44 research outputs found

    Platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule-1 in neutrophil emigration during acute bacterial pneumonia in mice and rats

    Get PDF
    Platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule-1 (PECAM-1) (CD31) is an adhesion molecule believed to mediate transendothelial migration of neutrophils and other leukocytes after CD11/CD18-mediated adhesion. Our study evaluated the role of PECAM-1 in neutrophil emigration across the pulmonary capillaries and the bronchial microvasculature using blocking anti-PECAM-1 antibodies in mice and rats. Neutrophil emigration was induced by Escherichia coli, a stimulus eliciting CD11/CD18-dependent emigration, or Streptococcus pneumoniae, a stimulus inducing CD11/CD18-independent emigration. Although anti-PECAM-1 antibodies partially inhibited glycogen-induced neutrophil emigration into the peritoneum, neutrophil emigration across either the pulmonary capillaries or the bronchial microvasculature in response to either E. coli or S. pneumoniae was not prevented when the function of PECAM-1 was inhibited in either mice or rats. There was also no increase in the number of intravascular neutrophils within the bronchial vessels after treatment with anti-PECAM-1 antibody. These studies indicate that either CD11/CD18-dependent or -independent adhesion pathways may lead to PECAM-1-independent transendothelial migration through the pulmonary or the bronchial endothelium

    IL-21 promotes the expansion of CD27+CD28+ tumor infiltrating lymphocytes with high cytotoxic potential and low collateral expansion of regulatory T cells

    Get PDF
    Contains fulltext : 118572.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)BACKGROUND: Adoptive cell transfer of tumor infiltrating lymphocytes has shown clinical efficacy in the treatment of melanoma and is now also being explored in other tumor types. Generation of sufficient numbers of effector T cells requires extensive ex vivo expansion, often at the cost of T cell differentiation and potency. For the past 20 years, IL-2 has been the key cytokine applied in the expansion of TIL for ACT. However, the use of IL-2 has also led to collateral expansion of regulatory T cells (Tregs) and progressive T cell differentiation, factors known to limit in vivo persistence and activity of transferred TIL. The use of alternative T cell growth factors is therefore warranted. Here, we have compared the effects of IL-2, -15 and -21 cytokines on the expansion and activation of TIL from single-cell suspensions of non-small cell lung cancer, ovarian cancer and melanoma. METHODS: We applied the K562-based artificial APC (aAPC) platform for the direct and rapid expansion of tumor infiltrating lymphocytes isolated from primary cancer specimens. These aAPC were engineered to express the Fc-gamma receptor CD32 (for anti-CD3 antibody binding), the co-stimulatory molecule 4-1BBL, and to secrete either IL-2, IL-15 or IL-21 cytokine. RESULTS: Although IL-2 aAPC induced the greatest overall TIL expansion, IL-21 aAPC induced superior expansion of CD8+ T cells with a CD27+CD28+ "young" phenotype and superior functional cytotoxic effector characteristics, without collateral expansion of Tregs. CONCLUSION: Our data rationalize the clinical application of IL-21-secreting aAPC as a standardized cell-based platform in the expansion of "young" effector TIL for ACT

    Primary Invasive Aspergillosis of the Digestive Tract: Report of Two Cases and Review of the Literature

    Get PDF
    BACKGROUND: Disseminated aspergillosis is thought to occur as a result of vascular invasion from the lungs with subsequent bloodstream dissemination, and portals of entry other than sinuses and/or the respiratory tract remain speculative. METHODS: We report two cases of primary aspergillosis in the digestive tract and present a detailed review of eight of the 23 previously-published cases for which detailed data are available. RESULTS AND CONCLUSION: These ten cases presented with symptoms suggestive of typhlitis, with further peritonitis requiring laparotomy and small bowel segmental resection. All cases were characterized by the absence of pulmonary disease at the time of histologically-confirmed gastrointestinal involvement with vascular invasion by branched Aspergillus hyphae. These cases suggest that the digestive tract may represent a portal of entry for Aspergillus species in immunocompromised patients

    Human melanoma cell lines differ in their capacity to release ADP and aggregate platelets.

    No full text
    In this study we have investigated, using three different human melanoma cell lines (M1Do., M3Da., M4Be.). the varying capacity of melanoma cells to induce platelet aggregation in the presence or absence of inhibitors of ADP or thrombin. The expression levels of different integrins (alpha v, beta 3, alpha v beta 3, alpha IIb, alpha v beta 3) were evaluated by immunoprecipitation, binding and flow cytometry studies. The level of ADP in supernatants of melanoma cells were quantified by ADP bioassay and HPLC. Platelets were irreversibly aggregated by M3Da, as shown by electron microscopy, in contrast to M1Do, which induced a slow reversible aggregation. M4Be. did not induce platelet aggregation. In both cases, with M3Da. or M1Do., apyrase but not PPACK inhibited platelet induced aggregation. An anti-alpha v beta 3 monoclonal antibody (LYP18) or polyclonal antibody inhibited platelet aggregation. A similar number of LYP18 molecules bound to the surface of M1Do., M3Da. and M4Be. cell lines. Biological HPLC assays of ADP present in the supernatant of tumour cell lines showed the highest concentration of ADP to be secreted by M3Da., followed by M1Do., and none detected for M4Be. These results show that differences in in vitro aggregating potential of the three human melanoma cell lines are not related to low integrin expression levels but to their ability to generate ADP. Generation of ADP by human melanoma cells may act as important modulator of melanoma-platelet interactions
    corecore