scholarly journals Cellular Mediators of Inflammation: Tregs andTH17Cells in Gastrointestinal Diseases

2009 ◽  
Vol 2009 ◽  
pp. 1-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Franco Pandolfi ◽  
Rossella Cianci ◽  
Danilo Pagliari ◽  
Raffaele Landolfi ◽  
Giovanni Cammarota

Human lymphocyte subpopulations were originally classified as T- and B-cells in the 70s. Later, with the development of monoclonal antibodies, it became possible to recognize, within the T-cells, functional populations:CD4+andCD8+. These populations were usually referred to as “helper” and “suppressor” cells, respectively. However several investigations within the CD8 cells failed to detect a true suppressor activity. Therefore the term suppressor was neglected because it generated confusion. Much later, true suppressor activity was recognized in a subpopulation of CD4 cells characterized by high levels of CD25. The novel population is usually referred to as T regulatory cells (Tregs) and it is characterized by the expression of FoxP3. The heterogeneity of CD4 cells was further expanded by the recent description of a novel subpopulation characterized by production of IL-17. These cells are generally referred to asTH17. They contribute to regulate the overall immune response together with other cytokine-producing populations. Treg andTH17cells are related because they could derive from a common progenitor, depending on the presence of certain cytokines. The purpose of this review is to summarize recent findings of the role of these novel populations in the field of human gastroenterological disease.

2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aleksandra Pyzik ◽  
Ewelina Grywalska ◽  
Beata Matyjaszek-Matuszek ◽  
Jacek Roliński

This review of literature attempts to identify the factors that are involved in the pathogenesis of Hashimoto thyroiditis, an immune defect in an individual with genetic susceptibility accompanied with environmental factors. The frequency of Hashimoto’s disease is a growing trend and among Caucasians it is estimated at approximately 5%. The dysfunction of the gland may be clinically evident (0.1–2% of the population) or subclinical (10–15%). The pathology is diagnosed five to ten times more often in women than men and its incidence increases with the age (the peak of the number of cases is between 45 and 65); however, it can also be diagnosed in children. The pathogenesis of Hashimoto’s thyroiditis is still not fully comprehended. In the etiology of Hashimoto thyroiditis excessively stimulated T CD4+ cells are known to play the most important role. Recent research has demonstrated an increasing role of newly discovered cells such as Th17 (CD4+IL-17+) or T regulatory cells (CD4+CD25+highFoxP3+) in the induction of autoimmune disorders. The process of programmed cell death also plays an equally important role in the pathogenesis and the development of hypothyroidism.


1996 ◽  
Vol 184 (5) ◽  
pp. 2013-2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
N R Krieger ◽  
D P Yin ◽  
C G Fathman

The generation of knockout mice with targeted gene disruption has provided a valuable tool for studying the immune response. Here we describe the use of CD4 and CD8 knockout mice to examine the role of CD4+ and CD8+ cells in initiating allotransplantation rejection. Pretreatment with a brief course of depletive anti-CD4 monoclonal antibody therapy allowed permanent survival of heart, but not skin, allografts transplanted across a major histocompatibility barrier. However, skin as well as heart grafts were permanently accepted in the CD4 knockout mice. Transfer of CD4+ cells into CD4 knockout recipient mice 1 d before skin engraftment reconstituted rejection, demonstrating that CD4+ cells are necessary for initiating rejection of allogeneic transplants. Major histocompatibility complex disparate heart and skin allografts transplanted into CD8 knockout recipients were rejected within 10 d. This study demonstrates that CD4+ but not CD8+ T cells are absolutely required to initiate allograft rejection.


2015 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 78-81 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Nasadyuk

The article highlights the up-to-date literary data about the role of tissue and circulating stem cells in the processes of regeneration and carcinogenesis of gastric mucosa and intestine and development of liver and pancreatic fibrosis. The paper also presents the novel methods of treatment of common gastrointestinal diseases with the use of cell and gene technologies.


Author(s):  
M L Choong ◽  
S H Ton ◽  
S K Cheong

The lymphocyte subsets in the peripheral blood of healthy Malaysian adults (212 subjects, age 18–71 years) were analysed using a flow cytometer FACScan in an effort to establish a reference range for the lymphocyte subsets. The lymphocyte subsets studied were T cells (CD3), B cells (CD19), natural killer (NK) cells (CD3−CD16+/CD56+), helper/inducer cells (CD4), cytotoxic/suppressor cells (CD8) and the helper/suppressor ratio (CD4/CD8). The distributions of T cells, CD4 cells and CD8 cells were symmetric about their means while B cells, NK cells and CD4/CD8 ratio followed a skewed distribution. Differences in race were observed for T cells, NK cells, CD4 cells and CD4/CD8 ratio where the Indians were significantly different from the Malays and the Chinese (higher T cells, CD4 cells and CD4/CD8 ratio and lower NK cells). The B cells were significantly lower in the Chinese than the Malays and the Indians. Age differences were seen only in the Chinese where increased CD4 cells and CD4/CD8 ratio, and decreased CD8 cells were observed. A sex difference was observed only in the Chinese where the CD4/CD8 ratio was significantly higher in females than males.


Blood ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 90 (2) ◽  
pp. 850-857 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andreas Heitger ◽  
Nikolaus Neu ◽  
Hannelore Kern ◽  
Eva-Renate Panzer-Grümayer ◽  
Hildegard Greinix ◽  
...  

Abstract To contribute to the understanding of the role of the thymus in humans in the reconstitution of naive (CD45RA+) T cells after bone marrow transplantation (BMT), we compared T-cell regeneration in a unique situation, namely a thymectomized cancer patient (15 years old), with that of thymus-bearing patients after allogeneic BMT. These cases shared features of transplantation (total body irradiation, HLA-matched donors, and graft-versus-host disease prophylaxis with cyclosporine A) and all had an uncomplicated posttransplantation course. As shown by fluorescence-activated cell sorting analyses, the thymectomized host failed to reconstitute CD45RA+ T-helper cells even 24 months after BMT (11% CD45RA+ of CD4+ cells). In this patient, preferentially CD45RO+ cells contributed to the recovery of CD4+ cells (206 of 261/μL at 6 months and 463 of 558/μL at 24 months after BMT, CD45RA+ of CD4+ cells), whereas CD45RA+ cells remained low (<60/μL). In contrast, nine thymus-bearing hosts (5 children and 4 adults) examined between 6 and 24 months after BMT effectively reconstituted CD4+/CD45RA+ cells according to their normal age-related range (≥28% in adults and ≥50% in children). Five of these were analyzed sequentially at 6 and 9 months after BMT. Within this period, CD45RA+ cells increasingly contributed to the recovery of CD4+ cells (median, +21%), even when total CD4+ cells decreased. With respect to T-cytotoxic/suppressor cells, the thymectomized host retained the capacity to recover CD45RA+ cells (137 of 333/μL at 6 months and 596 of 1,046/μL at 24 months after BMT, CD45RA+ of CD8+ cells), a proportion similar to that seen in thymus-bearing hosts. These findings suggest that a thymus-independent pathway exists to regenerate CD45RA+ T-cytotoxic/suppressor cells, but residual thymus is essential to reconstitute naive (CD45RA+) T-helper cells after BMT in humans.


2011 ◽  
Vol 2011 ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matteo Vergati ◽  
Jeffrey Schlom ◽  
Kwong Y. Tsang

Evaluating the number, phenotypic characteristics, and function of immunosuppressive cells in the tumor microenvironment and peripheral blood could elucidate the antitumor immune response and provide information to evaluate the efficacy of cancer vaccines. Further studies are needed to evaluate the correlation between changes in immunosuppressive cells and clinical outcomes of patients in cancer vaccine clinical trials. This paper focuses on the role of T-regulatory cells, myeloid-derived suppressor cells, and tumor-associated macrophages in cancer and cancer immunotherapy and their role in immune monitoring.


2013 ◽  
Vol 305 (3) ◽  
pp. R205-R215 ◽  
Author(s):  
Derick Okwan-Duodu ◽  
Jerome Landry ◽  
Xiao Z. Shen ◽  
Roberto Diaz

The renin angiotensin system (RAS) is a network of enzymes and peptides that coalesce primarily on the angiotensin II type 1 receptor (AT1R) to induce cell proliferation, angiogenesis, fibrosis, and blood pressure control. Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE), the key peptidase of the RAS, is promiscuous in that it cleaves other substrates such as substance P and bradykinin. Accumulating evidence implicates ACE in the pathophysiology of carcinogenesis. While the role of ACE and its peptide network in modulating angiogenesis via the AT1R is well documented, its involvement in shaping other aspects of the tumor microenvironment remains largely unknown. Here, we review the role of ACE in modulating the immune compartment of the tumor microenvironment, which encompasses the immunosuppressive, cancer-promoting myeloid-derived suppressor cells, alternatively activated tumor-associated macrophages, and T regulatory cells. We also discuss the potential roles of peptides that accumulate in the setting of chronic ACE inhibitor use, such as bradykinin, substance P, and N-acetyl-seryl-aspartyl-lysyl-proline (Ac-SDKP), and how they may undercut the gains of anti-angiogenesis from ACE inhibition. These emerging mechanisms may harmonize the often-conflicting results on the role of ACE inhibitors and ACE polymorphisms in various cancers and call for further investigations into the potential benefit of ACE inhibitors in some neoplasms.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Alexander Cieremans ◽  
Ju Young Kim ◽  
Ariana Valencia ◽  
Justin Santos ◽  
Jennifer Bordeaux ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction: PD-1 inhibitors have shown limited efficacy in glioblastoma due to microenvironment immunosuppression and low tumor mutational burden. In GBM, PD-L1 expression is not a predictive marker for response to PD-1 or PD-L1 inhibitors. Multiplex immunostaining panel technology allows for detailed analyses of tumor microenvironment cells and their interaction. Our study to evaluates the feasibility and predictive value of quantitative spatial profiling in GBM.Methods: Pre-treatment tumor tissue was collected retrospectively from 27 patients at Columbia University Irving Medical Center with primary glioblastoma who were diagnosed within the past three years, had surgery here, and were either treated with SOC therapy (n= 8) or PD-1 inhibitors at recurrence (n= 19). Multiplex immunofluorescence panels included 1) CD11b/IDO1/HLADR/GFAP, 2) PD1/PD-L1/GFAP, and 3) CD4/CD8/CD25/FoxP3/Ki67/GFAP. Results: Multiplex immunofluorescence panels did not show any correlation with outcomes in patients treated with SOC therapy. Among the 19 patients treated with PD-1 inhibitors, those with more HLA-DR positive cells had worse outcomes (p= 0.02). PD-L1 expression on tumor cells was not predictive of outcomes. There was a correlation trend between PD-1/PD-L1 interaction score (p= 0.08) and outcomes. PTEN loss was correlated with higher Ki67 expression in both tumor cells (p= 0.05) and non-tumors cells (p= 0.03); however, this was not found in Ki67 in CD4+ cells, CD8+ cells, or CD4+CD8+ cells combined. Tumor-associated macrophages, myeloid-derived suppressor cells, CD8+ cells, and CD4+ cells were not significant predictive markers for outcome. Conclusion: Quantitative spatial profiling by multiplex immunofluorescence is feasible in FFPE glioblastoma tissue. More refined and extensive quantitative and spatial microenvironment analyses may allow for the development of biomarkers for immunotherapy in GBM.


1979 ◽  
Vol 149 (3) ◽  
pp. 592-600 ◽  
Author(s):  
C Bona ◽  
W E Paul

An idiotype of the dinitrophenyl-binding myeloma protein MOPC 460 was expressed on a small but significant proportion of anti-TNP antibodies which appeared after in vivo or in vitro immunization of BALB/c mice with three T-independent TNP antigens. In vitro experiments show that the depletion of T cells before culture increased significantly the number of plaques secreting anti-TNP antibodies bearing MOPC 460 idiotype (460Id). T cells from BALB/c mice, but not from C.B20 mice, exhibit this suppressor activity. Plate-binding experiments indicate that the suppressive action of the T-lymphocyte population depends on a cell which can bind to MOPC 460 myeloma protein. The possible role of these normally occurring, idiotype-specific T cells on expression of 460Id in the anti-TNP antibody response of BALB/c mice is discussed.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 915-915
Author(s):  
Deborah Yallop ◽  
Andrea GS Buggins ◽  
Chris Pepper ◽  
Stephen Devereux

Abstract Abstract 915 In this study we put forward a novel approach to investigate the T cell compartment of chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL). The role of T cells in the pathobiology of CLL has become the subject of much research due to compelling evidence that CLL is derived from antigen experienced B cells that are subject to ongoing activation. The malignant proliferation occurs particularly within the pseudofollicles of lymph nodes where the CLL cells are in close proximity with T cells and stromal cells of the microenvironment. Our group has previously shown, by multi-parameter confocal microscopy of paraffin embedded CLL lymph node biopsy sections, that almost all proliferating CLL cells are in close contact with CD4+ CD25+ FOXP3- T cells. In order to gain access to this T cell compartment and gain further insight into the phenotype and role of these T cells we have utilized the technique of lymph node fine needle aspiration (LN-FNA). Patients with a diagnosis of CLL and who have lymphadenopathy accessible to LN-FNA were invited to participate in the study. A total of 21 LN-FNAs were collected from 18 patients. The median cell yield obtained was 4.1 x106 (range 1–13×106). Multi-colour flow cytometry using antibody panels of up to 7 flurochrome combinations was performed using a BD FACSCanto II (BD Biosciences) and analyzed with FlowJo (Treestar) and GraphPad Prism (GraphPad Software Inc.). Uniquely we have been able to compare the phenotype of the T cells derived from the LN-FNA with cells from the peripheral blood (PB) of the same patient taken at the same time. A panel consisting of CD3 (APC-Cy7), CD4 (PerCp-Cy5.5), CD8 (Pacific Blue), CD25 (FITC), CD40L (PE), CTLA-4 (Pe-Cy7), PD-1 (APC) was designed to investigate T cell subsets and activation markers. We found a statistically significant higher number of CD3+ T cells in the lymphocyte gate of CLL LN-FNAs (20.75% +/−13.80) compared to PB (6.25% +/− 4.06); p=0.0152. Additionally, of the CD3+ cells, there were more CD4+ cells in the LN-FNA (72.25% +/− 8.10) compared to PB (59.38% +/− 15.73); p=0.005, and conversely less CD8+ cells in the LN-FNA (17.43% +/− 6.50) compared to PB (27.43% +/− 14.18); p=0.03. The percentage of CD4+ and CD8+ cells expressing CD25, CD40L and CTLA-4 was not found to be significantly different. A further panel consisting of CD4 (PerCP-Cy5.5), CD8 (Pacific Blue), CD45RA (Pe-Cy7), CD62L (APC-Cy7), CCR7 (PE), CD28 (APC) and CD25 (FITC) was used to differentiate between effector memory, central memory and naive T cells. In the LN-FNA CD4+ cells there was a trend towards an increased effector memory phenotype compared to the peripheral blood (60%+/− 20 vs. 29%+/−13). One of the most striking observations in this study was the significantly increased mean fluorescence intensity of the exhaustion marker PD-1 on the CD4+ LN-FNA cells (1041+/− 1130) compared to PB (415.9+/− 487); p=0.0002. This was also mirrored in the CD8+ cells, LN-FNA (1342+/− 1219) compared to PB (465.8+/− 658.7); p=0.0015. Additionally significantly less PD-1 expression was observed in both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells from age matched normal controls confirming the relevance of these findings. Importantly, we have reproduced these observations using multi-parameter immunofluorescence microscopy on paraffin embedded CLL and normal lymph node biopsy samples. Lymph node sections were antigen retrieved and fluorescently labelled with combinations of CD4, CD23, Ki67 as well as PD-1 and then visualised using a Zeiss Axiovert LSM 510 microscope. Our results support the hypothesis that T cells in CLL are chronically stimulated by antigen within the lymph node. In addition, the results from the PB imply that either PD-1 expression is down-regulated on these cells or that the T cell pools derived from LN-FNA and PB are distinct from one another. To investigate this further we are currently examining the T cell receptor repertoires from these two compartments. In addition, it is known that expression levels of PD-L1, a ligand of PD-1, correlates with poor prognosis in many solid tumours and we are therefore investigating the role of this ligand pairing in CLL. In order to understand how this disease persists and progresses it is necessary to unravel the complex network of signals that mediate the survival and proliferation of the CLL cells. Our data suggest that T cells are part of this complex cellular crosstalk and blocking receptor ligand interactions, such as PD-1 and PD-L1, may offer potential future therapeutic targets. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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