The Journal of immunology : official journal of the American Association of Immunologists
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Treatment of T cells with the cysteine protease bromelain has been widely used to enhance the binding of human T cells to human E (autologous E rosettes) and has been shown to remove surface T cell CD44 molecules. Ligand binding to CD44 has been shown to markedly augment T cell activation. To study the activation potential of bromelain-treated CD44 T cells, we have compared the proliferation of sham- and bromelain-treated normal human PBMC to mitogenic CD2 mAb. ⋯ These data demonstrate that expression of portions of the extracellular domains of the CD44, CD45RA, E2/MIC2, CD6, CD7, CD8, and Leu 8/LAM1 surface molecules are not required for CD2 activation of human T cells. Rather, the removal of these surface molecules by bromelain is associated with enhanced T cell-monocyte aggregation and enhanced CD2-mediated T cell activation. Taken together with data that CD44, E2/MIC2, CD6, and CD7 mAb inhibit CD2/lymphocyte function-associated Ag-3-mediated cellular interactions and also augment CD2-mediated triggering of T cells, these data suggest that members of the bromelain-sensitive group of surface molecules may comprise a set of CD2-associated adhesion ligands that acts in concert to modulate human T cell activation.
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Astrocyte-enriched populations were established from human embryonic brain analyzed for their ability to synthesize cytokines potentially relevant for mechanisms of inflammation and immunity in the brain. Unstimulated astrocytes did not secrete significant IL-6, IL-8, macrophage CSF (M-CSF), granulocyte-macrophage CSF (GM-CSF), or granulocyte-CSF (G-CSF), as determined by specific ELISA and/or bioassay. With the exception of M-CSF mRNA, transcripts for the above factors were not detected in unstimulated astrocytes. ⋯ No IL-6, M-CSF, GM-CSF, G-CSF, or IL-8 were induced by IL-1 beta or TNF-alpha in early primary cultures, which mainly contain undifferentiated neuronal/glial progenitor cells. These studies demonstrate for the first time the production of multiple cytokines by normal human astrocytes stimulated in culture by IL-1 beta and TNF-alpha. The capacity of human astrocytes to synthesize and release cytokines active on hemolymphopoietic cells supports the concept that these cells play an important role in the regulation of inflammatory and immune responses in a variety of brain pathologies.
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B cell repertoire changes that characterize systemic autoimmune disease may be linked to an acceleration of normal immune aging. To examine this issue, the repertoires expressed by lupus-prone and geriatric normal mice were compared. An ELISA-spot assay was used to identify and quantitate individual lymphocytes secreting antibodies reactive with a panel of five autoantigens and three conventional Ag. ⋯ As both normal and autoimmune mice grew older, they expressed repertoires that increasingly diverged from those of other members of the same strain--a process whose onset and rate of development was accelerated in lupus-prone animals. By analyzing B cells from individual MRL/lpr mice at multiple time points, we found that 1) autoreactivity developed over a specific time period, 2) individual animals developed increased responsiveness against different autoantigens, and 3) this increased responsiveness persisted for life. These results suggest that the repertoires of adult autoimmune mice are generated and maintained by a process of continuous (auto)antigenic stimulation similar to that associated with normal immune aging.
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We studied whether abnormalities in epidermal APC could be responsible for intracutaneous T cell activation in atopic dermatitis (AD). In the absence of added Ag, patients' peripheral blood T cells demonstrated significantly increased proliferation to their autologous lesional epidermal cells (mean +/- SEM = 19,726 +/- 9,754 cpm [3H]TdR uptake) relative to epidermal cells from uninvolved AD skin (2179 +/- 697 cpm) (n = 10) (p = 0.0001, log transformed data). AD T cell proliferative responses to autologous epidermal cells were dependent upon cells expressing HLA-DR, CD1a, and CD36, and not upon keratinocytes or their cytokines. ⋯ Addition of anti-CD1b to cocultures of AD epidermal cells and autologous T lymphocytes augmented T cell activation, suggesting that the expression of CD1b by AD Langerhans cells may represent over expression of a molecule functionally linked to the enhanced T cell stimulatory capacity of these cells. Thus, stimulatory signals for T cells contained within AD epidermis are carried by cells in an abnormal differentiation state as indicated by expression of phenotypic characteristics of both epidermal and dermal antigen presenting cells (HLA-DR+, CD1a+, CD1b+, CD36+). We propose that activation of autologous T cells by an altered cutaneous APC population may represent a mechanism for the hyperactive and disordered cell-mediated immune response that characterizes the dermatitic lesions of AD.
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Borna disease is a virus-induced, immune-mediated encephalomyelitis based on a delayed-type hypersensitivity reaction. The severity of clinical symptoms after intracerebral infection of rats with Borna disease virus was reduced after treatment with transforming growth factor (TGF-beta 2). Intraperitoneal injection of the recombinant molecule, rTGF-beta 2, started on the day of infection at a dose of either 1 micrograms given every day or every other day for 8 consecutive days or 2 micrograms every third day, was found to result in the absence of typical Borna disease symptoms at 14 days after infection in most of the TGF-beta-treated rats, a time point at which all infected control animals not treated with rTGF-beta 2 showed distinct signs of Borna disease. ⋯ Furthermore, the expression of MHC class II Ag was significantly reduced in the brain of rTGF-beta 2 treated Borna disease virus-infected rats, whereas MHC class I Ag expression was not. Most treated animals showed a reduction of Borna disease virus-specific serum antibodies, the result of an inhibition of the IgG response. The results presented here suggest a distinct influence of rTGF-beta 2 on T cell-mediated immune functions during the early phase of Borna disease virus-induced encephalomyelitis.