Pua HH et al. (JAN 2007)
The Journal of experimental medicine 204 1 25--31
A critical role for the autophagy gene Atg5 in T cell survival and proliferation.
Macroautophagy (hereafter referred to as autophagy) is a well-conserved intracellular degradation process. Recent studies examining cells lacking the autophagy genes Atg5 and Atg7 have demonstrated that autophagy plays essential roles in cell survival during starvation,in innate cell clearance of microbial pathogens,and in neural cell maintenance. However,the role of autophagy in T lymphocyte development and survival is not known. Here,we demonstrate that autophagosomes form in primary mouse T lymphocytes. By generating Atg5-/- chimeric mice,we found that Atg5-deficient T lymphocytes underwent full maturation. However,the numbers of total thymocytes and peripheral T and B lymphocytes were reduced in Atg5 chimeras. In the periphery,Atg5-/- CD8+ T lymphocytes displayed dramatically increased cell death. Furthermore,Atg5-/- CD4+ and CD8+ T cells failed to undergo efficient proliferation after TCR stimulation. These results demonstrate a critical role for Atg5 in multiple aspects of lymphocyte development and function and suggest that autophagy may be essential for both T lymphocyte survival and proliferation.
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Lengi AJ et al. (DEC 2006)
Journal of molecular endocrinology 37 3 421--32
17beta-estradiol downregulates interferon regulatory factor-1 in murine splenocytes.
Interferon regulatory factor-1 (IRF-1) is an important transcription factor that mediates interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma)-induced cell-signaling events. In this study,we examined whether 17beta-estradiol alters IRF-1 in splenic lymphocytes,in view of the immunomodulatory effects of this natural female sex hormone including its ability to alter IFN-gamma levels. We find that IRF-1 expression is markedly downregulated in splenocytes or purified T-cells from estrogen-treated mice at all time points studied when compared with their placebo counterparts. This decrease in IRF-1 in splenocytes from estrogen-treated mice is neither due to upregulation of IRF-1-interfering proteins (nucleophosmin or signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT)-5) nor due to alternatively spliced IRF-1 mRNA. Given that IFN-gamma is a potent inducer of IRF-1,direct addition of recombinant IFN-gamma to splenocytes from either wild-type or IFN-gamma-knockout mice,or the addition of recombinant IFN-gamma to purified T-cells,was expected to stimulate IRF-1 expression. However,robust expression of IRF-1 in cells from estrogen-treated mice was not seen,unlike what was observed in cells from placebo-treated mice. Diminished IFN-gamma induction of IRF-1 in cells from estrogen-treated mice was noticed despite comparable phosphorylated STAT-1 activation. These studies are the first to show that estrogen regulates IFN-gamma-inducible IRF-1 in lymphoid cells,a finding that may have implications to IFN-gamma-regulated immune and vascular diseases.
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Campello S et al. (DEC 2006)
The Journal of experimental medicine 203 13 2879--86
Orchestration of lymphocyte chemotaxis by mitochondrial dynamics.
Lymphocyte traffic is required to maintain homeostasis and perform appropriate immunological reactions. To migrate into inflamed tissues,lymphocytes must acquire spatial and functional asymmetries. Mitochondria are highly dynamic organelles that distribute in the cytoplasm to meet specific cellular needs,but whether this is essential to lymphocyte functions is unknown. We show that mitochondria specifically concentrate at the uropod during lymphocyte migration by a process involving rearrangements of their shape. Mitochondrial fission facilitates relocation of the organelles and promotes lymphocyte chemotaxis,whereas mitochondrial fusion inhibits both processes. Our data substantiate a new role for mitochondrial dynamics and suggest that mitochondria redistribution is required to regulate the motor of migrating cells.
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Hu J et al. (DEC 2006)
Journal of immunology (Baltimore,Md. : 1950) 177 11 8037--45
An HLA-A2.1-transgenic rabbit model to study immunity to papillomavirus infection.
We have established several HLA-A2.1-transgenic rabbit lines to provide a host to study CD8(+) T cell responses during virus infections. HLA-A2.1 protein expression was detected on cell surfaces within various organ tissues. Continuous cultured cells from these transgenic rabbits were capable of presenting both endogenous and exogenous HLA-A2.1-restricted epitopes to an HLA-A2.1-restricted epitope-specific CTL clone. A DNA vaccine containing an HLA-A2.1-restricted human papillomavirus type 16 E7 epitope (amino acid residues 82-90) stimulated epitope-specific CTLs in both PBLs and spleen cells of transgenic rabbits. In addition,vaccinated transgenic rabbits were protected against infection with a mutant cottontail rabbit papillomavirus DNA containing an embedded human papillomavirus type 16 E7/82-90 epitope. Complete protection was achieved using a multivalent epitope DNA vaccine based on epitope selection from cottontail rabbit papillomavirus E1 using MHC class I epitope prediction software. HLA-A2.1-transgenic rabbits will be an important preclinical animal model system to study virus-host interactions and to assess specific targets for immunotherapy.
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Isham CR et al. (MAR 2007)
Blood 109 6 2579--88
Chaetocin: a promising new antimyeloma agent with in vitro and in vivo activity mediated via imposition of oxidative stress.
Chaetocin,a thiodioxopiperazine natural product previously unreported to have anticancer effects,was found to have potent antimyeloma activity in IL-6-dependent and -independent myeloma cell lines in freshly collected sorted and unsorted patient CD138(+) myeloma cells and in vivo. Chaetocin largely spares matched normal CD138(-) patient bone marrow leukocytes,normal B cells,and neoplastic B-CLL (chronic lymphocytic leukemia) cells,indicating a high degree of selectivity even in closely lineage-related B cells. Furthermore,chaetocin displays superior ex vivo antimyeloma activity and selectivity than doxorubicin and dexamethasone,and dexamethasone- or doxorubicin-resistant myeloma cell lines are largely non-cross-resistant to chaetocin. Mechanistically,chaetocin is dramatically accumulated in cancer cells via a process inhibited by glutathione and requiring intact/unreduced disulfides for uptake. Once inside the cell,its anticancer activity appears mediated primarily through the imposition of oxidative stress and consequent apoptosis induction. Moreover,the selective antimyeloma effects of chaetocin appear not to reflect differential intracellular accumulation of chaetocin but,instead,heightened sensitivity of myeloma cells to the cytotoxic effects of imposed oxidative stress. Considered collectively,chaetocin appears to represent a promising agent for further study as a potential antimyeloma therapeutic.
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Beeton C et al. (NOV 2006)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 103 46 17414--9
Kv1.3 channels are a therapeutic target for T cell-mediated autoimmune diseases.
Autoreactive memory T lymphocytes are implicated in the pathogenesis of autoimmune diseases. Here we demonstrate that disease-associated autoreactive T cells from patients with type-1 diabetes mellitus or rheumatoid arthritis (RA) are mainly CD4+ CCR7- CD45RA- effector memory T cells (T(EM) cells) with elevated Kv1.3 potassium channel expression. In contrast,T cells with other antigen specificities from these patients,or autoreactive T cells from healthy individuals and disease controls,express low levels of Kv1.3 and are predominantly naïve or central-memory (T(CM)) cells. In T(EM) cells,Kv1.3 traffics to the immunological synapse during antigen presentation where it colocalizes with Kvbeta2,SAP97,ZIP,p56(lck),and CD4. Although Kv1.3 inhibitors [ShK(L5)-amide (SL5) and PAP1] do not prevent immunological synapse formation,they suppress Ca2+-signaling,cytokine production,and proliferation of autoantigen-specific T(EM) cells at pharmacologically relevant concentrations while sparing other classes of T cells. Kv1.3 inhibitors ameliorate pristane-induced arthritis in rats and reduce the incidence of experimental autoimmune diabetes in diabetes-prone (DP-BB/W) rats. Repeated dosing with Kv1.3 inhibitors in rats has not revealed systemic toxicity. Further development of Kv1.3 blockers for autoimmune disease therapy is warranted.
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Ahn Y-T et al. (JAN 2007)
Molecular and cellular biology 27 1 253--66
Dynamic interplay of transcriptional machinery and chromatin regulates late" expression of the chemokine RANTES in T lymphocytes."
The chemokine RANTES (regulated upon activation normal T cell expressed and secreted) is expressed late" (3 to 5 days) after activation in T lymphocytes. In order to understand the molecular events that accompany changes in gene expression�
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Fujii H et al. (MAR 2007)
Blood 109 5 2008--13
In vivo control of acute lymphoblastic leukemia by immunostimulatory CpG oligonucleotides.
Despite considerable success in treating newly diagnosed childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL),relapsed disease remains a significant clinical challenge. Using a NOD/SCID mouse xenograft model,we report that immunostimulatory DNA oligonucleotides containing CpG motifs (CpG ODNs) stimulate significant immune activity against primary human ALL cells in vivo. The administration of CpG ODNs induced a significant reduction in systemic leukemia burden,mediated continued disease control,and significantly improved survival of mice with established human ALL. The death of leukemia cells in vivo was independent of the ability of ALL cells to respond directly to CpG ODNs and correlated with the production of IL-12p70,IFN-alpha,and IFN-gamma by the host. In addition,depletion of natural killer cells by anti-asialo-GM1 treatment significantly reduced the in vivo antileukemic activity of CpG ODN. This antileukemia effect was not limited to the xenograft model because natural killer cell-dependent killing of ALL by human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) was also increased by CpG ODN stimulation. These results suggest that CpG ODNs have potential as therapeutic agents for the treatment of ALL.
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Schenk S et al. (JAN 2007)
Stem cells (Dayton,Ohio) 25 1 245--51
Monocyte chemotactic protein-3 is a myocardial mesenchymal stem cell homing factor.
MSCs have received attention for their therapeutic potential in a number of disease states,including bone formation,diabetes,stem cell engraftment after marrow transplantation,graft-versus-host disease,and heart failure. Despite this diverse interest,the molecular signals regulating MSC trafficking to sites of injury are unclear. MSCs are known to transiently home to the freshly infarcted myocardium. To identify MSC homing factors,we determined chemokine expression pattern as a function of time after myocardial infarction (MI). We merged these profiles with chemokine receptors expressed on MSCs but not cardiac fibroblasts,which do not home after MI. This analysis identified monocyte chemotactic protein-3 (MCP-3) as a potential MSC homing factor. Overexpression of MCP-3 1 month after MI restored MSC homing to the heart. After serial infusions of MSCs,cardiac function improved in MCP-3-expressing hearts (88.7%,p textless .001) but not in control hearts (8.6%,p = .47). MSC engraftment was not associated with differentiation into cardiac myocytes. Rather,MSC engraftment appeared to result in recruitment of myofibroblasts and remodeling of the collagen matrix. These data indicate that MCP-3 is an MSC homing factor; local overexpression of MCP-3 recruits MSCs to sites of injured tissue and improves cardiac remodeling independent of cardiac myocyte regeneration.
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Wada Y et al. (FEB 2007)
Blood 109 3 1156--64
Selective abrogation of Th1 response by STA-5326, a potent IL-12/IL-23 inhibitor.
The interleukin-12 (IL-12) cytokine induces the differentiation of naive T cells to the T helper cell type 1 (Th1) phenotype and is integral to the pathogenesis of Th1-mediated immunologic disorders. A more recently discovered IL-12 family member,IL-23,shares the p40 protein subunit with IL-12 and plays a critical role in the generation of effector memory T cells and IL-17-producing T cells. We introduce a novel compound,STA-5326,that down-regulates both IL-12 p35 and IL-12/IL-23 p40 at the transcriptional level,and inhibits the production of both IL-12 and IL-23 cytokines. Oral administration of STA-5326 led to a suppression of the Th1 but not Th2 immune response in mice. In vivo studies using a CD4+CD45Rbhigh T-cell transfer severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) mouse inflammatory bowel disease model demonstrated that oral administration of STA-5326 markedly reduced inflammatory histopathologic changes in the colon. A striking decrease in interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) production was observed in ex vivo culture of lamina propria cells harvested from animals treated with STA-5326,indicating a down-regulation of the Th1 response by STA-5326. These results suggest that STA-5326 has potential for use in the treatment of Th1-related autoimmune or immunologic disorders. STA-5326 currently is being evaluated in phase 2 clinical trials in patients with Crohn disease and rheumatoid arthritis.
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Wencker M et al. (JAN 2007)
Journal of virology 81 1 301--8
Human T-cell leukemia virus type 1 Tax protein down-regulates pre-T-cell receptor alpha gene transcription in human immature thymocytes.
The human pre-T-cell receptor alpha (TCRalpha; pTalpha) gene encodes a polypeptide which associates with the TCRbeta chain and CD3 molecules to form the pre-TCR complex. The surface expression of the pre-TCR is pTalpha dependent,and signaling through this complex triggers an early alphabeta T-cell developmental checkpoint inside the thymus,known as beta-selection. E2A transcription factors,which are involved at multiple stages of T-cell development,regulate the transcription of the pTalpha gene. Here we show that the regulatory protein Tax of the human T-cell leukemia virus type 1 (HTLV-1) efficiently suppresses the E47-mediated activation of the pTalpha promoter. Furthermore,we report that in Tax lentivirally transduced human MOLT-4 T cells,which constitutively express the pTalpha gene,the amount of pTalpha transcripts decreases. Such a decrease is not observed in MOLT-4 cells transduced by a vector encoding the Tax mutant K88A,which is unable to interact with p300. These data underline that Tax inhibits pTalpha transcription by recruiting this coactivator. Finally,we show that the expression of Tax in human immature thymocytes results in a decrease of pTalpha gene transcription but does not modify the level of E47 transcripts. These observations indicate that Tax,by silencing E proteins,down-regulates pTalpha gene transcription during early thymocyte development. They further provide evidence that Tax can interfere with an important checkpoint during T-cell differentiation in the thymus.
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Li J et al. (JAN 2007)
Journal of leukocyte biology 81 1 328--35
cDNA microarray analysis reveals fundamental differences in the expression profiles of primary human monocytes, monocyte-derived macrophages, and alveolar macrophages.
We report the systematic use of large-scale cDNA microarrays to study the gene expression profiles of primary human peripheral blood monocytes (MONO) in comparison with in vitro-differentiated,M-CSF-induced MONO-derived macrophages (MAC) and primary human alveolar MAC (AM),obtained by bronchoalveolar lavage from the lungs of normal volunteers. These studies revealed large-scale differences in the gene expression profile between both MAC types (MAC and AM) and MONO. In addition,large differences were observed in the gene expression profiles of the two MAC types. Specifically,21% of genes on the array (2904 out of 13,582) were differentially expressed between AM and MONO,and 2229 out of 13,583 probes were differentially expressed between MAC and AM. Our expression data show remarkable differences in gene expression between different MAC subpopulations and emphasize the heterogeneity of different MAC populations. This study underscores the need to scrutinize models of MAC biology for relevance to specific disease processes.
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