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861
نتائج ل
"CD40L protein"
صنف حسب:
The atopic dermatitis blood signature is characterized by increases in inflammatory and cardiovascular risk proteins
2017
Beyond classic “allergic”/atopic comorbidities, atopic dermatitis (AD) emerges as systemic disease with increased cardiovascular risk. To better define serum inflammatory and cardiovascular risk proteins, we used an OLINK high-throughput proteomic assay to analyze moderate-to-severe AD (n = 59) compared to psoriasis (n = 22) and healthy controls (n = 18). Compared to controls, 10 proteins were increased in serum of both diseases, including Th1 (IFN-γ, CXCL9, TNF-β) and Th17 (CCL20) markers. 48 proteins each were uniquely upregulated in AD and psoriasis. Consistent with skin expression, AD serum showed up-regulation of Th2 (IL-13, CCL17, eotaxin-1/CCL11, CCL13, CCL4, IL-10), Th1 (CXCL10, CXCL11) and Th1/Th17/Th22 (IL-12/IL-23p40) responses. Surprisingly, some markers of atherosclerosis (fractalkine/CX3CL1, CCL8, M-CSF, HGF), T-cell development/activation (CD40L, IL-7, CCL25, IL-2RB, IL-15RA, CD6) and angiogenesis (VEGF-A) were significantly increased only in AD. Multiple inflammatory pathways showed stronger enrichment in AD than psoriasis. Several atherosclerosis mediators in serum (e.g. E-selectin, PI3/elafin, CCL7, IL-16) correlated with SCORAD, but not BMI. Also, AD inflammatory mediators (e.g. MMP12, IL-12/IL-23p40, CXCL9, CCL22, PI3/Elafin) correlated between blood and lesional as well as non-lesional skin. Overall, the AD blood signature was largely different compared to psoriasis, with dysregulation of inflammatory and cardiovascular risk markers, strongly supporting its systemic nature beyond atopic/allergic association.
Journal Article
Sustained cellular immune dysregulation in individuals recovering from SARS-CoV-2 infection
2021
SARS-CoV-2 causes a wide spectrum of clinical manifestations and significant mortality. Studies investigating underlying immune characteristics are needed to understand disease pathogenesis and inform vaccine design. In this study, we examined immune cell subsets in hospitalized and nonhospitalized individuals. In hospitalized patients, many adaptive and innate immune cells were decreased in frequency compared with those of healthy and convalescent individuals, with the exception of an increase in B lymphocytes. Our findings show increased frequencies of T cell activation markers (CD69, OX40, HLA-DR, and CD154) in hospitalized patients, with other T cell activation/exhaustion markers (PD-L1 and TIGIT) remaining elevated in hospitalized and nonhospitalized individuals. B cells had a similar pattern of activation/exhaustion, with increased frequency of CD69 and CD95 during hospitalization followed by an increase in PD1 frequencies in nonhospitalized individuals. Interestingly, many of these changes were found to increase over time in nonhospitalized longitudinal samples, suggesting a prolonged period of immune dysregulation after SARS-CoV-2 infection. Changes in T cell activation/exhaustion in nonhospitalized patients were found to positively correlate with age. Severely infected individuals had increased expression of activation and exhaustion markers. These data suggest a prolonged period of immune dysregulation after SARS-CoV-2 infection, highlighting the need for additional studies investigating immune dysregulation in convalescent individuals.
Journal Article
Comparative analysis of activation induced marker (AIM) assays for sensitive identification of antigen-specific CD4 T cells
بواسطة
Dan, Jennifer M.
,
Cirelli, Kimberly M.
,
Crotty, Shane
في
Acquired immune deficiency syndrome
,
AIDS
,
Animals
2017
The identification and study of antigen-specific CD4 T cells, both in peripheral blood and in tissues, is key for a broad range of immunological research, including vaccine responses and infectious diseases. Detection of these cells is hampered by both their rarity and their heterogeneity, in particular with regards to cytokine secretion profiles. These factors prevent the identification of the total pool of antigen-specific CD4 T cells by classical methods. We have developed assays for the highly sensitive detection of such cells by measuring the upregulation of surface activation induced markers (AIM). Here, we compare two such assays based on concurrent expression of CD69 plus CD40L (CD154) or expression of OX40 plus CD25, and we develop additional AIM assays based on OX40 plus PD-L1 or 4-1BB. We compare the relative sensitivity of these assays for detection of vaccine and natural infection-induced CD4 T cell responses and show that these assays identify distinct, but overlapping populations of antigen-specific CD4 T cells, a subpopulation of which can also be detected on the basis of cytokine synthesis. Bystander activation had minimal effect on AIM markers. However, some T regulatory cells upregulate CD25 upon antigen stimulation. We therefore validated AIM assays designed to exclude most T regulatory cells, for both human and non-human primate (NHP, Macaca mulatta) studies. Overall, through head-to-head comparisons and methodological improvements, we show that AIM assays represent a sensitive and valuable method for the detection of antigen-specific CD4 T cells.
Journal Article
Consistent survival in consecutive cases of life-supporting porcine kidney xenotransplantation using 10GE source pigs
2024
Xenotransplantation represents a possible solution to the organ shortage crisis and is an imminent clinical reality with long-term xenograft survival in pig-to-nonhuman primate (NHP) heart and kidney large animal models, and short-term success in recent human decedent and clinical studies. However, concerns remain about safe clinical translation of these results, given the inconsistency in published survival as well as key differences between preclinical procurement and immunosuppression and clinical standards-of-care. Notably, no studies of solid organ pig-to-NHP transplantation have achieved xenograft survival longer than one month without CD40/CD154 costimulatory blockade, which is not currently an FDA-approved immunosuppression strategy. We now present consistent survival in consecutive cases of pig-to-NHP kidney xenotransplantation, including long-term survival after >3 hours of xenograft cold preservation time as well as long-term survival using FDA-approved immunosuppression. These data provide critical supporting evidence for the safety and feasibility of clinical kidney xenotransplantation. Moreover, long-term survival without CD40/CD154 costimulatory blockade may provide important insights for immunosuppression regimens to be considered for first-in-human clinical trials.
Xenotransplantation is an imminent clinical reality but concerns remain around the logistics of procurement and the experimental immunosuppression regimens required to achieve long-term xenograft survival. Here the authors show more than 6 month survival of genetically modified porcine kidneys in baboons after regulatory compliant organ procurements, clinically relevant organ preservation times and FDA-approved immunosuppressive reagents.
Journal Article
Boosting CAR T-cell responses in lymphoma by simultaneous targeting of CD40/4-1BB using oncolytic viral gene therapy
2021
Pretreatment of B-cell lymphoma patients with immunostimulatory gene therapy using armed oncolytic viruses may prime tumor lesions for subsequent chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy, thereby enhancing CAR T-cell functionality and possibly increasing response rates in patients. LOAd703 (delolimogene mupadenorepvec) is an oncolytic adenovirus (serotype 5/35) that encodes for the transgenes CD40L and 4-1BBL, which activate both antigen-presenting cells and T cells. Many adenoviruses failed to demonstrate efficacy in B-cell malignancies, but LOAd703 infect cells via CD46, which enables B cell infection. Herein, we investigated the therapeutic potential of LOAd703 in human B-cell lymphoma models, alone or in combination with CAR T-cell therapy. LOAd703 could infect and replicate in B-cell lymphoma cell lines (BC-3, Karpas422, Daudi, DG-75, U-698) and induced an overall enhanced immunogenic profile with upregulation of co-stimulatory molecules CD80, CD86, CD70, MHC molecules, death receptor Fas and adhesion molecule ICAM-1. Further, CAR T-cell functionality was boosted by stimulation with lymphoma cells infected with LOAd703. This was demonstrated by an augmented release of IFN-γ and granzyme B, increased expression of the degranulation marker CD107a, fewer PD-1 + TIM-3+ CAR T cells in vitro and enhanced lymphoma cell killing both in in vitro and in vivo xenograft models. In addition, LOAd703-infected lymphoma cells upregulated the secretion of several chemokines (CXCL10, CCL17, CCL22, CCL3, CCL4) essential for immune cell homing, leading to enhanced CAR T-cell migration. In conclusion, immunostimulatory LOAd703 therapy is an intriguing approach to induce anti-lymphoma immune responses and to improve CAR T-cell therapy in B-cell lymphoma.
Journal Article
Platelets mediate inflammatory monocyte activation by SARS-CoV-2 spike protein
بواسطة
Li, Tianyang
,
Wang, Jianhua
,
Zhou, Guo
في
Antibodies
,
Biomedical research
,
Blood platelets
2022
Infection with SARS-CoV-2, the causative agent of COVID-19, causes mild to moderate disease in most patients but carries a risk of morbidity and mortality. Seriously affected individuals manifest disorders of hemostasis and a cytokine storm, but it is not understood how these manifestations of severe COVID-19 are linked. Here, we showed that the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein engaged the CD42b receptor to activate platelets via 2 distinct signaling pathways and promoted platelet-monocyte communication through the engagement of P selectin/PGSL-1 and CD40L/CD40, which led to proinflammatory cytokine production by monocytes. These results explain why hypercoagulation, monocyte activation, and a cytokine storm are correlated in patients severely affected by COVID-19 and suggest a potential target for therapeutic intervention.
Journal Article
Interventional hydrogel microsphere vaccine as an immune amplifier for activated antitumour immunity after ablation therapy
2023
The response rate of pancreatic cancer to chemotherapy or immunotherapy pancreatic cancer is low. Although minimally invasive irreversible electroporation (IRE) ablation is a promising option for irresectable pancreatic cancers, the immunosuppressive tumour microenvironment that characterizes this tumour type enables tumour recurrence. Thus, strengthening endogenous adaptive antitumour immunity is critical for improving the outcome of ablation therapy and post-ablation immune therapy. Here we present a hydrogel microsphere vaccine that amplifies post-ablation anti-cancer immune response via releasing its cargo of FLT3L and CD40L at the relatively lower pH of the tumour bed. The vaccine facilitates migration of the tumour-resident type 1 conventional dendritic cells (cDC1) to the tumour-draining lymph nodes (TdLN), thus initiating the cDC1-mediated antigen cross-presentation cascade, resulting in enhanced endogenous CD8
+
T cell response. We show in an orthotopic pancreatic cancer model in male mice that the hydrogel microsphere vaccine transforms the immunologically cold tumour microenvironment into hot in a safe and efficient manner, thus significantly increasing survival and inhibiting the growth of distant metastases.
Minimally invasive irreversible electroporation shows some therapeutic promise in irresectable pancreatic cancers that are notorious for poor survival. Here authors combine this with administration of a hydrogel microsphere vaccine that augments the antigen presentation T cell response cascade that naturally initiates following ablation.
Journal Article
A Novel Anti-CD40 Monoclonal Antibody, Iscalimab, for Control of Graves Hyperthyroidism—A Proof-of-Concept Trial
بواسطة
Frommer, Lara
,
Kahaly, George J
,
Stan, Marius Nicolae
في
Autoantibodies
,
Care and treatment
,
CD40 antigen
2020
Abstract
Context
The CD40-CD154 co-stimulatory pathway plays an important role in the pathogenesis of Graves disease (GD) by promoting autoreactive B-cell activation.
Objective
Evaluate efficacy and safety of a human, blocking, nondepleting anti-CD40 monoclonal antibody, iscalimab, in hyperthyroid patients with GD.
Design
Open-label, phase II proof-of-concept study.
Setting
Multicenter.
Patients
Fifteen with GD.
Intervention
Patients received 5 doses of iscalimab at 10 mg/kg intravenously over 12 weeks.
Main outcome measures
Thyroid-related hormones and autoantibodies, plasma soluble CD40, free CD40 on B cells, soluble CXCL13, pharmacokinetics, and safety were assessed.
Results
The iscalimab intervention resulted in complete CD40 engagement for up to 20 weeks. A clinical response and biochemical euthyroidism was observed in 7 of 15 (47%) patients. Free and total triiodothyronine and thyroxine normalized in 7 patients who did not receive any rescue medication with antithyroid drugs (ATD), and 2/15 (13.3%) showed normal thyrotropin. Six (40%) patients required ATD. Four of 7 responders relapsed after treatment completion. Serum concentrations of thyrotropin receptor autoantibodies (TSH-R-Ab) significantly declined in all patients (mean 15.3 IU/L vs 4.0 IU/L, 66% reduction; P < 0.001) and TSH-R-Ab levels normalized in 4 (27%). Thyroperoxidase and thyroglobulin autoantibodies significantly decreased in responders. Iscalimab rapidly reduced serum CXCL13 concentrations (P < 0.001). Twelve (80.0%) patients reported at least 1 adverse event (AE). All treatment-related AE were mild or moderate and resolved by end of the study.
Conclusion
Iscalimab was generally safe and clinically effective in a subgroup of hyperthyroid GD patients. The potential therapeutic benefit of iscalimab should be further tested.
Journal Article
Neoantigen-specific stem cell memory-like CD4+ T cells mediate CD8+ T cell-dependent immunotherapy of MHC class II-negative solid tumors
بواسطة
Cohen, Ezra E. W.
,
Thota, Rukman R.
,
Ramamoorthy Premlal, Ashmitaa Logandha
في
631/250
,
692/699
,
Adoptive immunotherapy
2023
CD4
+
T cells play key roles in a range of immune responses, either as direct effectors or through accessory cells, including CD8
+
T lymphocytes. In cancer, neoantigen (NeoAg)-specific CD8
+
T cells capable of direct tumor recognition have been extensively studied, whereas the role of NeoAg-specific CD4
+
T cells is less well understood. We have characterized the murine CD4
+
T cell response against a validated NeoAg (CLTC
H129>Q
) expressed by the MHC-II-deficient squamous cell carcinoma tumor model (SCC VII) at the level of single T cell receptor (TCR) clonotypes and in the setting of adoptive immunotherapy. We find that the natural CLTC
H129>Q
-specific repertoire is diverse and contains TCRs with distinct avidities as measured by tetramer-binding assays and CD4 dependence. Despite these differences, CD4
+
T cells expressing high or moderate avidity TCRs undergo comparable in vivo proliferation to cross-presented antigen from growing tumors and drive similar levels of therapeutic immunity that is dependent on CD8
+
T cells and CD40L signaling. Adoptive cellular therapy (ACT) with NeoAg-specific CD4
+
T cells is most effective when TCR-engineered cells are differentiated ex vivo with IL-7 and IL-15 rather than IL-2 and this was associated with both increased expansion as well as the acquisition and stable maintenance of a T stem cell memory (T
SCM
)-like phenotype in tumor-draining lymph nodes (tdLNs). ACT with T
SCM
-like CD4
+
T cells results in lower PD-1 expression by CD8
+
T cells in the tumor microenvironment and an increased frequency of PD-1
+
CD8
+
T cells in tdLNs. These findings illuminate the role of NeoAg-specific CD4
+
T cells in mediating antitumor immunity via providing help to CD8
+
T cells and highlight their therapeutic potential in ACT.
In cancer, neoantigen (NeoAg)-specific CD8
+
T cells capable of direct tumor recognition have been extensively studied but little is known of the role of NeoAg-specific CD4
+
T cells. Here Schoenberger and colleagues analyze an oligoclonal CD4
+
T cell response to a naturally arising murine tumor NeoAg at the level of TCR usage and functionality.
Journal Article
A Highly Immunogenic, Protective, and Safe Adenovirus-Based Vaccine Expressing Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus S1-CD40L Fusion Protein in a Transgenic Human Dipeptidyl Peptidase 4 Mouse Model
بواسطة
Al-amri, Sawsan S.
,
Alharbi, Naif Khalaf
,
Agrawal, Anurodh Shankar
في
Adenoviruses
,
Adenoviruses, Human - genetics
,
Adjuvants
2019
Abstract
Background
Infection control measures have played a major role in limiting human/camel-to-human transmission of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV); however, development of effective and safe human or camel vaccines is warranted.
Methods
We extended and optimized our previous recombinant adenovirus 5 (rAd5)–based vaccine platform characterized by in vivo amplified and CD40-mediated specific responses to generate MERS-CoV S1 subunit-based vaccine. We generated rAd5 constructs expressing CD40-targeted S1 fusion protein (rAd5-S1/F/CD40L), untargeted S1 (rAd5-S1), and Green Fluorescent Protein (rAd5-GFP), and evaluated their efficacy and safety in human dipeptidyl peptidase 4 transgenic (hDPP4 Tg+) mice.
Results
Immunization of hDPP4 Tg+ mice with a single dose of rAd5-S1/F/CD40L elicited as robust and significant specific immunoglobulin G and neutralizing antibodies as those induced with 2 doses of rAd5-S1. After MERS-CoV challenge, both vaccines conferred complete protection against morbidity and mortality, as evidenced by significantly undetectable/reduced pulmonary viral loads compared to the control group. However, rAd5-S1– but not rAd5-S1/F/CD40L–immunized mice exhibited marked pulmonary perivascular hemorrhage post–MERS-CoV challenge despite the observed protection.
Conclusions
Incorporation of CD40L into rAd5-based MERS-CoV S1 vaccine targeting molecule and molecular adjuvants not only enhances immunogenicity and efficacy but also prevents inadvertent pulmonary pathology after viral challenge, thereby offering a promising strategy to enhance safety and potency of vaccines.
In this study, we describe a potent and safe recombinant adenovirus 5–based Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) vaccine expressing MERS-CoV S1 as an antigen and incorporating CD40L as a targeting ligand and molecular adjuvant. The vaccine protected transgenic mice against lethal challenge without vaccine-associated immunopathology.
Journal Article