首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
We investigated the effect of CD137 costimulatory blockade in the development of murine acute and chronic graft-vs-host diseases (GVHD). The administration of anti-CD137 ligand (anti-CD137L) mAb at the time of GVHD induction ameliorated the lethality of acute GVHD, but enhanced IgE and anti-dsDNA IgG autoantibody production in chronic GVHD. The anti-CD137L mAb treatment efficiently inhibited donor CD8(+) T cell expansion and IFN-gamma expression by CD8(+) T cells in both GVHD models and CD8(+) T cell-mediated cytotoxicity against host-alloantigen in acute GVHD. However, a clear inhibition of donor CD4(+) T cell expansion and activation has not been observed. On the contrary, in chronic GVHD, the number of CD4(+) T cells producing IL-4 was enhanced by anti-CD137L mAb treatment. This suggests that the reduction of CD8(+) T cells producing IFN-gamma promotes Th2 cell differentiation and may result in exacerbation of chronic GVHD. Our results highlight the effective inactivation of CD8(+) T cells and the lesser effect on CD4(+) T cell inactivation by CD137 blockade. Intervention of the CD137 costimulatory pathway may be beneficial for some selected diseases in which CD8(+) T cells are major effector or pathogenic cells. Otherwise, a combinatorial approach will be required for intervention of CD4(+) T cell function.  相似文献   

2.
The complete repertoire of cellular and molecular determinants that influence graft-vs-host disease (GVHD) is not known. Using a well-established murine model of GVHD (B6-->bm12 mice), we sought to elucidate the role of the donor non-T cell compartment and molecular determinants therein in the pathogenesis of GVHD. In this model the acute GVHD-inducing effects of purified B6 wild-type (wt) CD4(+) T cells was inhibited by wt non-T cells in a dose-dependent manner. Paradoxically, unlike the chronic GVHD phenotype observed in bm12 mice transplanted with B6wt unfractionated splenocytes, bm12 recipients of B6ccr2-null unfractionated splenocytes developed acute GVHD and died of IFN-gamma-mediated bone marrow aplasia. This switch from chronic to acute GVHD was associated with increased target organ infiltration of activated CD4(+) T cells as well as enhanced expression of Th1/Th2 cytokines, chemokines, and the antiapoptotic factor bfl1. In vitro, ccr2(-/-) CD4(+) T cells in unfractionated splenocytes underwent significantly less activation-induced cell death than B6wt CD4(+) T cells, providing another potential mechanistic basis along with enhanced expression of bfl1 for the increased numbers of activated T cells in target organs of B6ccr2(-/-) splenocyte-->bm12 mice. Collectively, these findings have important clinical implications, as they implicate the donor non-T cell compartment as a critical regulator of GVHD and suggest that ccr2 expression in this cellular compartment may be an important molecular determinant of activation-induced cell death and GVHD pathogenesis.  相似文献   

3.
CD40/CD40L signaling promotes both B cell and CTL responses in vivo, the latter being beneficial in tumor models. Because CTL may also limit autoreactive B cell expansion in lupus, we asked whether an agonist CD40 mAb would exacerbate lupus due to B cell stimulation or would improve lupus due to CTL promotion. These studies used an induced model of lupus, the parent-into-F1 model in which transfer of DBA/2 splenocytes into B6D2F1 mice induces chronic lupus-like graft-vs-host disease (GVHD). Although agonist CD40 mAb treatment of DBA-->F1 mice initially exacerbated B cell expansion, it also strongly promoted donor CD8 T cell engraftment and cytolytic activity such that by 10 days host B cells were eliminated consistent with an accelerated acute GVHD. CD40 stimulation bypassed the requirement for CD4 T cell help for CD8 CTL possibly by licensing dendritic cells (DC) as shown by the following: 1) greater initial activation of donor CD8 T cells, but not CD4 T cells; 2) earlier activation of host DC; 3) host DC expansion that was CD8 dependent and CD4 independent; and 4) induction of acute GVHD using CD4-depleted purified DBA CD8+ T cells. A single dose of CD40 mAb improved lupus-like renal disease at 12 wk, but may not suffice for longer periods consistent with a need for continuing CD8 CTL surveillance. These results demonstrate that in the setting of lupus-like CD4 T cell-driven B cell hyperactivity, CTL promotion is both feasible and beneficial and the CTL-promoting properties of CD40 stimulation outweigh the B cell-stimulatory properties.  相似文献   

4.
To address whether a functional dichotomy exists between CD80 and CD86 in naive T cell activation in vivo, we administered anti-CD80 or CD86 blocking mAb alone or in combination to mice with parent-into-F(1) graft-vs-host disease (GVHD). In this model, the injection of naive parental T cells into unirradiated F(1) mice results in either a Th1 cytokine-driven, cell-mediated immune response (acute GVHD) or a Th2 cytokine-driven, Ab-mediated response (chronic GVHD) in the same F(1) recipient. Combined CD80/CD86 blockade beginning at the time of donor cell transfer mimicked previous results seen with CTLA4Ig and completely abrogated either acute or chronic GVHD by preventing the activation and maturation of donor CD4(+) T cells as measured by a block in acquisition of memory marker phenotype and cytokine production. Similar results were seen with selective CD86 blockade; however, the degree of CD4 inhibition was always less than that seen with combined CD80/CD86 blockade. A more striking effect was seen with selective CD80 blockade in that chronic GVHD was converted to acute GVHD. This effect was associated with the induction of Th1 cytokine production, donor CD8(+) T cell activation, and development of antihost CTL. The similarity of this effect to that reported for selective CTLA4 blockade suggests that CD80 is a critical ligand for CTLA4 in mediating the down-regulation of Th1 responses and CD8(+) T cell activation. In contrast, CD86 is critical for the activation of naive CD4(+) T cells in either a Th1 or a Th2 cytokine-mediated response.  相似文献   

5.
CD154, one of the most extensively studied T cell costimulation molecules, represents a promising therapeutic target in organ transplantation. However, the immunological mechanisms of CD154 blockade that result in allograft protection, particularly in the context of alloreactive CD4/CD8 T cell activation, remain to be elucidated. We now report on the profound inhibition of alloreactive CD8(+) T cells by CD154 blockade via both CD4-dependent and CD4-independent activation pathways. Using CD154 KO recipients that are defective in alloreactive CD8(+) T cell activation and unable to reject cardiac allografts, we were able to restore CD8 activation and graft rejection by adoptively transferring CD4(+) or CD8(+) T cells from wild-type syngeneic donor mice. CD4-independent activation of alloreactive CD8(+) T cells was confirmed following treatment of wild-type recipients with CD4-depleting mAb, and by using CD4 KO mice. Comparable levels of alloreactive CD8(+) T cell activation was induced by allogenic skin engraftment in both animal groups. CD154 blockade inhibited CD4-independent alloreactive CD8(+) T cell activation. Furthermore, we analyzed whether disruption of CD154 signaling affects cardiac allograft survival in skin-sensitized CD4 KO and CD8 KO recipients. A better survival rate was observed consistently in CD4 KO, as compared with CD8 KO recipients. Our results document CD4-dependent and CD4-independent activation pathways for alloreactive CD8(+) T cells that are both sensitive to CD154 blockade. Indeed, CD154 blockade was effective in preventing CD8(+) T cell-mediated cardiac allograft rejection.  相似文献   

6.
Graft-vs-host disease (GVHD) is caused by a donor T cell anti-host reaction that evolves over several weeks to months, suggesting a requirement for persistent alloreactive T cells. Using the C3H.SW anti-C57BL/6 (B6) mouse model of human GVHD directed against minor histocompatibility Ags, we found that donor CD8(+) T cells secreting high levels of IFN-gamma in GVHD B6 mice receiving C3H.SW naive CD8(+) T cells peaked by day 14, declined by day 28 after transplantation, and persisted thereafter, corresponding to the kinetics of a memory T cell response. Donor CD8(+) T cells recovered on day 42 after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation expressed the phenotype of CD44(high)CD122(high)CD25(low), were able to homeostatically survive in response to IL-2, IL-7, and IL-15 and rapidly proliferated upon restimulation with host dendritic cells. Both allogeneic effector memory (CD44(high)CD62L(low)) and central memory (CD44(high)CD62L(high)) CD8(+) T cells were identified in B6 mice with ongoing GVHD, with effector memory CD8(+) T cells as the dominant (>80%) population. Administration of these allogeneic memory CD8(+) T cells into secondary B6 recipients caused virulent GVHD. A similar allogeneic memory CD4(+) T cell population with the ability to mediate persistent GVHD was also identified in BALB/b mice receiving minor histocompatibility Ag-mismatched B6 T cell-replete bone marrow transplantation. These results indicate that allogeneic memory T cells are generated in vivo during GVH reactions and are able to cause GVHD, resulting in persistent host tissue injury. Thus, in vivo blockade of both alloreactive effector and memory T cell-mediated host tissue injury may prove to be valuable for GVHD prevention and treatment.  相似文献   

7.
YD Joo  WS Lee  HJ Won  SM Lee  HR Kim  JK Park  SG Park  IW Choi  I Choi  SK Seo 《Cytokine》2012,60(1):277-283
The immunoregulatory effects of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) on allogeneic peripheral blood cell transplantation (PBCT) have been demonstrated to reduce acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). However, the underlying mechanism is still not clear. In this study, we focused on the direct effects of G-CSF on donor CD4(+) T cell responses after transplantation. We observed that lethally irradiated B6D2F1 recipient mice that are transplanted with CD4(+) T cells from G-CSF-treated B6 donors showed mild attenuations in severity and mortality compared with recipients transplanted with PBS-treated CD4(+) T cells. Notably, skin GVHD was significantly reduced, but no such reduction was observed in other organs. Although there was no difference with respect to alloreactive expansion or Foxp3(+) Treg induction, the use of G-CSF-treated CD4(+) T cells significantly reduced the numbers of IL-17-producing and RORγt-expressing cells in the secondary lymphoid organs of allogeneic recipients after transplantation compared with the use of the control cells. Finally, we found that the suppressor of cytokine signaling-3 (SOCS3) expression in G-CSF-treated donor CD4(+) T cells was much higher than that in control CD4(+) T cells. Our results demonstrate that the inhibition of Th17 cell differentiation by SOCS3 induction is associated with the immunoregulatory role of G-CSF in CD4(+) T cell-mediated acute GVHD.  相似文献   

8.
Donor CD8(+) T cells play a critical role in mediating graft-vs-leukemia (GVL) activity, but also induce graft-vs-host disease (GVHD) in recipients conditioned with total body irradiation (TBI). In this study, we report that injections of donor C57BL/6 (H-2(b)) or FVB/N (H-2(q)) CD8(+) T with bone marrow cells induced chimerism and eliminated BCL1 leukemia/lymphoma cells without clinical signs of GVHD in anti-CD3-conditioned BALB/c (H-2(d)) recipients, but induced lethal GVHD in TBI-conditioned recipients. Using in vivo and ex vivo bioluminescent imaging, we observed that donor CD8(+) T cells expanded rapidly and infiltrated GVHD target tissues in TBI-conditioned recipients, but donor CD8(+) T cell expansion in anti-CD3-conditioned recipients was confined to lymphohematological tissues. This confinement was associated with lack of up-regulated expression of alpha(4)beta(7) integrin and chemokine receptors (i.e., CXCR3) on donor CD8(+) T cells. In addition, donor CD8(+) T cells in anti-CD3-conditioned recipients were rendered unresponsive, anergic, Foxp3(+), or type II cytotoxic T phenotype. Those donor CD8(+) T cells showed strong suppressive activity in vitro and mediated GVL activity without clinical signs of GVHD in TBI-conditioned secondary recipients. These results indicate that anti-CD3 conditioning separates GVL activity from GVHD via confining donor CD8(+) T cell expansion to host lymphohemological tissues as well as tolerizing them in the host.  相似文献   

9.
T cells play an essential role in driving humoral autoimmunity in lupus. Molecules such as TRAIL exhibit strong T cell modulatory effects and are up-regulated in lupus, raising the possibility that they may influence disease severity. To address this possibility, we examined the role of TRAIL expression on pathogenic T cells in an induced model of murine lupus, the parent-into-F(1) (P-->F(1)) model of chronic graft-vs-host disease (GVHD), using wild-type or TRAIL-deficient donor T cells. Results were compared with mice undergoing suppressive acute GVHD. Although chronic GVHD mice exhibited less donor T cell TRAIL up-regulation and IFN-alpha-inducible gene expression than acute GVHD mice, donor CD4(+) T cell TRAIL expression in chronic GVHD was essential for sustaining effector CD4(+) Th cell numbers, for sustaining help to B cells, and for more severe lupus-like renal disease development. Conversely, TRAIL expression on donor CD8(+) T cells had a milder, but significant down-regulatory effect on CTL effector function, affecting the perforin/granzyme pathway and not the Fas ligand pathway. These results indicate that, in this model, T cell-expressed TRAIL exacerbates lupus by the following: 1) positively regulating CD4(+) Th cell numbers, thereby sustaining T cell help for B cells, and 2) to a lesser degree by negatively regulating perforin-mediated CD8(+) CTL killing that could potentially eliminate activated autoreactive B cells.  相似文献   

10.
CD4(+) alpha beta T cells from either normal C57BL/6 (B6) or MHC-II-deficient (A alpha(-/-) or A beta(-/-)) B6 donor mice engrafted into congenic immunodeficient RAG1(-/-) B6 hosts induced an aggressive inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Furthermore, CD4(+) T cells from CD1d(-/-) knockout (KO) B6 donor mice but not those from MHC-I(-/-) (homozygous transgenic mice deficient for beta(2)-microglobulin) KO B6 mice induced a colitis in RAG(-/-) hosts. Abundant numbers of in vivo activated (CD69(high)CD44(high)CD28(high)) NK1(+) and NK1(-) CD4(+) T cells were isolated from the inflamed colonic lamina propria (cLP) of transplanted mice with IBD that produced large amounts of TNF-alpha and IFN-gamma but low amounts of IL-4 and IL-10. IBD-associated cLP Th1 CD4(+) T cell populations were polyclonal and MHC-II-restricted when derived from normal B6 donor mice, but oligoclonal and apparently MHC-I-restricted when derived from MHC-II-deficient (A alpha(-/-) or A beta(-/-)) B6 donor mice. cLP CD4(+) T cell populations from homozygous transgenic mice deficient for beta(2)-microglobulin KO B6 donor mice engrafted into RAG(-/-) hosts were Th2 and MHC-II restricted. These data indicate that MHC-II-dependent as well as MHC-II-independent CD4(+) T cells can induce a severe and lethal IBD in congenic, immunodeficient hosts, but that the former need the latter to express its IBD-inducing potential.  相似文献   

11.
ICOS, a CD28 family member expressed on activated CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells, plays important roles in T cell activation and effector function. Here we studied the role of ICOS in graft-vs-host disease (GVHD) mediated by CD4(+) or CD8(+) T cells in allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. In comparison of wild-type and ICOS-deficient T cells, we found that recipients of ICOS(-/-) CD4(+) T cells exhibited significantly less GVHD morbidity and delayed mortality. ICOS(-/-) CD4(+) T cells had no defect in expansion, but expressed significantly less Fas ligand and produced significantly lower levels of IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha. Thus, ICOS(-/-) CD4(+) T cells were impaired in effector functions that lead to GVHD. In contrast, recipients of ICOS(-/-) CD8(+) T cells exhibited significantly enhanced GVHD morbidity and accelerated mortality. In the absence of ICOS signaling, either using ICOS-deficient donors or ICOS ligand-deficient recipients, the levels of expansion and Tc1 cytokine production of CD8(+) T cells were significantly increased. The level of expansion was inversely correlated with the level of apoptosis, suggesting that increased ability of ICOS(-/-) CD8(+) T cells to induce GVHD resulted from the enhanced survival and expansion of those cells. Our findings indicate that ICOS has paradoxical effects on the regulation of alloreactive CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells in GVHD.  相似文献   

12.
Infusion of donor antiviral T cells can provide protective immunity for recipients of hemopoietic progenitor cell transplants, but may cause graft-vs-host disease (GVHD). Current methods of separating antiviral T cells from the alloreactive T cells that produce GVHD are neither routine nor rapid. In a model of lethal murine CMV (MCMV) infection following MHC-mismatched bone marrow transplantation, infusion of MCMV-immune donor lymphocytes pretreated with the DNA cross-linking compound amotosalen prevented MCMV lethality without producing GVHD. Although 95% of mice receiving 30 x 10(6) pretreated donor lymphocytes survived beyond day +100 without MCMV disease or GVHD, all mice receiving equivalent numbers of untreated lymphocytes rapidly died of GVHD. In vitro, amotosalen blocked T cell proliferation without suppressing MCMV peptide-induced IFN-gamma production by MCMV-primed CD8(+) T cells. In vivo, pretreated lymphocytes reduced hepatic MCMV load by 4-log(10) and promoted full hemopoietic chimerism. Amotosalen-treated, MCMV tetramer-positive memory (CD44(high)) CD8(+) T cells persisted to day +100 following infusion, and expressed IFN-gamma when presented with viral peptide. Pretreated T cells were effective at preventing MCMV lethality over a wide range of concentrations. Thus, amotosalen treatment rapidly eliminates the GVHD activity of polyclonal T cells, while preserving long-term antiviral and graft facilitation effects, and may be clinically useful for routine adoptive immunotherapy.  相似文献   

13.
Alloantigen expression on host APCs is essential to initiate graft-vs-host disease (GVHD); however, critical APC subset remains to be elucidated. We compared the ability of dendritic cells (DCs) and B cells to initiate acute GVHD by an add-back study of MHC class II-expressing APCs (II(+/+)) into MHC class II-deficient (II(-/-)) mice that were resistant to CD4-dependent GVHD. Injection of host-derived, but not donor-derived, II(+/+) DCs or host-derived II(+/+) B cells, was sufficient to break GVHD resistance of II(-/-) mice and induced lethal acute GVHD. By contrast, host-derived II(+/+) B cells, both naive and LPS stimulated, failed to induce activation or tolerance of donor CD4(+) T cells. Similarly, in a model of CD8-dependent GVHD across MHC class I mismatch injection of allogeneic DCs, but not B cells, induced robust proliferation of donor CD8(+) T cells and broke GVHD resistance of chimeric recipients in which APCs were syngeneic to donors. These results demonstrate that host-derived DCs are critical in priming donor CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells to cause GVHD, and selective targeting of host DCs may be a promising strategy to prevent GVHD.  相似文献   

14.
Interleukin-7 has been shown to enhance T cell reconstitution after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation, in part, by expansion of mature donor T cells, but whether IL-7 also exacerbates graft-vs-host disease (GVHD) remains unresolved. To address this issue, we examined the effect of IL-7 on GVHD induction using a well-defined murine GVHD model (B6-->B6AF1/J). Administration of IL-7 to nonirradiated B6AF1/J recipients of B6 T cells resulted in expansion of splenic donor CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells and increased GVHD mortality. In contrast, administration of IL-7 on the same schedule failed to increase GVHD mortality in either sublethally or lethally irradiated animals that received graded doses of T cells designed to induce varying degrees of GVHD severity. Moreover, IL-7 failed to increase the number of alloreactive T cells when examined in a murine model (B6-->BALB.B) that allowed for direct quantitation of graft-vs-host-reactive T cells. The combination of irradiation and transplantation of alloreactive donor T cells resulted in significantly increased levels of endogenous splenic IL-7 mRNA when compared with nonirradiated transplanted animals, providing a potential explanation for why exogenous IL-7 did not increase GVHD severity in these mice. We conclude that host conditioning modulates the ability of exogenous IL-7 to exacerbate GVHD and that this occurs through induction of endogenous IL-7 production.  相似文献   

15.
CD30, a TNFR family member, is expressed on activated CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells and B cells and is a marker of Hodgkin's lymphoma; its ligand, CD30L (CD153) is expressed by activated CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells, B cells, and macrophages. Signaling via CD30 can lead to proliferation or cell death. CD30-deficient (-/-) mice have impaired thymic negative selection and increased autoreactivity. Although human alloreactive T cells preferentially reside within the CD30(+) T cell subset, implicating CD30 as a regulator of T cell immune responses, the role of CD30/CD153 in regulating graft-vs-host disease (GVHD) has not been reported. We used a neutralizing anti-CD153 mAb, CD30(-/-) donor mice, and generated CD153(-/-) recipient mice to analyze the effect of CD30/CD153 interaction on GVHD induction. Our data indicate that the CD30/CD153 pathway is a potent regulator of CD4(+), but not CD8(+), T cell-mediated GVHD. Although blocking CD30/CD153 interactions in vivo did not affect alloreactive CD4(+) T cell proliferation or apoptosis, a substantial reduction in donor CD4(+) T cell migration into the gastrointestinal tract was readily observed with lesser effects in other GVHD target organs. Blockade of the CD30/CD153 pathway represents a new approach for preventing CD4(+) T cell-mediated GVHD.  相似文献   

16.
In the DBA/2 --> unirradiated (C57BL/6 x DBA/2)F(1) model of chronic graft-vs-host disease (cGVHD), donor CD4(+) T cells play a critical role in breaking host B cell tolerance, while donor CD8(+) T cells are rapidly removed and the remaining cells fall into anergy. Previously we have demonstrated that in vivo ligation of GITR (glucocorticoid-induced TNF receptor-related gene) can activate donor CD8(+) T cells, subsequently converting the disease pattern from cGVHD to an acute form. In this study, we investigated the effect of an agonistic mAb against CD40 on cGVHD. Treatment of anti-CD40 mAb inhibited the production of anti-DNA IgG1 autoantibody and the development of glomerulonephritis. The inhibition of cGVHD occurred because anti-CD40 mAb prevented donor CD8(+) T cell anergy such that subsequently activated donor CD8(+) T cells deleted host CD4(+) T cells and host B cells involved in autoantibody production. Additionally, functionally activated donor CD8(+) T cells induced full engraftment of donor hematopoietic cells and exhibited an increased graft-vs-leukemia effect. However, induction of acute GVHD by donor CD8(+) T cells seemed to be not so apparent. Further CTL analysis indicated that there were lower levels of donor CTL activity against host cells in mice that received anti-CD40 mAb, compared with mice that received anti-GITR mAb. Taken together, our results suggest that a different intensity of donor CTL activity is required for removal of host hematopoietic cells, including leukemia vs induction of acute GVHD.  相似文献   

17.
Regulatory T cells (Tregs), in particular CD4(+) Foxp3(+) T cells, have been shown to play an important role in the maintenance of tolerance after allogeneic stem cell transplantation. In the current study, we have identified a population of CD8(+) Foxp3(+) T cells that are induced early during graft-versus-host disease (GVHD), constitute a significant percentage of the entire Treg population, and are present in all major GVHD target organs. These cells expressed many of the same cell surface molecules as found on CD4(+) Tregs and potently suppressed in vitro alloreactive T cell responses. Induction of these cells correlated positively with the degree of MHC disparity between donor and recipient and was significantly greater than that observed for CD4(+)-induced Tregs (iTregs) in nearly all tissue sites. Mice that lacked the ability to make both CD8(+) and CD4(+) iTregs had accelerated GVHD mortality compared with animals that were competent to make both iTreg populations. The absence of both iTreg populations was associated with significantly greater expansion of activated donor T cells and increased numbers of CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells that secreted IFN-γ and IL-17. The presence of CD8(+) iTregs, however, was sufficient to prevent increased GVHD mortality in the complete absence of CD4(+) Tregs, indicating at least one functional iTreg population was sufficient to prevent an exacerbation in GVHD severity, and that CD8(+) iTregs could compensate for CD4(+) iTregs. These studies define a novel population of CD8(+) Tregs that play a role in mitigating the severity of GVHD after allogeneic stem cell transplantation.  相似文献   

18.
Previous experimental studies have shown that acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) is associated with two waves of donor CD8(+) T cell expansion. In the current studies, we used in vivo bioluminescent imaging, in vivo BrdU labeling, and three different experimental GVHD systems to show that B7-H1 expression by recipient parenchymal cells controls the second wave of alloreactive donor CD8(+) T cell expansion and the associated second phase of GVHD. Loss of B7-H1 expression by parenchymal cells during the course of GVHD was associated with persistent proliferation of donor CD8(+) T cells in GVHD target tissues and continued tissue injury, whereas persistent expression of B7-H1 expression by parenchymal cells led to reduced proliferation of donor CD8(+) T cells in GVHD target tissues and resolution of GVHD. These studies demonstrate that parenchymal cell expression of B7-H1 is required for tolerizing infiltrating T cells and preventing the persistence of GVHD. Our results suggest that therapies designed to preserve or restore expression of B7-H1 expression by parenchymal tissues in the recipient could prevent or ameliorate GVHD in humans.  相似文献   

19.
TNF-TNFR2 interactions promote MHC class II-stimulated alloresponses while TNF-TNFR1 interactions promote MHC class I-stimulated alloresponses. The present studies were designed to evaluate whether TNF-TNFR2 interactions were involved in the in vivo generation of CD4(+) T cell-mediated intestinal graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) in the (C57BL/6J (hereafter called B6) --> B6 x B6.C-H-2(bm12) (bm12))F(1) GVHD model. Briefly, 5 x 10(6) splenic CD4(+) T lymphocytes from B6.TNFR2(-/-) or control B6 mice were transferred with 1--2 x 10(6) T cell-depleted B6 bone marrow cells (BMC) to irradiated MHC class II-disparate (bm12 x B6)F(1) mice. Weight loss, intestinal inflammation, and the surface expression of CD45RB (memory marker) on intestinal and splenic lymphocytes were assessed. IL-2 and IFN-alpha mRNA levels in intestinal lymphocytes were assessed by nuclease protection assays. A significant reduction in weight loss and intestinal inflammation was observed in recipients of the TNFR2(-/-)CD4(+) SpC. Similarly, a significant decrease was noted in T cell numbers and in CD45RB(low) (activated/memory) expression on intestinal but not CD4(+) T cells in recipients of TNFR2(-/-)CD4(+) spleen cells. IL-2 and IFN-alpha mRNA levels were reduced in the intestine in the recipients of TNFR2(-/-) splenic CD4(+) T cells. These results indicate that TNF-TNFR2 interactions are important for the development of intestinal inflammation and activation/differentiation of Th1 cytokine responses by intestinal lymphocytes in MHC class II-disparate GVHD while playing an insignificant role in donor T cell activation in the spleen.  相似文献   

20.
T cell upregulation of B7 molecules CD80 and CD86 limits T cell expansion in immunodeficient hosts; however, the relative roles of CD80 separate from CD86 on CD4 versus CD8 T cells in a normal immune system are not clear. To address this question, we used the parent-into-F1 (P→F1) murine model of graft-versus-host disease and transferred optimal and suboptimal doses of CD80 and/or CD86 knockout (KO) T cells into normal F1 hosts. Enhanced elimination of host B cells by KO T cells was observed only at suboptimal donor cell doses and was greatest for CD80 KO→F1 mice. Wild-type donor cells exhibited peak CD80 upregulation at day 10; CD80 KO donor cells exhibited greater peak (day 10) donor T cell proliferation and CD8 T cell effector CTL numbers versus wild-type→F1 mice. Fas or programmed cell death-1 upregulation was normal as was homeostatic contraction of CD80 KO donor cells from days 12-14. Mixing studies demonstrated that maximal host cell elimination was seen when both CD4 and CD8 T cells were CD80 deficient. These results indicate an important role for CD80 upregulation on Ag-activated CD4 and CD8 T cells in limiting expansion of CD8 CTL effectors as part of a normal immune response. Our results support further studies of therapeutic targeting of CD80 in conditions characterized by suboptimal CD8 effector responses.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号