scholarly journals Dendritic Cells in the Gut: Interaction with Intestinal Helminths

2010 ◽  
Vol 2010 ◽  
pp. 1-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fela Mendlovic ◽  
Ana Flisser

The mucosal environment in mammals is highly tolerogenic; however, after exposure to pathogens or danger signals, it is able to shift towards an inflammatory response. Dendritic cells (DCs) orchestrate immune responses and are highly responsible, through the secretion of cytokines and expression of surface markers, for the outcome of such immune response. In particular, the DC subsets found in the intestine have specialized functions and interact with different immune as well as nonimmune cells. Intestinal helminths primarily induce Th2 responses where DCs have an important yet not completely understood role. In addition, this cross-talk results in the induction of regulatory T cells (T regs) as a result of the homeostatic mucosal environment. This review highlights the importance of studying the particular relation “helminth-DC-milieu” in view of the significance that each of these factors plays. Elucidating the mechanisms that trigger Th2 responses may provide the understanding of how we might modulate inflammatory processes.

Genes ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 323 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guoying Wang ◽  
Xianghui Li ◽  
Lei Zhang ◽  
Abualgasim Elgaili Abdalla ◽  
Tieshan Teng ◽  
...  

Dendritic cells (DCs) play a critical role in the immune system which sense pathogens and present their antigens to prime the adaptive immune responses. As the progression of sepsis occurs, DCs are capable of orchestrating the aberrant innate immune response by sustaining the Th1/Th2 responses that are essential for host survival. Hence, an in-depth understanding of the characteristics of DCs would have a beneficial effect in overcoming the obstacle occurring in sepsis. This paper focuses on the role of DCs in the progression of sepsis and we also discuss the reverse sepsis-induced immunosuppression through manipulating the DC function. In addition, we highlight some potent immunotherapies that could be used as a novel strategy in the early treatment of sepsis.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Archana Kulkarni-Munje ◽  
Nandini Malshe ◽  
Sonali Palkar ◽  
Aniket Amlekar ◽  
Sanjay Lalwani ◽  
...  

Childhood vaccination plays critical role in protecting infants from several dreaded diseases. Of the global 15 million preterm (PT) infants with compromised immune system born annually, India contributes to >3.5 million. Generation of adequate vaccine-induced immune response needs to be ensured of their protection. Immune response of Indian PT (n = 113) and full-term (FT, n = 80) infants to pentavalent vaccine administered as per the national recommendation was studied. Antibody titers against component antigens of pentavalent vaccine, immune cells profiling (T and B cells, monocytes and dendritic cells) and plasma cytokines were determined pre- and post-vaccination. Additionally, cell-mediated recall immune responses to pentavalent antigens were evaluated after short time antigenic exposure to infant PBMCs. Irrespective of gestational age (GA), all the infants developed adequate antibody response against tetanus, diphtheria, and protective but lower antibody levels for Haemophilus influenzae type-b and hepatitis B in preterm infants. Lower (~74%) protective antibody response to pertussis was independent of gestational age. PT-infants exhibited lower frequencies of CD4 T cells/dendritic cells/monocytes, increased plasma IL-10 levels and lower proliferation of central and effector memory T cells than in term-infants. Proliferative central memory response of FT-infants without anti-pertussis antibodies suggests protection from subsequent infection. Responder/non-responder PT-infants lacked immunological memory and could be infected with Bordetella. For hepatitis B, the recall response was gestational age-dependent and antibody status-independent. Humoral/cellular immune responses of PT-infants were dependent on the type of the immunogen. Preterm infants born before 32 weeks of gestation may need an extra dose of pentavalent vaccine for long lived robust immune response.


Nanomedicine ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 15 (17) ◽  
pp. 1641-1652
Author(s):  
Wen Liu ◽  
Yuki Takahashi ◽  
Masaki Morishita ◽  
Makiya Nishikawa ◽  
Yoshinobu Takakura

Aim: Tumor-derived small extracellular vesicles (TEVs) are considered for use in inducing tumor antigen-specific immune responses as they contain tumor antigens. The delivery of tumor antigens to the antigen presentation cells (especially dendritic cells [DCs]), and the activation of DCs are the main challenges of TEV therapy. Materials & methods: TEVs were modified with CD40 ligand (CD40L), which can target CD40 expressed on the surface of DCs and can activate them via CD40L-CD40 interactions. Results: It was found that CD40L-TEVs were efficiently taken up by DCs and also activated them. Moreover, tumor antigens were efficiently presented to the T cells by DCs treated with CD40L-TEVs. Conclusion: This study proved that CD40L-modification of TEVs will be helpful for further development of TEV-based tumor vaccination.


2002 ◽  
Vol 49 (2) ◽  
pp. 295-302 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dariusz W Kowalczyk

This article reviews the evidence for the danger model in the context of immune response to tumors and the insufficiency of the immune system to eliminate tumor growth. Despite their potential immunogenicity tumors do not induce significant immune responses which could destroy malignant cells. According to the danger model, the immune surveillance system fails to detect tumor antigens because transformed cells do not send any danger signals which could activate dendritic cells and initiate an immune response. Instead, tumor cells or antigen presenting cells turn off the responding T cells and induce tolerance. The studies reviewed herein based on model tumor antigens, recombinant viral vectors and detection of tumor specific T cells by MHC/peptide tetramers underscore the critical role of tumor antigen presentation and the context in which it occurs. They indicate that antigen presentation only by activated but not by cancer or resting dendritic cells is necessary for the induction of immune responses to tumor antigens. It becomes apparent that the inability of dendritic cells to become activated provides a biological niche for tumor escape from immune destruction and seems to be a principal mechanism for the failure of tumor immune surveillance.


Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 107 (3) ◽  
pp. 1003-1009 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susanne Hofer ◽  
Karina Pfeil ◽  
Harald Niederegger ◽  
Susanne Ebner ◽  
Van Anh Nguyen ◽  
...  

AbstractWhen T cells are primed by dendritic cells (DCs) to initiate antigen-specific immune responses screening for matching antigen receptor-MHC/peptide pairs takes place in DC-T-cell conjugates. For an immune response DC-T-cell conjugates formed during priming events need to dissolve. Although detailed knowledge on molecules involved in the conjugate formation is available, dissolving of them has not been considered to be an active process. Here, we identify CYTIP (cytohesin-interacting protein) to mediate DC-T-cell deattachment. CYTIP, which is induced during maturation of DCs, shortly accumulates to the contact zones with T cells within the first hour of coculture. Specific silencing of CYTIP results in stronger adhesion of DCs to T cells and to fibronectin. When a need for deattachment is created in a T-cell priming assay by only partially loading DCs with antigen, CYTIP silencing causes reduced priming capacity. Thus, CYTIP allows DCs to actively control DC-T-cell interactions.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 4685-4685
Author(s):  
Lotta Hansson ◽  
Marzia Palma ◽  
Lars Adamson ◽  
Harriet Ryblom ◽  
Barbro Näsman-Glaser ◽  
...  

Abstract Background and aim. We have previously demonstrated that immunization with ex-vivo generated autologous dendritic cells loaded with apoptotic tumor cells (Apo-DC) induces specific immune responses in CLL patients especially when combined with GM-CSF and low-dose cyclophosphamide (CTX) (Palma et al, CII 2012). In this study we evaluate the safety and immunogenicity of Apo-DC vaccination in combination with low-dose lenalidomide alone, or in combination with GM-CSF and low-dose CTX in CLL patients. In patients with multiple myeloma, lenalidomide boosted the response to a pneumococcal vaccine (Noonan et al, Clin Ca Res 2012); lenalidomide may thus be a useful adjuvant also with tumor vaccines but has not yet been explored in man. In patients with CLL, lenalidomide has immunomodulatory properties including NK and T cell stimulation, as well as enhanced immunoglobulin production. Lenalidomide also induced a clinical "flare" reaction, upregulated adhesion molecules and facilitated synapse formation between CLL and T cells (Ramsay et al, J Clin Invest 2008; Shanafelt et al, Blood 2013)i.e. effects of advantage in tumor vaccination. We here report on the first results using lenalidomide as an adjuvant in tumor vaccination in man. Methods. Ten patients with slowly progressive but asymptomatic CLL were included. The first five patients were immunized intradermally five times during fourteen weeks with a mean of 16x106 Apo-DCs. Low-dose lenalidomide was given daily as an adjuvant at a dose of 2.5 mg from start of vaccination, for four weeks, and then escalated to 5 mg daily until week 24 (cohort I). The next five patients were treated in the same way but also received 300 mg/m2 CTX at day -3 and GM-CSF sc day 1-4 (cohort II). Clinical and immune effects of the vaccination were evaluated at regular time intervals for 1 year. A vaccine-induced immune response was defined as a ≥ 2-fold increase compared to pre-immunization values in either 3H-thymidine incorporation (proliferation) assay or ELISpot assay as described (Palma et al, CII 2012). Changes in the numbers of lymphocyte subpopulations including regulatory T cells (Tregs) as well as in T-cells expressing activation (CD69, CD137) and regulatory markers (CD103) were also evaluated. Results. To date, the 8 first included patients have completed treatment as planned and passed study week 52. The remaining 2 patients are between study week 24 and 52. No adverse events (AE) > grade 2 have been observed with the exception of one patient who had grade 3 hemolysis (AIHA) at study week 6 (cohort I) and one patient who had grade 4 thrombocytopenia at study week 5 (cohort II). AIHA was treated with steroids and lenalidomide was temporarily withdrawn for 4 weeks. The grade 4 thrombocytopenia required a 10 weeks withdraw of lenalidomide, upon which the thrombocytopenia resolved to grade 1. A decrease in the lymphocyte count fulfilling the criteria for partial response (clinical PR) was seen in 5 patients during lenalidomide treatment (one in cohort I and four in cohort II), but the lymphocyte count increased again to pre-vaccination levels at withdrawal of lenalidomide at week 24. Vaccine-induced immune responses were noted in 4/5 patients in cohort I and in 2/5 patients in cohort II. An inverse correlation between Tregs numbers and proliferation assay values was observed (r = -0.46, p=0.0015) i.e. high proliferative response was associated with low Tregs count. Changes in T cells expressing activation markers (CD69 and CD137) as well as the regulatory marker CD103 were also observed. Summary/conclusions. This is the first study on lenalidomide as an immunomodulatory agent in tumor vaccination. The results indicate that immunization of CLL patients with autologous tumor-loaded DCs combined with low-dose lenalidomide induced specific immune responses in CLL patients. Lenalidomide as a low-dose immune adjuvance had acceptable tolerability. This therapeutic approach should be explored further to define an optimal combination of vaccination schedule, lenalidomide dose and combination with other immunomodulatory agents interfering with the tumor-microenvironment with the aim to induce a potent immune response with a clinical impact. Disclosures Off Label Use: Lenalidomide is used as an adjuvant in this CLL vaccination study. Österborg:Celgene: DMC memeber of Celgene-initiated phase 3 trials Other.


2002 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 727-730 ◽  
Author(s):  
Klaus J. Erb ◽  
Claudia Trujillo ◽  
Mike Fugate ◽  
Heidrun Moll

ABSTRACT Infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis continues to be one of the major global health threats. Strong mycobacterium-specific Th1 immune responses correlate with protection, and decreased Th1 responses correlate with disease progression. In contrast, the impact of Th2 responses on the development of protective immune responses to mycobacteria remains unclear. To analyze whether ongoing Th2 responses present in the lung influence the development of a protective Th1 immune response to mycobacteria, we coinfected mice with the helminth Nippostrongylus brasiliensis and Mycobacterium bovis BCG. We found that the T cells from the lymph nodes of coinfected mice secreted significantly less gamma interferon than did the T cells from mice infected with M. bovis BCG after in vitro stimulation with purified protein from M. tuberculosis when 108 CFU of M. bovis BCG were used for the infection. This result indicates that the helminth infection reduced the Th1 immune response to the mycobacteria in the lung. However, mycobacterial clearance was not delayed in the coinfected animals. Importantly, the infection with BCG after the helminth infection did not reduce the helminth-induced Th2 response in the lung, ruling out the possibility that the lack of a reduction in bacterial clearance in the coinfected mice was due to a downmodulation of the helminth-induced Th2 response. Taken together, our results suggest that ongoing Th2 responses in the lung do not necessarily lead to increased susceptibility to mycobacterial infection.


2017 ◽  
Vol 114 (49) ◽  
pp. E10568-E10577 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anton Götz ◽  
Mei San Tang ◽  
Maureen C. Ty ◽  
Charles Arama ◽  
Aissata Ongoiba ◽  
...  

Dendritic cells (DCs) are activated by pathogens to initiate and shape immune responses. We found that the activation of DCs by Plasmodium falciparum, the main causative agent of human malaria, induces a highly unusual phenotype by which DCs up-regulate costimulatory molecules and secretion of chemokines, but not of cytokines typical of inflammatory responses (IL-1β, IL-6, IL-10, TNF). Similar results were obtained with DCs obtained from malaria-naïve US donors and malaria-experienced donors from Mali. Contact-dependent cross-talk between the main DC subsets, plasmacytoid and myeloid DCs (mDCs) was necessary for increased chemokine and IFN-α secretion in response to the parasite. Despite the absence of inflammatory cytokine secretion, mDCs incubated with P. falciparum-infected erythrocytes activated antigen-specific naïve CD4+ T cells to proliferate and secrete Th1-like cytokines. This unexpected response of human mDCs to P. falciparum exhibited a transcriptional program distinct from a classical LPS response, pointing to unique P. falciparum-induced activation pathways that may explain the uncharacteristic immune response to malaria.


2021 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tian-Yu Lei ◽  
Ying-Ze Ye ◽  
Xi-Qun Zhu ◽  
Daniel Smerin ◽  
Li-Juan Gu ◽  
...  

AbstractThrough considerable effort in research and clinical studies, the immune system has been identified as a participant in the onset and progression of brain injury after ischaemic stroke. Due to the involvement of all types of immune cells, the roles of the immune system in stroke pathology and associated effects are complicated. Past research concentrated on the functions of monocytes and neutrophils in the pathogenesis of ischaemic stroke and tried to demonstrate the mechanisms of tissue injury and protection involving these immune cells. Within the past several years, an increasing number of studies have elucidated the vital functions of T cells in the innate and adaptive immune responses in both the acute and chronic phases of ischaemic stroke. Recently, the phenotypes of T cells with proinflammatory or anti-inflammatory function have been demonstrated in detail. T cells with distinctive phenotypes can also influence cerebral inflammation through various pathways, such as regulating the immune response, interacting with brain-resident immune cells and modulating neurogenesis and angiogenesis during different phases following stroke. In view of the limited treatment options available following stroke other than tissue plasminogen activator therapy, understanding the function of immune responses, especially T cell responses, in the post-stroke recovery period can provide a new therapeutic direction. Here, we discuss the different functions and temporal evolution of T cells with different phenotypes during the acute and chronic phases of ischaemic stroke. We suggest that modulating the balance between the proinflammatory and anti-inflammatory functions of T cells with distinct phenotypes may become a potential therapeutic approach that reduces the mortality and improves the functional outcomes and prognosis of patients suffering from ischaemic stroke.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexandra J. Spencer ◽  
Paul F. McKay ◽  
Sandra Belij-Rammerstorfer ◽  
Marta Ulaszewska ◽  
Cameron D. Bissett ◽  
...  

AbstractSeveral vaccines have demonstrated efficacy against SARS-CoV-2 mediated disease, yet there is limited data on the immune response induced by heterologous vaccination regimens using alternate vaccine modalities. Here, we present a detailed description of the immune response, in mice, following vaccination with a self-amplifying RNA (saRNA) vaccine and an adenoviral vectored vaccine (ChAdOx1 nCoV-19/AZD1222) against SARS-CoV-2. We demonstrate that antibody responses are higher in two-dose heterologous vaccination regimens than single-dose regimens. Neutralising titres after heterologous prime-boost were at least comparable or higher than the titres measured after homologous prime boost vaccination with viral vectors. Importantly, the cellular immune response after a heterologous regimen is dominated by cytotoxic T cells and Th1+ CD4 T cells, which is superior to the response induced in homologous vaccination regimens in mice. These results underpin the need for clinical trials to investigate the immunogenicity of heterologous regimens with alternate vaccine technologies.


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