Hü et al. (JAN 2010)
International immunology 22 1 35--44
Intact LFA-1 deactivation promotes T-cell activation and rejection of cardiac allograft.
Leucocyte function-associated antigen-1 (LFA-1) is known to be involved in immune reactions leading to allograft rejection. The role of deactivating LFA-1 in this context has not been investigated yet,although it is accepted that regulating LFA-1 activity is essential for T-cell function. Expressing LFA-1 locked in an active state in mice (LFA-1(d/d)) allowed us to investigate the in vivo function of LFA-1 deactivation for allograft rejection in a model of heterotopic cardiac transplantation. We provide in vivo evidence that regulating LFA-1 activity from an active to an inactive state controls antigen-specific priming and proliferation of T cells in response to allogeneic stimuli. Consequently,defective LFA-1 deactivation significantly prolonged cardiac allograft survival. Furthermore,reduced numbers of alloantigen-specific T cells and non-allo-specific innate immune cells within allografts of LFA-1(d/d) recipients indicate that expression of active LFA-1 impairs inflammatory responses involving all major leucocyte subpopulations. Taken together,our in vivo data suggest that LFA-1 deactivation is important for the formation of inflammatory lesions and rejection of cardiac allografts. Thus,the dynamic regulation of LFA-1 activity,rather than the mere presence of LFA-1,appears to contribute to the control of immune reactions inducing allogeneic transplant rejection.
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Kondo A et al. (AUG 2010)
Blood 116 7 1124--31
Interferon-gamma and tumor necrosis factor-alpha induce an immunoinhibitory molecule, B7-H1, via nuclear factor-kappaB activation in blasts in myelodysplastic syndromes.
During disease progression in myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS),clonal blasts gain a more aggressive nature,whereas nonclonal immune cells become less efficient via an unknown mechanism. Using MDS cell lines and patient samples,we showed that the expression of an immunoinhibitory molecule,B7-H1 (CD274),was induced by interferon-gamma (IFNgamma) and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNFalpha) on MDS blasts. This induction was associated with the activation of nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB) and nearly completely blocked by an NF-kappaB inhibitor,pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate (PDTC). B7-H1(+) MDS blasts had greater intrinsic proliferative capacity than B7-H1(-) MDS blasts when examined in various assays. Furthermore,B7-H1(+) blasts suppressed T-cell proliferation and induced T-cell apoptosis in allogeneic cocultures. When fresh bone marrow samples from patients were examined,blasts from high-risk MDS patients expressed B7-H1 molecules more often compared with those from low-risk MDS patients. Moreover,MDS T cells often overexpressed programmed cell death 1 (PD-1) molecules that transmit an inhibitory signal from B7-H1 molecules. Taken together,these findings provide new insight into MDS pathophysiology. IFNgamma and TNFalpha activate NF-kappaB that in turn induces B7-H1 expression on MDS blasts. B7-H1(+) MDS blasts have an intrinsic proliferative advantage and induce T-cell suppression,which may be associated with disease progression in MDS.
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Doreau A et al. (JUL 2009)
Nature immunology 10 7 778--85
Interleukin 17 acts in synergy with B cell-activating factor to influence B cell biology and the pathophysiology of systemic lupus erythematosus.
Studies have suggested involvement of interleukin 17 (IL-17) in autoimmune diseases,although its effect on B cell biology has not been clearly established. Here we demonstrate that IL-17 alone or in combination with B cell-activating factor controlled the survival and proliferation of human B cells and their differentiation into immunoglobulin-secreting cells. This effect was mediated mainly through the nuclear factor-kappaB-regulated transcription factor Twist-1. In support of the relevance of our observations and the potential involvement of IL-17 in B cell biology,we found that the serum of patients with systemic lupus erythematosus had higher concentrations of IL-17 than did the serum of healthy people and that IL-17 abundance correlated with the disease severity of systemic lupus erythematosus.
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Drake A et al. ( 2016)
PloS one 11 11 e0166280
Interleukins 7 and 15 Maintain Human T Cell Proliferative Capacity through STAT5 Signaling.
T lymphocytes require signals from self-peptides and cytokines,most notably interleukins 7 and 15 (IL-7,IL-15),for survival. While mouse T cells die rapidly if IL-7 or IL-15 is withdrawn,human T cells can survive prolonged withdrawal of IL-7 and IL-15. Here we show that IL-7 and IL-15 are required to maintain human T cell proliferative capacity through the STAT5 signaling pathway. T cells from humanized mice proliferate better if stimulated in the presence of human IL-7 or IL-15 or if T cells are exposed to human IL-7 or IL-15 in mice. Freshly isolated T cells from human peripheral blood lose proliferative capacity if cultured for 24 hours in the absence of IL-7 or IL-15. We further show that phosphorylation of STAT5 correlates with proliferation and inhibition of STAT5 reduces proliferation. These results reveal a novel role of IL-7 and IL-15 in maintaining human T cell function,provide an explanation for T cell dysfunction in humanized mice,and have significant implications for in vitro studies with human T cells.
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Pahwa R et al. (DEC 2010)
Journal of immunological methods 363 1 67--79
Isolation and expansion of human natural T regulatory cells for cellular therapy.
Natural T regulatory cells (nTregs) play a key role in inducing and maintaining immunological tolerance. Cell-based therapy using purified nTregs is under consideration for several conditions,but procedures employed to date have resulted in cell populations that are contaminated with cytokine secreting effector cells. We have established a method for isolation and ex vivo expansion of human nTregs from healthy blood donors for cellular therapy aimed at preventing allograft rejection in organ transplants. The Robosep instrument was used for initial nTreg isolation and rapamycin was included in the expansion phase of cell cultures. The resulting cell population exhibited a stable CD4(+)CD25(++bright)Foxp3(+) phenotype,had potent functional ability to suppress CD4(+)CD25(negative) T cells without evidence of conversion to effector T cells including TH17 cells,and manifested little to no production of pro-inflammatory cytokines upon in vitro stimulation. Boolean gating analysis of cytokine-expressing cells by flow cytometry for 32 possible profile end points revealed that 96% of expanded nTregs did not express any cytokine. From a single buffy coat,approximately 80 million pure nTregs were harvested after expansion under cGMP conditions; these cell numbers are adequate for infusion of approximately one million cells kg?¹ for cell therapy in clinical trials.
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Hagness M et al. ( 2012)
The Journal of Immunology 188 11 5459--66
Kinetics and activation requirements of contact-dependent immune suppression by human regulatory T cells
Naturally occurring regulatory T cells (Tregs) maintain self tolerance by dominant suppression of potentially self-reactive T cells in peripheral tissues. However,the activation requirements,the temporal aspects of the suppressive activity,and mode of action of human Tregs are subjects of controversy. In this study,we show that Tregs display significant variability in the suppressive activity ex vivo as 54% of healthy blood donors examined had fully suppressive Tregs spontaneously,whereas in the remaining donors,anti-CD3/CD2/CD28 stimulation was required for Treg suppressive activity. Furthermore,anti-CD3/CD2/CD28 stimulation for 6 h and subsequent fixation in paraformaldehyde rendered the Tregs fully suppressive in all donors. The fixation-resistant suppressive activity of Tregs operated in a contact-dependent manner that was not dependent on APCs,but could be fully obliterated by trypsin treatment,indicating that a cell surface protein is directly involved. By add-back of active,fixed Tregs at different time points after activation of responding T cells,the responder cells were susceptible to Treg-mediated immune suppression up to 24 h after stimulation. This defines a time window in which effector T cells are susceptible to Treg-mediated immune suppression. Lastly,we examined the effect of a set of signaling inhibitors that perturb effector T cell activation and found that none of the examined inhibitors affected Treg activation,indicating pathway redundancy or that Treg activation proceeds by signaling mechanisms distinct from those of effector T cells.
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Eggimann L et al. (MAY 2015)
Bone marrow transplantation 50 5 743--5
Kinetics of peripheral blood chimerism for surveillance of patients with leukemia and chronic myeloid malignancies after reduced-intensity conditioning allogeneic hematopoietic SCT.
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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Haase D et al. ( )
Journal of immunotherapy (Hagerstown,Md. : 1997) 38 6 250--8
Large-scale Isolation of Highly Pure Untouched" Regulatory T Cells in a GMP Environment for Adoptive Cell Therapy."
Adoptive cell therapy is an emerging treatment strategy for a number of serious diseases. Regulatory T (Treg) cells represent 1 cell type of particular interest for therapy of inflammatory conditions,as they are responsible for controlling unwanted immune responses. Initial clinical trials of adoptive transfer of Treg cells in patients with graft-versus-host disease were shown to be safe. However,obtaining sufficient numbers of highly pure and functional Treg cells with minimal contamination remains a challenge. We developed a novel approach to isolate untouched" human Treg cells from healthy donors on the basis of negative selection using the surface markers CD49d and CD127. This procedure
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Huang S-H et al. (JAN 2018)
The Journal of clinical investigation
Latent HIV reservoirs exhibit inherent resistance to elimination by CD8+ T cells.
The presence of persistent,latent HIV reservoirs in CD4+ T cells obstructs current efforts to cure infection. The so-called kick-and-kill paradigm proposes to purge these reservoirs by combining latency-reversing agents with immune effectors such as cytotoxic T lymphocytes. Support for this approach is largely based on success in latency models,which do not fully reflect the makeup of latent reservoirs in individuals on long-term antiretroviral therapy (ART). Recent studies have shown that CD8+ T cells have the potential to recognize defective proviruses,which comprise the vast majority of all infected cells,and that the proviral landscape can be shaped over time due to in vivo clonal expansion of infected CD4+ T cells. Here,we have shown that treating CD4+ T cells from ART-treated individuals with combinations of potent latency-reversing agents and autologous CD8+ T cells consistently reduced cell-associated HIV DNA,but failed to deplete replication-competent virus. These CD8+ T cells recognized and potently eliminated CD4+ T cells that were newly infected with autologous reservoir virus,ruling out a role for both immune escape and CD8+ T cell dysfunction. Thus,our results suggest that cells harboring replication-competent HIV possess an inherent resistance to CD8+ T cells that may need to be addressed to cure infection.
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Houtenbos I et al. (MAR 2006)
Haematologica 91 3 348--55
Leukemia-derived dendritic cells: towards clinical vaccination protocols in acute myeloid leukemia.
The ability of acute myeloid leukemic (AML) blasts to differentiate into leukemic dendritic cells (DC) thus acquiring the potential to present known and unknown leukemic antigens efficiently,holds promise as a possible new treatment for AML patients with minimal residual disease. Recent advances in culture methods have made the clinical use of leukemic DC feasible. However,additional measures appear to be essential in order to potentiate vaccines and to overcome the intrinsic tolerant state of the patients immune system. This review describes ways to improve AML-DC vaccines and discusses critical aspects concerning the development of clinical vaccination protocols.
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Grö et al. (JUL 2016)
Blood
LFA-1 integrin antibodies inhibit leukocyte α4β1-mediated adhesion by intracellular signaling.
Binding of ICAM-1 (intercellular adhesion molecule-1) to the β2-integrin LFA-1 (leukocyte function associated antigen-1) is known to induce crosstalk to the α4β1 integrin. Using different LFA-1 monoclonal antibodies we have been able to study the requirement and mechanism of action for the crosstalk in considerable detail. LFA-1 activating antibodies and those inhibitory antibodies that signal to α4β1 induce phosphorylation of Thr-758 on the β2-chain,which is followed by binding of 14-3-3 proteins and signaling through the G protein exchange factor Tiam1. This results in dephosphorylation of Thr-788/789 on the β1-chain of α4β1 and loss of binding to its ligand VCAM-1 (vascular cell adhesion molecule-1). The results show that with LFA-1 antibodies,we can either 1) activate LFA-1 and inhibit α4β1,2) inhibit both LFA-1 and α4β1,3) inhibit LFA-1 but not α4β1 or 4) not affect LFA-1 or α4β1 These findings are important for the understanding of integrin regulation and for the interpretation of the effect of integrin antibodies and their use in clinical applications.
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