38 research outputs found
The Role of Natural Killer Cells and Interferon in Virus Infections: A Thesis
Definitive evidence that natural killer (NK) cells mediate an antiviral effect in vivo was obtained using murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV) as a model system. Adoptive transfer studies using a variety of physical and immunochemical techniques to enrich and deplete NK cell activity showed that the cell population capable of mediating resistance (as assayed by enhanced survival and reduction in spleen virus titers) had the phenotype of an NK cell: a nylon wool nonadherent, asialo GM1+, NK 1.2+, ly 5+, Thy-1-, Ia-, low-density lymphocyte. Adoptive transfer of IL-2-dependent cloned NK cells (but not T cells) also provided resistance. NK cells did not provide resistance to lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV).
Selective depletion of NK cell activity by injection of mice with antibody to anti-asialo GM1 lowered resistance to MCMV, mouse hepatitis virus, and vaccinia virus but not to LCMV. NK cell depletion resulted in up to 1000-fold increases in spleen and liver virus titers, correlating with more severe pathology in these organs. NK cells were found to have antiviral effects early (0-3 days) but not late (6-9 days) postinfection. NK cell depletion resulted in markedly increased MCMV-induced suppression of T cell function, which is probably responsible for the delayed clearance of virus seen in these mice. NK cell depletion resulted in increased virus synthesis during persistent MCMV infection, but had no effect on the course of persistent LCMV infection, despite elevated NK cell and interferon (IFN) levels found in these LCMV-infected mice. The reason why NK cells play a role against MCMV but not LCMV infection was not due to differences in NK cells induced by these 2 viruses, but more likely due to target cell susceptibility. IFN pretreatment of MCMV-infected cells failed to protect them against NK cell-mediated lysis, whereas uninfected and LCMV-infected cells were almost totally protected. These IFN-pretreated, LCMV-infected cells were not resistant to cell-mediated lysis in general, as this treatment increased their sensitivity to virus-specific T cell-mediated lysis by 2- to 3-fold. This enhanced sensitivity to lysis correlated with increased surface expression of H-2 antigens, but not viral antigens. In summary, these studies provide compelling evidence that NK cells can mediate antiviral effects in vivo, and provide some insights into their mode of action and consequences of their disfunction
Clinical and MRI responses to etanercept in early non-radiographic axial spondyloarthritis : 48-week results from the EMBARK study
Objective: To evaluate the efficacy and safety of etanercept (ETN) after 48 weeks in patients with early active non-radiographic axial spondyloarthritis (nr-axSpA).
Methods: Patients meeting Assessment of SpondyloArthritis international Society (ASAS) classification criteria for axSpA, but not modified New York radiographic criteria, received double-blind ETN 50 mg/week or placebo (PBO) for 12 weeks, then open-label ETN (ETN/ETN or PBO/ETN). Clinical, health, productivity, MRI and safety outcomes were assessed and the 48-week data are presented here.
Results: 208/225 patients (92%) entered the open-label phase at week 12 (ETN, n=102; PBO, n=106). The percentage of patients achieving ASAS40 increased from 33% to 52% between weeks 12 and 48 for ETN/ETN and from 15% to 53% for PBO/ETN (within-group p value <0.001 for both). For ETN/ETN and PBO/ETN, the EuroQol 5 Dimensions utility score improved by 0.14 and 0.08, respectively, between baseline and week 12 and by 0.23 and 0.22 between baseline and week 48. Between weeks 12 and 48, MRI Spondyloarthritis Research Consortium of Canada sacroiliac joint (SIJ) scores decreased by -1.1 for ETN/ETN and by -3.0 for PBO/ETN, p<0.001 for both. Decreases in MRI SIJ inflammation and C-reactive protein correlated with several clinical outcomes at weeks 12 and 48.
Conclusions: Patients with early active nr-axSpA demonstrated improvement from week 12 in clinical, health, productivity and MRI outcomes that was sustained to 48 weeks
Radiographic severity of knee osteoarthritis is conditional on interleukin 1 receptor antagonist gene variations
BACKGROUND: A lack of biomarkers that identify patients at risk for severe osteoarthritis (OA) complicates development of disease-modifying OA drugs. OBJECTIVE: To determine whether inflammatory genetic markers could stratify patients with knee OA into high and low risk for destructive disease. METHODS: Genotype associations with knee OA severity were assessed in two Caucasian populations. Fifteen single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in six inflammatory genes were evaluated for association with radiographic severity and with synovial fluid mediators in a subset of the patients. RESULTS: Interleukin 1 receptor antagonist (IL1RN) SNPs (rs419598, rs315952 and rs9005) predicted Kellgren-Lawrence scores independently in each population. One IL1RN haplotype was associated with lower odds of radiographic severity (OR=0.15; 95% CI 0.065 to 0.349; p<0.0001), greater joint space width and lower synovial fluid cytokine levels. Carriage of the IL1RN haplotype influenced the age relationship with severity. CONCLUSION: IL1RN polymorphisms reproducibly contribute to disease severity in knee OA and may be useful biomarkers for patient selection in disease-modifying OA drug trials
Etanercept treatment for extended oligoarticular juvenile idiopathic arthritis, enthesitis-related arthritis, or psoriatic arthritis
To describe the 6-year safety and efficacy of etanercept (ETN) in children with extended oligoarticular juvenile idiopathic arthritis (eoJIA), enthesitis-related arthritis (ERA), and psoriatic arthritis (PsA) METHODS: Patients who completed the 2-year, open-label, phase III CLinical Study In Pediatric Patients of Etanercept for Treatment of ERA, PsA, and Extended Oligoarthritis (CLIPPER) were allowed to enroll in its 8-year long-term extension (CLIPPER2). Children received ETN at a once-weekly dose of 0.8 mg/kg, up to a maximum dose of 50 mg/week. Efficacy assessments included the JIA core set of outcomes, the JIA American College of Rheumatology response criteria (JIA-ACR), and the Juvenile Arthritis Disease Activity Score (JADAS). Efficacy data are reported as responder analyses using a hybrid method for missing data imputation and as observed cases. Safety assessments included treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs).Out of 127 patients originally enrolled in CLIPPER, 109 (86%) entered CLIPPER2. After 6 years of trial participation (2 years in CLIPPER and 4 years in CLIPPER2), 41 (32%) patients were still taking ETN, 13 (11%) entered the treatment withdrawal phase after achieving low/inactive disease (of whom 7 had to restart ETN), 36 (28%) discontinued treatment for other reasons but are still being observed, and 37 (29%) discontinued treatment permanently. According to the hybrid imputation analysis, proportions of patients achieving JIA ACR90, JIA ACR100, and JADAS inactive disease after the initial 2 years of treatment were 58%, 48%, and 32%, respectively. After the additional 4 years, those proportions in patients who remained in the trial were 46%, 35%, and 24%. Most frequently reported TEAEs [n (%), events per 100 patient-years] were headache [28 (22%), 5.3], arthralgia [24 (19%), 4.6], and pyrexia [20 (16%), 3.8]. Number and frequency of TEAEs, excluding infections and injection site reactions, decreased over the 6-year period from 193 and 173.8, respectively, during year 1 to 37 and 61.3 during year 6. A single case of malignancy (Hodgkin's lymphoma) and no cases of active tuberculosis, demyelinating disorders, or deaths were reported.Open-label etanercept treatment for up to 6 years was safe, well tolerated, and effective in patients with eoJIA, ERA, and PsA.ClinicalTrials.gov: CLIPPER, NCT00962741 , registered 20 August, 2009, CLIPPER2, NCT01421069 , registered 22 August, 2011
Interferon enhances the susceptibility of virus-infected fibroblasts to cytotoxic T cells
Interferon (IFN) pretreatment of low-passage mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEF) infected with lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus or vaccinia virus rendered these cells two to three times more susceptible to lysis by H-2 restricted, virus-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) than control, virus-infected MEF. The increased sensitivity to lysis correlated with increased expression of surface H-2 antigens, but not viral antigens. Continuous cell lines already highly sensitive to CTL-mediated lysis and already expressing high levels of surface H-2 antigens were unaffected by IFN pretreatment. These results suggest that IFN treatment, by increasing surface H-2 levels, may result in increased association of surface H-2 and virus antigens, leading to enhanced recognition and lysis by virus-specific CTL
L-theanine intervention enhances human gammadeltaT lymphocyte function
Human gammadeltaT lymphocytes are a subset of T cells and are a first line of defense against microbes and tumors. These gammadeltaT cells can be primed by nitrogen-containing bisphosphonates, and certain short-chain alkylamines. These primed gammadeltaT cells have an enhanced capacity to proliferate and to secrete cytokines upon ex vivo exposure to a wide variety of microbes and tumor cells. The largest dietary source of alkylamines is L-theanine, an amino acid unique to tea beverages that is catabolized to ethylamine. Supplementation of subjects with capsules containing L-theanine and catechins has recently been shown to decrease the incidence of cold and flu symptoms, while enhancing gammadeltaT cell function
Inability of interferon to protect virus-infected cells against lysis by natural killer (NK) cells correlates with NK cell-mediated antiviral effects in vivo
Murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV) is a natural killer (NK) cell-sensitive virus, whereas lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) is an NK cell-resistant virus. Selective depletion of NK cell activity by injection of mice with anti-asialo GM1 antibody enhanced synthesis of MCMV but not that of LCMV when mice were simultaneously infected with the two viruses. This suggests that the NK cell-mediated antiviral effects may depend on target cell susceptibility to NK cell-mediated lysis rather than the ability of a virus to induce a specialized antiviral NK cell. In support of this concept, activated NK cells isolated from either MCMV- or LCMV-infected mice had similar patterns of killing against all targets tested. Mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEF) infected with MCMV were less sensitive to lysis by activated NK cells than either uninfected or LCMV-infected MEF. However, when MEF were pretreated with IFN, activated NK cell-mediated lysis against MCMV-infected MEF was undiminished and was much higher (up to fourfold) than that against uninfected MEF, whose sensitivity to lysis was almost totally abolished by IFN pretreatment. LCMV-infected MEF were also protected by IFN against activated NK cell-mediated lysis. During infection, the virus-induced IFN may protect uninfected and LCMV-infected cells from IFN-activated, NK cell-mediated lysis, but MCMV-infected cells may remain sensitive to lysis. This could explain how NK cells play a role in resistance to MCMV but not LCMV
The role of natural killer cells and interferon in resistance to acute infection of mice with herpes simplex virus type 1
The relative roles of interferon (IFN) and natural killer (NK) cells in herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) infection of mice were examined. Adoptive transfer of adult mouse leukocytes into 4- to 6-day-old suckling mice protected the recipients from HSV-1 infection, as judged by viral titers in the spleen 2 days postinfection. Protection was mediated by several classes of leukocytes, including those depleted of NK cell activity by antibody to asialo GM1 and those depleted of macrophages by size separation. Mice receiving these leukocytes produced significantly higher levels of IFN 6 hr postinfection (early IFN) than did HSV-1-infected mice not receiving donor leukocytes. Antibody to IFN, under conditions that blocked early but not late IFN synthesis, greatly enhanced HSV-1 synthesis in mice receiving leukocytes and completely removed the protective effect mediated by leukocytes. High doses of anti-asialo GM1 blocked both NK cell activity and early IFN production and resulted in high titers of HSV-1. This effect on virus synthesis was not seen if mice were given antibody 1 day postinfection. Lower doses of anti-asialo GM1, which still depleted NK cell activity but had no effect on early IFN production, did not enhance HSV-1 synthesis. Depletion of NK cell activity with a low dose of antibody had no effect on the reduced HSV-1 synthesis resulting from prophylactic IFN treatment or on the enhanced HSV-1 synthesis resulting from antibody to IFN treatment. Thus, resistance to acute HSV-1 infection in mice correlates with early IFN production but not with NK cell activity, suggesting that NK cells are not major mediators of natural resistance in this model and that the antiviral effect of IFN is not mediated by NK cells