In situ targeting of dendritic cells by antigen-loaded red blood cells: A novel approach to cancer immunotherapy

Vaccine ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 28 (17) ◽  
pp. 2965-2972 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alice Banz ◽  
Magali Cremel ◽  
Audrey Rembert ◽  
Yann Godfrin
Transfusion ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 59 (4) ◽  
pp. 1312-1323
Author(s):  
Man Zhao ◽  
Qianqian Zhou ◽  
Chulin He ◽  
Yulong Zhang ◽  
Zhengjun Wang ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 93 (4) ◽  
pp. 518-526 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eszter Vörös ◽  
Nathaniel Z. Piety ◽  
Briony C. Strachan ◽  
Madeleine Lu ◽  
Sergey S. Shevkoplyas

1983 ◽  
Vol 61 (6) ◽  
pp. 1202-1206 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. B. Sleet ◽  
L. J. Weber

The effects of arterial and esophageal cannulation, esophageal occlusion, and in situ gut perfusion on water–electrolyte balance of the buffalo sculpin (Enophrys bison), a marine teleost, were examined. The water–electrolyte balance was monitored before, during, and after the above-mentioned manipulation by measurement of blood constituents which indicated changes in the osmotic status (plasma osmolality and sodium and chloride levels) and vascular volume (plasma protein, red blood cells, and hematocrit). After arterial cannulation, disturbances in the osmotic status and vascular volume were manifested by a hyperosmotic hemodilution that appeared to result from an influx of hyperosmotic fluid. The osmotic imbalance was corrected within 24 h whereas the volume disturbance persisted. When gut perfusion was started after arterial and esophageal cannulation, a hyperosmotic hemodilution resulted. With esophageal occlusion, a hemodilution without a concurrent osmotic imbalance followed arterial and esophageal cannulation. A gut origin for both the osmotic and volume disturbances was indicated.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 4113-4113
Author(s):  
Stephanie C. Eisenbarth ◽  
Jeanne E Hendrickson ◽  
Samuele Calabro ◽  
Antonia Gallman

Abstract The generation of antibodies against transfused red blood cells (RBCs) can pose a serious health risk, especially in chronically transfused patients requiring life-long transfusion support; yet our understanding of what immune signals or cells dictate when someone will become alloimmunized is lacking. Every non-autologous red cell unit has multiple antigens foreign to the transfused recipient; some people respond to these foreign antigens with an adaptive immune response and some do not. Given the now well established role of innate immune signals in regulating adaptive immunity, understanding if and how innate immunity is triggered during transfusion may allow development of therapies to prevent alloimmunization in chronically transfused subjects such as those with myelodysplasia or hemoglobinopathies. We have established a murine model system in which we can evaluate both the role of particular innate immune stimuli as well as particular cells of the immune system in regulating the allogeneic response to transfused red blood cells. A particularly useful transgenic “HOD mouse” has been engineered, which encodes a triple fusion protein and provides a unique tool to directly assess both RBC-specific T and B cell responses. This RBC-specific antigen contains the model protein antigen hen egg lysozyme (HEL) fused to chicken ovalbumin (OVA) fused to the human Duffybblood group antigen (HEL-OVA-Duffy) as an integral membrane protein under control of the beta globin promoter. Transfusion of genetically targeted mice lacking various innate immune receptors allows us to screen for important immune pathways regulating the response to allogeneic RBCs. Using these models, we recently discovered that mice lacking the NOD-like receptor NLRP10 fail to develop alloimmunity to transfused red blood cells. Surprisingly, the early innate immune cytokine response, including IL-6, IL-1beta and TNF-alpha, was unaffected in mice lacking NLRP10. Yet both B cell and T cell activation in the spleen to the transgenic transfused RBCs was abrogated. Inclusion of OVA in the alloantigen of the HOD mice allows us to readily study naïve CD4+ T cell activation following transfusion by using the OTII T cell receptor (TCR) transgenic mice in which essentially all T cells express one antigen receptor specific for a peptide of OVA. By tracking rounds of cell division we found that adoptively transferred OTII undergo more than 5-8 rounds of division in the spleen three days following transfusion of HOD RBCs in WT recipients. In contrast, no OTII proliferation was observed in NLRP10-deficient mice following OTII adoptive transfer and HOD RBC transfusion, suggesting that T cells are failing to receive activation signals by splenic antigen presenting cells. We have previously demonstrated that NLRP10-deficient dendritic cells fail to migrate from peripheral tissues such as the skin to draining lymph nodes. Our preliminary data now suggest that NLRP10-deficient dendritic cells are able to process and present RBC-derived antigens, but do not migrate to T cell zones in the spleen to prime naïve RBC-specific T cells. The relative role of dendritic cells, B cells and macrophages in the induction of erythrocyte alloimmunization remain unclear. Further, the need for DC migration within the spleen in the induction of alloimmunity to transfused RBCs has not been addressed. These mice allow us for the first time to answer these fundamental immunologic questions during transfusion. Future work will aim to determine how dendritic cell movement within the spleen is regulated during transfusion in NLRP10-deficient mice and the specific role of splenic dendritic cells in CD4+ T cell priming to allogeneic RBCs. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2011 ◽  
Vol 100 (3) ◽  
pp. 143a
Author(s):  
Silki Arora ◽  
Sang Hoon Park ◽  
Jennifer Mauser ◽  
Debopam Chakrabarti ◽  
Alfons Schulte

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