21 research outputs found

    Primary peripheral primitive neuroectodermal tumor (pPNET) of the prostate. Immunophenotipic and molecular study of a case

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    Human Peripheral Lymphoid Tissues Contain Autoimmune Regulator-Expressing Dendritic Cells

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    Autoimmune regulator (AIRE) modulates the expression of tissue-restricted antigens (TSAs) and promotes central tolerance in the thymus. However, few autoreactive T cells escape negative selection and reach the periphery, where peripheral tolerance is required to avoid autoimmunity. Murine lymph nodes (LNs) have been shown to contain “stromal” cells expressing AIRE and TSAs. Here we report the occurrence of AIRE-expressing cells in human peripheral lymphoid tissues, including LNs, tonsils, and gut-associated lymphoid tissue, with the exception of the spleen. Notably, AIRE cells are absent in fetal LNs and, in postnatal life , they are more numerous in abdominal than in superficial LNs, thus suggesting that their development in periphery may depend on instructive signals from microenvironment and antigen challenge. Extrathymic AIRE cells show a dendritic morphology, consistently express human leukocyte antigen- DR (HLADR) and fascin, and are largely positive for CD11c and S100 and for the dendritic cell-activation markers CD40, CD83, DC-LAMP/CD208, and CCR7. Lymphoid, myelomonocytic, mesenchymal, and epithelial cell lineage markers are negative. The HLADRhigh/AIRE cell fraction isolated from mesenteric LNs expressed TSAs (insulin, CYP17A1, and CYP21A2), as well as molecules associated with tolerogenic functions, such as interleukin-10 and indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase. Data indicate that AIRE cells in human peripheral lymphoid tissues correspond to a subset of activated interdigitating dendritic cells expressing TSAs and the tolerogenic molecules indoleamine 2,3- dioxygenase and interleukin-10, suggestive of a potential tolerogenic function

    Stem/ progenitor cells derived from mouse skin engraft into the brain and have a therapeutic potential

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    Spinal glioneuronal tumor with rosetted neuropil islands and meningeal dissemination: histopathological and radiological study of a pediatric case

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    Hypomorphic mutation in the RAG2 gene affects dendritic cell distribution and migration

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    In Omenn syndrome, altered dendritic cell distribution and impaired migration represent an additional level of immune dysregulation, contributing to the pathogenesis of autoimmunity. OS is a severe combined immunodeficiency characterized by erythrodermia and protracted diarrhea as a result of infiltration of oligoclonal-activated T cells, caused by hypomorphic mutations in RAGs. The RAG2(R229Q) mouse model fully recapitulates the clinical OS phenotype. We evaluated whether T and B cell defects, together with the abnormal lymphoid structure, could affect DC homeostasis and function. High density of LCs was observed in skin biopsies of Omenn patients and in the derma of RAG2(R229Q) mice, correlating with the presence of erythrodermia. In vivo models of cutaneous skin painting and CHS demonstrated a decreased migration of RAG2(R229Q) DCsin particular, LCsinto draining LNs. Interestingly, at steady state, RAG2(R229Q) mice showed a reduction in DC number in all hematopoietic organs except LNs. Analysis of the MHCII marker revealed a diminished expression also upon the LPS-driven inflammatory condition. Despite the decreased number of peripheral DCs, BM pre-cDCs were present in normal number compared with RAG2(+/+) controls, whereas pDCs and monocytes were reduced significantly. Overall, these results point to a secondary defect in the DC compartment, which contributes to clinical manifestations and autoimmunity in OS

    Efficacy Of Lentivirus-Mediated Gene Therapy In An Omenn Syndrome Recombination-Activating Gene 2 Mouse Model Is Not Hindered By Inflammation And Immune Dysregulation

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    Background: Omenn syndrome (OS) is a rare severe combined immunodeficiency associated with autoimmunity and caused by defects in lymphoid-specific V(D)J recombination. Most patients carry hypomorphic mutations in recombination-activating gene (RAG) 1 or 2. Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation is the standard treatment; however, gene therapy (GT) might represent a valid alternative, especially for patients lacking a matched donor. Objective: We sought to determine the efficacy of lentiviral vector (LV) mediated GT in the murine model of OS (Rag2(R229Q/R229Q)), in correcting immunodeficiency and autoimmunity. Methods: Lineage-negative cells from mice with OS were transduced with an LV encoding the human RAG2 gene and injected into irradiated recipients with OS. Control mice underwent transplantation with wild-type or OS-untransduced lineage-negative cells. Immunophenotyping, T-dependent and T-independent antigen challenge, immune spectratyping, autoantibody detection, and detailed tissue immunohistochemical analyses were performed. Results: LV-mediated GT allowed immunologic reconstitution, although it was suboptimal compared with that seen in wild-type bone marrow (BM) transplanted OS mice in peripheral blood and hematopoietic organs, such as the BM, thymus, and spleen. We observed in vivo variability in the efficacy of GT correlating with the levels of transduction achieved. Immunoglobulin levels and T-cell repertoire normalized, and gene-corrected mice responded properly to challenges in vivo. Autoimmune manifestations, such as skin infiltration and autoantibodies, dramatically improved in GT mice with a vector copy number/ genome higher than 1 in the BM and 2 in the thymus. Conclusions: Our data show that LV-mediated GT for patients with OS significantly ameliorates the immunodeficiency, even in an inflammatory environment.Wo
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