scholarly journals Long-term changes of spine dynamics and microglia after transient peripheral immune response triggered by LPS in vivo

2011 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 27 ◽  
Author(s):  
Satoru Kondo ◽  
Shinichi Kohsaka ◽  
Shigeo Okabe
Parasitology ◽  
1987 ◽  
Vol 94 (2) ◽  
pp. 243-254 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. K. Shaw ◽  
D. A. Erasmus

SUMMARYThe long-term, in vivo effects of a single, subcurative dose (200 mg/kg body weight of mouse) of praziquantel on the structure of adult Schistosoma mansoni and on the process and speed of tegumental repair are described. In both male and female worms praziquantel caused often extensive damage to the tegument, in the form of surface blebbings, swellings and lesions, and vacuolization and disruption of the subtegumental tissues. Repair of the drug-induced tegumental damage occurred slowly with partial and, more rarely, complete repair only being seen after 65 days post-treatment (p.t.), although signs of damage were still observed, particularly in male worms, at 100 days p.t. In contrast, repair of damage to the subtegumental/parenchymal tissues including the tegumental perikarya occurred relatively quickly, with the majority of worms examined appearing normal by 8–12 days p.t. The possible role(s) of the host immune response in relation to the speed of tegumental repair in vivo is discussed.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Sieweke ◽  
Sethuraman Subramanian ◽  
Clara Busch ◽  
Kaaweh Molawi ◽  
Laufey Geirsdottir ◽  
...  

Abstract Alveolar macrophages (AM) are tissue resident macrophages of the lung that can be expanded in culture, but it is unknown to what extent culture affects their in vivo identity. Here we show that long-term ex vivo expanded mouse AM (exAM) maintain core AM gene expression but show culture adaptations related to adhesion, metabolism and proliferation. Strikingly, even after several months in culture exAM reacquired full transcriptional and epigenetic identity upon transplantation into the lung and could self-maintain in the natural niche long-term. Changes in open chromatin regions (OCR) observed in culture were fully reversible in transplanted exAM (texAM) and resulted in a gene expression profile indistinguishable from resident AM. Our results demonstrate that long-term proliferation of AM in culture does not compromise cellular identity in vivo. The demonstrated robustness of exAM identity provides new opportunities for mechanistic analysis and highlights the therapeutic potential of ex vivo expanded macrophages.


2009 ◽  
Vol 2009 ◽  
pp. 30-30
Author(s):  
A Doeschl-Wilson ◽  
I Kyriazakis ◽  
L Galina-Pantoja

Porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome (PRRS) is an endemic pig disease in most European countries, causing respiratory distress, fever and growth reductions in growing pigs and increased litter mortality in sows. The disease is characterised by exceptionally long-term viral persistence within the host, a weak innate host immune response and delayed adaptive host immune response, and large between animal variation in the immune response (Murtaugh et al., 2004). Although numerous in-vitro and in-vivo studies produced valid insight into the fine details of the virus dynamics and its interaction with the host’s immune response, several fundamental questions concerning the role of diverse immune components and host genetics remain unanswered. In this study mathematical models were developed to investigate the role of diverse processes caused by the virus or the immune response on the infection characteristics.


1989 ◽  
Vol 61 (1) ◽  
pp. 91-96 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. A. Lnenicka ◽  
H. L. Atwood

1. Previous studies have demonstrated that initial transmitter release, fatigability, and the morphology of identified crayfish neuromuscular synapses adapt to long-term changes in motoneuron impulse activity. 2. Experiments were performed to determine whether these long-term, adaptive alterations in neuromuscular synaptic physiology are triggered by changes in neuromuscular synaptic activity, muscle activity, or neuronal impulse activity. The fast closer excitor of the crayfish claw, a phasic motoneuron, was studied. Either the central or the peripheral region of the motoneuron was selectively stimulated in vivo by blocking impulse activity midway along the motor axon with localized application of tetrodotoxin and stimulating either central or distal to the blocked region. 3. Neither muscle activity nor transmitter release from the neuromuscular synapses was required to trigger the changes in synaptic physiology. Stimulation central to the block induced changes in neuromuscular transmission that included a long-lasting decrease in initial transmitter release and increased fatique resistance. 4. Because peripheral stimulation also produced decreased initial transmitter release, it appears that increased impulse activity in either region of the motoneuron can produce the synaptic changes. These results along with earlier findings suggest that neuronal depolarization induces adaptive, long-term changes in synapses. 5. These results are discussed in relation to findings at vertebrate and invertebrate synapses.


Stroke ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 50 (Suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Amy S Tsai ◽  
Ketura Berry ◽  
Maxime M Beneyto ◽  
Dyani Gaudilliere ◽  
Edward A Ganio ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
George R. Schade

More efficacious and less invasive treatment strategies are needed for renal carcinoma (RCC). One promising approach is the focused ultrasound (FUS) technique known as boiling histotripsy (BH). BH is capable of mechanically destroying renal tumors in vivo with negligible thermal effects. BH ablation of RCC has been associated with release of endogenous danger signals, altered cytokine milieu and inflammatory infiltrate shortly after treatment indicative of an immune response. Because immunotherapy remains the only therapy capable of inducing long-term disease remission in ~5% of patients with metastatic disease, we hypothesize that the systemic immune response triggered by BH may provide additional therapeutic benefit beyond the local treatment. This hypothesis will be tested in two aims: 1) determine if BH ablation of RCC stimulates a systemic anti-tumor immune response and 2) evaluate the long-term oncologic effects of BH ablation of RCC. We propose to treat RCC in the Eker rat with extracorporeal BH or sham FUS procedures. We will then characterize the immune response following BH vs. SHAM treatments and the oncologic impact of BH vs. SHAM treatment on both the targeted tumor, as well as non-treated tumors in both the ipsilateral and contralateral kidney. We believe the proposed study will demonstrate that BH treatment of RCC will stimulate an anti-tumor immune response and yield potential targets to improve this response. Ultimately, we hypothesize that this approach could improve outcomes of focal therapy and could lead to a clinically actionable combination FUS immunotherapy to improve response rates and outcomes for metastatic RCC


Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 108 (11) ◽  
pp. 201-201 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marina Deschamps ◽  
Patricia Mercier ◽  
Céline Pagneux ◽  
Jean-Marie Certoux ◽  
Eric Deconinck ◽  
...  

Abstract We performed a clinical trial of HS-tk-expressing gene-modified T cell (GMTC) infusion at time of geno-identical allo-BMT. Among 12 patients (pts) initially included, 4 are still alive, off immunosuppression, free of chronic graft-versus-host disease (GvHD). More than 9 years after BMT, circulating GMTC can be found in all 4 patient’s mononuclear cells (PBMC), as detected by HS-tk or NeoR quantitative PCR assays. Although a similar sensitivity for both assays, GMTC were detected at a lower level with the HS-tk vs NeoR PCR assay, suggesting HS-tk gene deletions. The aims of our study were to develop a molecular tool in order to precisely identify the areas of deletion, characterize the mechanism of deletion and determine if the deletions were present in the packaging cell line genome or occurred ex-vivo during GMTC preparation or subsequently in-vivo. PBMC, harvested from the 4 pts (70, 106, 67 & 76 months post BMT) were polyclonally expanded, G418-selected and cloned. Of 32 NeoR+ clones, 31 (12, 3, 2 and 14 clones for pts #6, 7, 8 & 9, respectively) were HS-tk PCR negative, confirming the presence of HS-tk transgene deletions in a large majority (31/32) of long-term circulating Neo-R expressing GMTC. By contrast, all clones generated from freshly produced GMTC were found to be both NeoR+/HS-tk+, excluding an impact of the cloning process. Using a newly designed PCR-based transgene “walking” method (from the NeoR gene to the 5′LTR), we identified, among the 31 NeoR+HS-tk- clones, 4 different deletions, each one patient specific, involving the total HS-tk transgene and including partial flanking SV40 or packaging signal y sequences. These newly identified deletions differed from the spliced HS-tk form previously described (Garin et al., Blood 2001). Junction deletion areas were sequenced and involved, for 3 out of 4 patients, homologue sequence motifs (CCGCCC, AATTC and GATC respectively for pt# 6, 7 & 8), suggesting recombination mechanisms within the transgene sequences. With the help of deletion-specific PCR assays, we then confirmed that each deletion was patient-specific and not detected in the 3 other pts. Using more sensitive deletion-specific (nested) PCR assays, no deletions within packaging cell line DNA were detected. Nevertheless, these patient-specific deletions were found in GMTC products, albeit at a very low frequency, prior to infusion at time of BMT as well as 1, 3 and 6 years post infusion, independently of GCV treatment or anti-HS-tk immune response. Lastly, by means of LAM-PCR, we determined that all the clones of a same patient carried the same patient-specific insertional site, demonstrating that all the G418-reselected/cloned T cells of a patient derived from the same original GMTC. Overall, we establish that patient-specific HS-tk gene deletions occur within the integrated retroviral sequence in GMTC prior to infusion; HS-tk gene deletions are found in almost all Neo-R expressing long term circulating GMTC, thus strongly in favour of a in vivo selection advantage, by escaping an anti- HS-tk immune response and/or GCV treatment and unique patient-specific HS-tk gene deletions and retroviral insertion site in GMTC capable of in-vitro expansion/cloning. This last finding suggests an extremely rare initial gene deletion event and/or a possible in vivo growth/survival advantage of rare GMTC clones.


Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 2596-2596
Author(s):  
Li Liu ◽  
Bradley S. Fletcher

Abstract Gene therapy in adult hemophilia A mice is known to generate a robust immune response against the newly produced FVIII protein. This phenomenon has been extensively reported for both viral and non-viral vectors. T cell activation promotes the proliferation of B cells that produce antibodies against FVIII (inhibitors) leading to a loss of circulating FVIII protein and activity. Approaches to attenuate this immune response have included the use of cytotoxic chemotherapeutic agents (such as cyclophosphamide) or the use of antibodies or soluble fusion proteins that prevent T cell activation (such as the fusion protein between the cytotoxic T lymphocyte-associated antigen 4 and the immunoglobulin heavy chain, CTLA-4-Ig). Recently, the mechanism by which CTLA-4-Ig exerts its effect has been elucidated and is thought to involve tryptophan catabolism by upregulation of the enzyme indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO). Catabolites of tryptophan degradation, such as kynurenine, have been shown to block T cell proliferation and promote T cell apoptosis. Here we report that hydrodynamic co-administration of Sleeping Beauty transposons encoding both FVIII and IDO are able to attenuate, but not fully block, inhibitor formation. With this approach, long term expression of FVIII at therapeutic levels (∼10% of normal) can be achieved in adult animals without the need for additional immune suppression. Only in animals receiving FVIII and IDO together can we detect FVIII protein by western blot at 24 weeks. Serum kynurenine levels are slightly elevated after gene delivery in animals receiving the IDO gene, but fall to within normal levels by 24 weeks. These results suggest that modulation of the levels of tryptophan catabolites in vivo can influence the formation of FVIII inhibitors.


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