963 resultados para CD4 and CD8 cells


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Human localized cutaneous leishmaniasis (LCL), induced by Leishmania braziliensis, ranges from a clinically mild, self-healing disease with localized cutaneous lesions to severe forms which can present secondary metastatic lesions. The T cell-mediated immune response is extremely important to define the outcome of the disease; however, the underlying mechanisms involved are not fully understood. A flow cytometric analysis of incorporation of 7-amino actinomycin D and CD4+ or CD8+ T cell surface phenotyping was used to determine whether different frequencies of early apoptosis or accidental cell death occur at different stages of LCL lesions. When all cells obtained from a biopsy sample were analyzed, larger numbers of early apoptotic and dead cells were observed in lesions from patients with active disease (mean = 39.5 ± 2.7%) as compared with lesions undergoing spontaneous healing (mean = 17.8 ± 2.2%). Cells displaying normal viability patterns obtained from active LCL lesions showed higher numbers of early apoptotic events among CD8+ than among CD4+ T cells (mean = 28.5 ± 3.8 and 15.3 ± 3.0%, respectively). The higher frequency of cell death events in CD8+ T cells from patients with LCL may be associated with an active form of the disease. In addition, low frequencies of early apoptotic events among the CD8+ T cells were observed in two patients with self-healing lesions. Although the number of patients in the latter group was small, it is possible to speculate that, during the immune response, differences in apoptotic events in CD4+ and CD8+ T cell subsets could be responsible for controlling the CD4/CD8 ratio, thus leading to healing or maintenance of disease.

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Infected dogs are urban reservoirs of Leishmania chagasi, which is a causative agent of visceral leishmaniasis (VL). Dogs exhibit immune suppression during the course of this disease, and lymphocyte apoptosis is involved in this process. To investigate apoptosis and the expression levels of FAS-FAS-associated death domain protein (CD95 or APO-1), FASL-FAS ligand protein (CD178), and TRAIL-TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (CD253) receptors in peripheral blood mononuclear cells and spleen leukocytes from 38 symptomatic dogs with moderate VL and 25 healthy dogs were evaluated by flow cytometry. The apoptosis rate of blood and splenic CD4+ and CD8+ cells was higher in infected dogs than in healthy dogs. The expression levels of FAS and FASL in blood and splenic CD4+ cells were lower in infected dogs than in healthy dogs. FAS expression in CD8+ cells was higher in infected dogs than in healthy dogs; in contrast, FASL expression was lower in infected dogs. The expression of the TRAIL receptor increased only in splenic CD8+ cells from infected dogs. The FAS and FAS-L blocking antibodies confirmed the importance of these receptors in apoptosis. Our results enhance the current understanding of the immune response in dogs infected with L. chagasi, facilitating the future development of therapeutic interventions to reduce lymphocyte depletion. © 2013 Elsevier B.V.

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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)

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The role of T lymphocytes in host responses to sublethal systemic infection with Candida albicans was evaluated by mAb depletion of CD4(+) and CD8(+) cells from BALB/c and CBA/CaH mice, which develop mild and severe tissue damage, respectively. Depletion of CD4(+) lymphocytes from BALB/c mice markedly increased tissue damage, but did not alter the course of infection. In CBA/CaH mice, depletion of CD4+ cells abrogated tissue destruction in both brain and kidney at day 4 after infection, and significantly decreased fungal colonization in the brain. However, the severity of tissue lesions increased relative to controls from day 8 onwards. A small increase in tissue damage was evident in both mouse strains after depletion of CD8(+) cells. There were no major differences between days 4 end 8 after infection in cDNA cytokine profiles of CD4(+) lymphocytes from either BALB/c or CBA/CaH mice. After passive transfer into infected syngeneic recipients, spleen cells from infected CBA/CaH mice markedly increased tissue damage when compared to controls, and also caused a significant increase in fungal colonization in the brain. A similar transfer in BALB/c mice increased the number of inflammatory cells in and around the lesions, but had no effect on the fungal burden in brain and kidney. The data demonstrate that both CD4(+) and CD8(+) lymphocytes contribute to the reduction of tissue damage after systemic infection with C. albicans, and that the development and expression of CD4(+) lymphocyte effector function is influenced by the genetic background of the mouse.

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The aim of this study was to determine the role of CD4 and CD8 cells on specific antibody production by murine Peyer's patch (PP) cells after oral immunization with Actinomyces viscosus in mice. Female DBA/2 mice were orally immunized with three low doses of heat-killed A. viscosus. Sham-immunized mice served as a control group. Mice were depleted of CD4 or CD8 cells by intraperitoneal injection of anti-CD4 or anti-CD8 antibodies daily for 3 days before oral immunization. One week after the last oral immunization, PPs were removed and cell suspensions were cultured with A. viscosus. Specific antibody production in the culture supernatants was assessed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. The results showed that oral immunization with A. viscosus induced a predominant specific immunoglobulin A (IgA) response by PP cells and, to a lesser extent, IgM antibodies. Depletion of CD4 but not CD8 cells suppressed the production of specific antibodies. These results suggest that oral immunization with low doses of A. viscosus may induce the production of specific antibodies by murine PP cells in a CD4-cell-dependent fashion.

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During their development, immature CD4+ CD8+ thymocytes become committed to either the CD4 or CD8 lineage. Subsequent complete maturation of CD4+ and CD8+ cells requires a molecular match of the expressed coreceptor and the MHC specificity of the TCR. The final size of the mature CD4+ and CD8+ thymic compartments is therefore determined by a combination of lineage commitment and TCR-mediated selection. In humans and mice, the relative size of CD4+ and CD8+ peripheral T cell compartments shows marked genetic variability. We show here that genetic variations in thymic lineage commitment, rather than TCR-mediated selection processes, are responsible for the distinct CD4/CD8 ratios observed in common inbred mouse strains. Genetic variations in the regulation of lineage commitment open new ways to analyze this process and to identify the molecules involved.

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The expression of immune response as a leukocytic infiltrate by CD4+ and CD8+ cells in the epithelium and in the intestinal lamina propria of chicks fed Lactobacillus spp or cecal microflora (CM) and experimentally challenged or not with Salmonella enterica serovar Enteritidis (SE) was studied using immunohistochemistry. Three hundred and twenty day-of-hatch broiler chicks were divided into four groups of 80 birds each and orally received L. reuteri, L. salivarius, L. acidophilus, or CM. Each group was subdivided into four subgroups of 20 birds each, classified as follows: a subgroup did not receive any oral treatment (negative control), subgroup treated with L. spp or CM, subgroup treated with L. spp or CM and challenged with SE, and subgroup only challenged with SE (positive control). The results show that the oral treatment with L. reuteri, L. salivarius, L. acidophilus, or CM and challenge or not with SE stimulated bird immune response as determined by the leukocytic infiltrate by CD8+ lymphocytes followed by CD4+ in the epithelium and in the lamina propria of the duodenum, jejunum, and cecum of chicks up to 12 days of age. CD8+ lymphocyte number was significantly higher in the intestine of chicks receiving CM and challenged with SE. The duodenum, followed by the jejunum, were the segments in which the immune response, as shown by T, CD4+ and CD8+ cells, was stimulated with the greatest intensity.

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Ag-experienced or memory T cells have increased reactivity to recall Ag, and can be distinguished from naive T cells by altered expression of surface markers such as CD44. Memory T cells have a high turnover rate, and CD8(+) memory T cells proliferate upon viral infection, in the presence of IFN-alphabeta and/or IL-15. In this study, we extend these findings by showing that activated NKT cells and superantigen-activated T cells induce extensive bystander proliferation of both CD8(+) and CD4(+) memory T cells. Moreover, proliferation of memory T cells can be induced by an IFN-alphabeta-independent, but IFN-gamma- or IL-12-dependent pathway. In these conditions of bystander activation, proliferating memory (CD44(high)) T cells do not derive from activation of naive (CD44(low)) T cells, but rather from bona fide memory CD44(high) T cells. Together, these data demonstrate that distinct pathways can induce bystander proliferation of memory T cells.

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MHC class II-peptide multimers are important tools for the detection, enumeration and isolation of antigen-specific CD4+ Τ cells. However, their erratic and often poor performance impeded their broad application and thus in-depth analysis of key aspects of antigen-specific CD4+ Τ cell responses. In the first part of this thesis we demonstrate that a major cause for poor MHC class II tetramer staining performance is incomplete peptide loading on MHC molecules. We observed that peptide binding affinity for "empty" MHC class II molecules poorly correlates with peptide loading efficacy. Addition of a His-tag or desthiobiotin (DTB) at the peptide N-terminus allowed us to isolate "immunopure" MHC class II-peptide monomers by affinity chromatography; this significantly, often dramatically, improved tetramer staining of antigen-specific CD4+ Τ cells. Insertion of a photosensitive amino acid between the tag and the peptide, permitted removal of the tag from "immunopure" MHC class II-peptide complex by UV irradiation, and hence elimination of its potential interference with TCR and/or MHC binding. Moreover, to improve loading of self and tumor antigen- derived peptides onto "empty" MHC II molecules, we first loaded these with a photocleavable variant of the influenza A hemagglutinin peptide HA306-318 and subsequently exchanged it with a poorly loading peptide (e.g. NY-ESO-1119-143) upon photolysis of the conditional ligand. Finally, we established a novel type of MHC class II multimers built on reversible chelate formation between 2xHis-tagged MHC molecules and a fluorescent nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA)-containing scaffold. Staining of antigen-specific CD4+ Τ cells with "NTAmers" is fully reversible and allows gentle cell sorting. In the second part of the thesis we investigated the role of the CD8α transmembrane domain (TMD) for CD8 coreceptor function. The sequence of the CD8α TMD, but not the CD8β TMD, is highly conserved and homodimerizes efficiently. We replaced the CD8α TMD with the one of the interleukin-2 receptor a chain (CD8αTac) and thus ablated CD8α TMD interactions. We observed that ΤΙ Τ cell hybridomas expressing CD8αTacβ exhibited severely impaired intracellular calcium flux, IL-2 responses and Kd/PbCS(ABA) P255A tetramer binding. By means of fluorescence resonance energy transfer experiments (FRET) we established that CD8αTacβ associated with TCR:CD3 considerably less efficiently than CD8αβ, both in the presence and the absence of Kd/PbCS(ABA) complexes. Moreover, we observed that CD8αTacβ partitioned substantially less in lipid rafts, and related to this, associated less efficiently with p56Lck (Lck), a Src kinase that plays key roles in TCR proximal signaling. Our results support the view that the CD8α TMD promotes the formation of CD8αβP-CD8αβ dimers on cell surfaces. Because these contain two CD8β chains and that CD8β, unlike CD8α, mediates association of CD8 with TCR:CD3 as well as with lipid rafts and hence with Lck, we propose that the CD8αTMD plays an important and hitherto unrecognized role for CD8 coreceptor function, namely by promoting CD8αβ dimer formation. We discuss what implications this might have on TCR oligomerization and TCR signaling. - Les multimères de complexes MHC classe II-peptide sont des outils importants pour la détection, le dénombrement et l'isolation des cellules Τ CD4+ spécifiques pour un antigène d'intérêt. Cependant, leur performance erratique et souvent inadéquate a empêché leur utilisation généralisée, limitant ainsi l'analyse des aspects clés des réponses des lymphocytes Τ CD4+. Dans la première partie de cette thèse, nous montrons que la cause principale de la faible efficacité des multimères de complexes MHC classe II-peptide est le chargement incomplet des molécules MHC par des peptides. Nous montrons également que l'affinité du peptide pour la molécule MHC classe II "vide" n'est pas nécessairement liée au degré du chargement. Grâce à l'introduction d'une étiquette d'histidines (His-tag) ou d'une molécule de desthiobiotine à l'extrémité N-terminale du peptide, des monomères MHC classe II- peptide dits "immunopures" ont pu être isolés par chromatographic d'affinité. Ceci a permis d'améliorer significativement et souvent de façon spectaculaire, le marquage des cellules Τ CD4+ spécifiques pour un antigène d'intérêt. L'insertion d'un acide aminé photosensible entre l'étiquette et le peptide a permis la suppression de l'étiquette du complexe MHC classe- Il peptide "immunopure" par irradiation aux UV, éliminant ainsi de potentielles interférences de liaison au TCR et/ou au MHC. De plus, afin d'améliorer le chargement des molécules MHC classe II "vides" avec des peptides dérivés d'auto-antigènes ou d'antigènes tumoraux, nous avons tout d'abord chargé les molécules MHC "vides" avec un analogue peptidique photoclivable issu du peptide HA306-318 de l'hémagglutinine de la grippe de type A, puis, sous condition de photolyse, nous l'avons échangé avec de peptides à chargement faible (p.ex. NY-ESO-1119-143). Finalement, nous avons construit un nouveau type de multimère réversible, appelé "NTAmère", basé sur la formation chélatante reversible entre les molécules MHC-peptide étiquettés par 2xHis et un support fluorescent contenant des acides nitrilotriacetiques (NTA). Le marquage des cellules Τ CD4+ spécifiques pour un antigène d'intérêt avec les "NTAmères" est pleinement réversible et permet également un tri cellulaire plus doux. Dans la deuxième partie de cette thèse nous avons étudié le rôle du domaine transmembranaire (TMD) du CD8α pour la fonction coréceptrice du CD8. La séquence du TMD du CD8α, mais pas celle du TMD du CD8β, est hautement conservée et permet une homodimérisation efficace. Nous avons remplacé le TMD du CD8α avec celui de la chaîne α du récepteur à l'IL-2 (CD8αTac), éliminant ainsi les interactions du TMD du CD8α. Nous avons montré que les cellules des hybridomes Τ T1 exprimant le CD8αTacβ présentaient une atteinte sévère du flux du calcium intracellulaire, des réponses d'IL-2 et de la liaison des tétramères Kd/PbCS(ABA) P255A. Grâce aux expériences de transfert d'énergie entre molécules fluorescentes (FRET), nous avons montré que l'association du CD8αTacβ avec le TCR:CD3 est considérablement moins efficace qu'avec le CD8αβ, et ceci aussi bien en présence qu'en absence de complexes Kd/PbCS(ABA). De plus, nous avons observé que le CD8αTacβ se distribuait beaucoup moins bien dans les radeaux lipidiques, engendrant ainsi, une association moins efficace avec p56Lck (Lck), une kinase de la famille Src qui joue un rôle clé dans la signalisation proximale du TCR. Nos résultats soutiennent l'hypothèse que le TMD du CD8αβ favorise la formation des dimères de CD8αβ à la surface des cellules. Parce que ces derniers contiennent deux chaînes CD8β et que CD8β, contrairement à CD8α, favorise l'association du CD8 au TCR:CD3 aussi bien qu'aux radeaux lipidiques et par conséquent à Lck, nous proposons que le TMD du CD8α joue un rôle important, jusqu'alors inconnu, pour la fonction coreceptrice du CD8, en encourageant la formation des dimères CD8αβ. Nous discutons des implications possibles sur l'oligomerisation du TCR et la signalisation du TCR.

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Efficient immune attack of malignant disease requires the concerted action of both CD8+ CTL and CD4+ Th cells. We used human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-A*0201 (A2.1) transgenic mice, in which the mouse CD8 molecule cannot efficiently interact with the alpha3 domain of A2.1, to generate a high-affinity, CD8-independent T cell receptor (TCR) specific for a commonly expressed, tumor-associated cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) epitope derived from the human p53 tumor suppressor protein. Retroviral expression of this CD8-independent, p53-specific TCR into human T cells imparted the CD8+ T lymphocytes with broad tumor-specific CTL activity and turned CD4+ T cells into potent tumor-reactive, p53A2.1-specific Th cells. Both T cell subsets were cooperative and interacted synergistically with dendritic cell intermediates and tumor targets. The intentional redirection of both CD4+ Th cells and CD8+ CTL by the same high-affinity, CD8-independent, tumor-specific TCR could provide the basis for novel broad-spectrum cancer immunotherapeutics.

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RESUME POUR UN LARGE PUBLIC Parmi les globules blancs, les lymphocytes T 004 jouent un rôle primordial dans la coordination de la réponse immunitaire contre les pathogènes et les lymphocytes T CD8 dans leur élimination. Lors d'une infection par le virus de l'immunodéficience humaine (VIH-1), non seulement les cellules T CD4 sont les principales cibles d'infections, mais aussi elles disparaissent progressivement tout au long de la maladie. Ce phénomène, appelé aussi épuisement des lymphocytes T CD4, est la principale cause provoquant le Syndrome d'Immunodéficience Acquise (SIDA). Malgré de grands efforts de recherche, nous ne sommes toujours pas en mesure de dire si ce phénomène est dû à un défaut dans la production de nouvelles cellules ou à une destruction massive de cellules en circulation. Dans cette étude, nous nous proposions, dans un premier temps, de comparer la production de nouvelles cellules T CD4 et CD8 chez des individus VIH-négatifs et positifs. Les cellules nouvellement produites portent un marqueur commun que l'on appelle TREC et qui est facilement mesurable. En considérant des paramètres cliniques, nous étions en mesure de déterminer le niveau de TRECs de cellules T CD4 et CD8 dans différentes phases de la maladie. De là, nous avons pu déterminer que le niveau de TREC est toujours plus bas dans les cellules T CD8 de patients VIH-positifs comparativement à notre groupe contrôle. Nous avons pu déterminer par une analyse ultérieure que cette différence est due à une forte prolifération de ces cellules chez les patients VIH-positifs, ce qui a pour effet de diluer ce marqueur. En revanche, la production de nouvelles cellules T CD4 chez des patients VIH-positifs est accentuée lors de la phase précoce de la maladie et largement réprimée lors de la phase tardive. Dans un second temps, nous avons effectué une analyse à grande échelle de l'expression de gènes associés à la division cellulaire sur des lymphocytes T CD4 et CD8 d'individus VIH-¬positifs et négatifs, avec comme contrôle des cellules proliférant in vitro. De cette étude, nous avons pu conclure que les cellules T CD8 de patients VIH-positifs étaient en état de prolifération, alors que les lymphocytes T CD4 présentaient des défauts majeurs conduisant à un arrêt de la division cellulaire. Nos résultats montrent que la capacité à produire de nouvelles cellules chez des patients VIH¬positifs reste active longtemps pendant la maladie, mais que l'incapacité des cellules T CD4 à proliférer peut enrayer la reconstitution immunitaire chez ces individus. ABSTRACT The hallmark of HIV-1 infection is the depletion of CD4 T cells. Despite extensive investigation, the mechanisms responsible for the loss of CD4 T cells have been elucidated only partially. In particular, it remains controversial whether CD4 T cell depletion results from a defect in T cell production or from a massive peripheral destruction. In this study, de novo T cell generation has been investigated by measuring T cell receptor rearrangement excision circles (TRECs) on large cohorts of HIV-negative (N=120) and HIV-1 infected (N=298) individuals. Analysis of TREC levels was performed in HIV-infected subjects stratified by the stage of HIV disease based on CD4 T cell counts (early: >500 CD4 T cells/µl; intermediate: <500>200; late: <200) and by age (20 to 60 years, n = 259). Our data show that TREC levels in CD8 T cells were significantly lower in HIV-infected subjects at any stage of disease compared to the control group. In contrast, TREC levels in CD4 T cells were significantly higher in HIV-infected subjects at early stages disease while no significant differences were observed at intermediate stages of the disease and were severely reduced only at late stages of disease. To investigate further the status of cell cycle in peripheral CD4 and CD8 T cells in HIV-1 infections, we determined the pattern of gene expression with the microarray technology. In particular, CD4 and CD8 T cells of HIV-1 infected and HIV-negative subjects were analysed by Cell Cycle cDNA expression array. The patterns of gene expression were compared to in vitro stimulated CD4 and CD8 T cells and this analysis showed that CD8 T cells of HIV-1 infected subjects had a pattern of gene expression very similar to that of in vitro stimulated CD8 T cells thus indicating ongoing cell cycling. In contrast, CD4 T cells of HIV-1 infected subjects displayed a complex pattern of gene expression. In fact, CD4 T cells expressed high levels of genes typically associated with cell activation, but low levels of cell cycle genes. Therefore, these results indicated that activated CD4 T cells of HIV-1 infected subjects were in cell cycle arrest. Taking together these results indicate that thymus function is preserved for long time during HIV- 1 infection and the increase observed in early stage disease may represent a compensatory mechanism to the depletion of CD4 T cells. However, we provide evidence for a cell cycle arrest of peripheral CD4 T cells that may prevent potentially the replenishment of CD4 T cells. RESUME Les mécanismes responsables de la perte des lymphocytes T CD4 lors de l'infection pas VIH n'ont été élucidés que partiellement. Nous ne savons toujours pas si l'épuisement des lymphocytes T CD4 résulte d'un défaut dans la production de cellules ou d'une destruction périphérique massive. Dans cette étude, la production de cellules T a été étudiée en mesurant les cercles d'excision générés lors du réarrangement du récepteur au cellules T (TRECs) chez des individus VIH-négatifs (N=120) et VIH-1 positifs (N=298). L'analyse des niveaux de TREC a été faite chez sujets HIV-infectés en considérant les phases de la maladie sur la base des comptes CD4 (phase précoce: > 500 cellules CD4/µl; intermédiaire: < 500>200; tardive: < 200) et par âge. Nos données démontrent que les niveaux de TRECs des cellules T CD8 étaient significativement plus bas chez les sujets VIH-1 infectés, à tous les stades de la maladie comparativement au groupe contrôle. En revanche, les niveaux de TRECs des cellules T CD4 étaient significativement plus élevés chez les sujets VIH-1 infectés durant la phase précoce de la maladie, tandis qu'aucune différence significative n'était observée durant la phase intermédiaire et étaient très réduits dans la phase tardive. Dans une deuxième partie, nous avons utilisé la technique des biopuces à d'ADN complémentaire pour analyser la régulation du cycle cellulaire chez les lymphocytes T CD4 et CD8 périphériques lors d'une infection au VIH-1. Des profils d'expression ont été déterminés et comparés à ceux de cellules T CD4 et CD8 stimulées in vitro, démontrant que les cellules T CD8 des sujets VIH-positifs avaient un profil d'expression très semblable à celui des cellules stimulées in vitro en prolifération. En revanche, les lymphocytes T CD4 des sujets VIH-1 positifs avaient un profil d'expression de gène plus complexe. En fait, leur profil montrait une sur- expression de gènes associés à une activation cellulaire, mais une sous-expression de ceux induisant une division. Ainsi, ces résultats indiquent que les lymphocytes T CD4 d'individus VIH-positifs présentent des dérégulations qui conduisent à un arrêt du cycle cellulaire. Ces résultats montrent que la fonction thymique est préservée longtemps pendant l'infection au VIH-1 et que l'augmentation de la quantité de TRECs dans la phase précoce de la maladie peut représenter un mécanisme compensatoire à l'épuisement des cellules T CD4. Cependant, nous démontrons aussi un clair dysfonctionnement du cycle cellulaire chez les cellules T CD4 d'individus infectés par VIH-1 ce qui peut enrayer la reconstitution du système immunitaire.

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Using a short-term bulk culture protocol designed for an intracellular-staining method based on a flow cytometry approach to the frequencies of cytokine-producing cells from tuberculosis and leprosy patients, we found distinct patterns of T cell subset expression. The method also reveals the profile of peak cytokine production and can provide simultaneous information about the phenotype of cytokine-producing cells, providing a reliable assay for monitoring the immunity of these patients. The immune response of Mycobacterium leprae and purified protein derivative (PPD) in vitro to a panel of mycobacteria-infected patients from an endemic area was assessed in primary mononuclear cell cultures. The kinetics and source of the cytokine pattern were measured at the single-cell level. IFN-gamma-, TNF-alpha-, IL-4- and IL-10-secreting T cells were intracytoplasmic evaluated in an attempt to identify M. leprae- and PPD-specific cells directly from the peripheral blood. The analysis by this approach indicated that TNF-alpha was the first (8 h) to be produced, followed by IFN-gamma (16 h), IL-10 (20 h) and IL-4 (24 h), and double-staining experiments confirmed that CD4+ were a greater source of TNF-alpha than of CD8+ T cells (P < 0.05). Both T cell subsets secreted similar amounts of IFN-gamma. We conclude that the protocol permits rapid evaluation of cytokine production by different T cell populations. The method can also be used to define immune status in non-infected and contact individuals.

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Objective. NKT cells have diverse immune regulatory functions including activation of cells involved in Th1- and Th2-type immune activities. Most previous studies have investigated the functions of NKT cells as a single family but more recent evidence indicates the distinct functional properties of NKT cell subpopulation. This study aims to determine whether NKT cell subpopulations have different stimulatory activities on other immune cells that may affect the outcome of NKT cell-based immunotherapy. Methods. NKT cells and NKT cell subpopulations (CD4(+)CD8(-), CD4(-)CD8(+), CD4(-)CD8(+)) were cocultured with PBMC and their activities on immune cells including CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells, NK cells, and B cells were assessed by flow cytometry. The production of cytokines in culture was measured by enzyme-linked immunsorbent assay. Results. The CD4(+)CD8(-) NKT cells demonstrated substantially greater stimulatory activities on CD4(+) T cells, NK cells, and B cells than other NKT cell subsets. The CD4(-)CD8(+) NKT cells showed the greatest activity on CD8(+) T cells, and were the only NKT cell subset that activated these immune cells. The CD4(-)CD8(-) NKT cells showed moderate stimulatory activity on CD4(+) T cells and the least activity on other immune cells. Conclusion. The results here suggest that NKT cell subpopulations differ in their abilities to stimulate other immune cells. This highlights the potential importance of manipulating specific NKT cell subpopulations for particular therapeutic situations and of evaluating subpopulations, rather than NKT cells as a group, during investigation of a possible role of NKT cells in various disease settings. (c) 2006 International Society for Experimental Hematology. Published by Elsevier Inc.

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T-cell based vaccines against HIV have the goal of limiting both transmission and disease progression by inducing broad and functionally relevant T cell responses. Moreover, polyfunctional and long-lived specific memory T cells have been associated to vaccine-induced protection. CD4(+) T cells are important for the generation and maintenance of functional CD8(+) cytotoxic T cells. We have recently developed a DNA vaccine encoding 18 conserved multiple HLA-DR-binding HIV-1 CD4 epitopes (HIVBr18), capable of eliciting broad CD4(+) T cell responses in multiple HLA class II transgenic mice. Here, we evaluated the breadth and functional profile of HIVBr18-induced immune responses in BALB/c mice. Immunized mice displayed high-magnitude, broad CD4(+)/CD8(+) T cell responses, and 8/18 vaccine-encoded peptides were recognized. In addition, HIVBr18 immunization was able to induce polyfunctional CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells that proliferate and produce any two cytokines (IFN gamma/TNF alpha, IFN gamma/IL-2 or TNF alpha/IL-2) simultaneously in response to HIV-1 peptides. For CD4(+) T cells exclusively, we also detected cells that proliferate and produce all three tested cytokines simultaneously (IFN gamma/TNF alpha/IL-2). The vaccine also generated long-lived central and effector memory CD4(+) T cells, a desirable feature for T-cell based vaccines. By virtue of inducing broad, polyfunctional and long-lived T cell responses against conserved CD4(+) T cell epitopes, combined administration of this vaccine concept may provide sustained help for CD8(+) T cells and antibody responses-elicited by other HIV immunogens.