracking theories of mental representation (including teleosemantics) are incompatible with the possibility of reliable misrepresentation and that (2) this is an important difficulty for them. Furthermore, she argues that this problem commits teleosemantics to an unjustified a priori rejection of color eliminativism. In this paper I argue that (1) teleosemantics can accommodate most cases of reliable misrepresentation, (2) those cases the theory fails to account for are not objectionable and (3) teleosemantics is not committed to any problematic view on the color realism-antirealism debate

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Bandura (1986) developed the concept of moral disengagement to explain how individuals can engage in detrimental behavior while experiencing low levels of negative feelings such as guilt-feelings. Most of the research conducted on moral disengagement investigated this concept as a global concept (e.g., Bandura, Barbaranelli, Caprara, & Pastorelli, 1996; Moore, Detert, Klebe Treviño, Baker, & Mayer, 2012) while Bandura (1986, 1990) initially developed eight distinct mechanisms of moral disengagement grouped into four categories representing the various means through which moral disengagement can operate. In our work, we propose to develop measures of this concept based on its categories, namely rightness of actions, rejection of personal responsibility, distortion of negative consequences, and negative perception of the victims, and which is not specific a particular area of research. Through our measures, we aim at better understanding the cognitive process leading individuals to behave unethically by investigating which category plays a role in explaining unethical behavior depending on the situations in which individuals are. To this purpose, we conducted five studies to develop the measures and to test its predictive validity. Particularly, we assessed the ability of the newly developed measures to predict two types of unethical behaviors, i.e. discriminatory behavior and cheating behavior. Confirmatory Factor analyses demonstrated a good fit of the model and findings generally supported our predictions.

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In recent years, an explosion of interest in neuroscience has led to the development of "Neuro-law," a new multidisciplinary field of knowledge whose aim is to examine the impact and role of neuroscientific findings in legal proceedings. Neuroscientific evidence is increasingly being used in US and European courts in criminal trials, as part of psychiatric testimony, nourishing the debate about the legal implications of brain research in psychiatric-legal settings. During these proceedings, the role of forensic psychiatrists is crucial. In most criminal justice systems, their mission consists in accomplishing two basic tasks: assessing the degree of responsibility of the offender and evaluating their future dangerousness. In the first part of our research, we aim to examine the impact of Neuroscientific evidence in the assessment of criminal responsibility, a key concept of law. An initial jurisprudential research leads to conclude that there are significant difficulties and limitations in using neuroscience for the assessment of criminal responsibility. In the current socio-legal context, responsibility assessments are progressively being weakened, whereas dangerousness assessments gain increasing importance in the field of forensic psychiatry. In the second part of our research we concentrate on the impact of using neuroscience for the assessment of dangerousness. We argue that in the current policy era of zero tolerance, judges, confronted with the pressure to ensure public security, may tend to interpret neuroscientific knowledge and data as an objective and reliable way of evaluating one's dangerousness and risk of reoffending, rather than their responsibility. This tendency could be encouraged by a utilitarian approach to punishment, advanced by some recent neuroscientific research which puts into question the existence of free will and responsibility and argues for a rejection of the retributive theory of punishment. Although this shift away from punishment aimed at retribution in favor of a consequentialist approach to criminal law is advanced by some authors as a more progressive and humane approach, we believe that it could lead to the instrumentalisation of neuroscience in the interest of public safety, which can run against the proper exercise of justice and civil liberties of the offenders. By advancing a criminal law regime animated by the consequentialist aim of avoiding social harms through rehabilitation, neuroscience promotes a return to a therapeutical approach to crime which can have serious impact on the kind and the length of sentences imposed on the offenders; if neuroscientific data are interpreted as evidence of dangerousness, rather than responsibility, it is highly likely that judges impose heavier sentences, or/and security measures (in civil law systems), which can be indeterminate in length. Errors and epistemic traps of past criminological movements trying to explain the manifestation of a violent and deviant behavior on a biological and deterministic basis stress the need for caution concerning the use of modern neuroscientific methods in criminal proceedings.

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Despite the overwhelming benefits of antiretroviral therapy (ART) in curtailing viral load in HIV-infected individuals, ART does not fully restore cellular and humoral immunity. HIV-infected individuals under ART show reduced responses to vaccination and infections and are unable to mount an effective antiviral immune response upon ART cessation. Many factors contribute to these defects, including persistent inflammation, especially in lymphoid tissues, where T follicular helper (Tfh) cells instruct and help B cells launch an effective humoral immune response. In this study we investigated the phenotype and function of circulating memory Tfh cells as a surrogate of Tfh cells in lymph nodes and found significant impairment of this cell population in chronically HIV-infected individuals, leading to reduced B cell responses. We further show that these aberrant memory Tfh cells exhibit an IL-2-responsive gene signature and are more polarized toward a Th1 phenotype. Treatment of functional memory Tfh cells with IL-2 was able to recapitulate the detrimental reprogramming. Importantly, this defect was reversible, as interfering with the IL-2 signaling pathway helped reverse the abnormal differentiation and improved Ab responses. Thus, reversible reprogramming of memory Tfh cells in HIV-infected individuals could be used to enhance Ab responses. Altered microenvironmental conditions in lymphoid tissues leading to altered Tfh cell differentiation could provide one explanation for the poor responsiveness of HIV-infected individuals to new Ags. This explanation has important implications for the development of therapeutic interventions to enhance HIV- and vaccine-mediated Ab responses in patients under ART.

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Infectious diseases after solid organ transplantation (SOT) are a significant cause of morbidity and reduced allograft and patient survival; however, the influence of infection on the development of chronic allograft dysfunction has not been completely delineated. Some viral infections appear to affect allograft function by both inducing direct tissue damage and immunologically related injury, including acute rejection. In particular, this has been observed for cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection in all SOT recipients and for BK virus infection in kidney transplant recipients, for community-acquired respiratory viruses in lung transplant recipients, and for hepatitis C virus in liver transplant recipients. The impact of bacterial and fungal infections is less clear, but bacterial urinary tract infections and respiratory tract colonization by Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Aspergillus spp appear to be correlated with higher rates of chronic allograft dysfunction in kidney and lung transplant recipients, respectively. Evidence supports the beneficial effects of the use of antiviral prophylaxis for CMV in improving allograft function and survival in SOT recipients. Nevertheless, there is still a need for prospective interventional trials assessing the potential effects of preventive and therapeutic strategies against bacterial and fungal infection for reducing or delaying the development of chronic allograft dysfunction.