20 research outputs found

    Identification of Markers that Distinguish Monocyte-Derived Fibrocytes from Monocytes, Macrophages, and Fibroblasts

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    The processes that drive fibrotic diseases are complex and include an influx of peripheral blood monocytes that can differentiate into fibroblast-like cells called fibrocytes. Monocytes can also differentiate into other cell types, such as tissue macrophages. The ability to discriminate between monocytes, macrophages, fibrocytes, and fibroblasts in fibrotic lesions could be beneficial in identifying therapies that target either stromal fibroblasts or fibrocytes. and in sections from human lung. We found that markers such as CD34, CD68, and collagen do not effectively discriminate between the four cell types. In addition, IL-4, IL-12, IL-13, IFN-γ, and SAP differentially regulate the expression of CD32, CD163, CD172a, and CD206 on both macrophages and fibrocytes. Finally, CD49c (α3 integrin) expression identifies a subset of fibrocytes, and this subset increases with time in culture.These results suggest that discrimination of monocytes, macrophages, fibrocytes, and fibroblasts in fibrotic lesions is possible, and this may allow for an assessment of fibrocytes in fibrotic diseases

    Integration of apoptosis and telomere erosion in virus-specific CD8+ T cells from blood and tonsils during primary infection.

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    Human-virus-specific CD8+ T cells that are found during primary infection have been studied almost exclusively in the peripheral blood, and it is unclear whether these cells are regulated in the same way as those in secondary lymphoid tissue. We investigated, therefore, the control of apoptosis and telomere erosion of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-specific CD8+ T cells found in the blood and tonsils of the same patients during acute infectious mononucleosis (AIM). Although the clonal composition of CD8+ T cells as determined by heteroduplex analysis was similar in both compartments, there was greater CD28 expression in the tonsil population, indicating that they were less differentiated. EBV-specific CD8+ T cells in both tissue types were extremely susceptible to apoptosis related to low Bcl-2 expression and were dependent on exogenous cytokines such as interleukin-2 (IL-2), IL-15, and interferon-alpha/beta (IFN-alpha/beta) for survival. In both compartments, however, these cells maintained their telomere lengths through telomerase induction. Thus, apoptosis-prone EBV-specific CD8+ T cells found during acute infection have to be rescued from death to persist as a memory population. However, signals that induce telomerase ensure that the rescued cells retain their replicative capacity. Significantly, these processes operate identically in cells found in blood and secondary lymphoid tissue

    Abnormal Cell Surface Antigen Expression in Individuals with Variant CD45 Splicing and Histiocytosis

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    Hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH) and Langerhans cell histiocytosis (LCH) are members of a group of rare heterogenous disorders, the histiocytoses, characterized by uncontrolled accumulation of pleomorphic infiltrates of leukocytes. The etiology of these diseases is mainly unknown. CD45 is a hemopoietic cell specific tyrosine phosphatase essential for antigen receptor mediated signaling in lymphocytes and different patterns of CD45 splicing are associated with distinct functions. Recently a polymorphism (C77G) in exon 4 of CD45 causing abnormal CD45 splicing and a point mutation affecting CD45 dimerization were implicated in multiple sclerosis in humans and lymphoproliferation and autoimmunity in mice respectively. Here we show that two patients with HLH exhibited abnormal CD45 splicing caused by the C77G variant allele, while a further 21 HLH patients have normal CD45. We have also examined 62 LCH patients and found three to have the C77G mutation. Peripheral blood thymus-derived (T) CD8+ cells from normal individuals carrying the C77G mutation show a significant decrease in the proportion of cells expressing L-selectin and increased frequency of cells with LFA-1hi expression. It remains to be established whether C77G is a contributing factor in these histiocytic disorders
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