224 research outputs found

    IL-17 and Therapeutic Kynurenines in Pathogenic Inflammation to Fungi

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    Abstract Largely viewed as proinflammatory, innate responses combine with adaptive immunity to generate the most effective form of antifungal resistance, and T cells exercise feedback control over diverse effects of inflammation on infection. Some degree of inflammation is required for protection, particularly in mucosal tissues, during the transitional response occurring between the rapid innate and slower adaptive response. However, progressive inflammation worsens disease and ultimately prevents pathogen eradication. IDO, tryptophan catabolites ("kynurenines"), and regulatory T cells help to tame overzealous and exaggerated inflammatory responses. In this context, IL-23 and the Th17 pathway, which down-regulate tryptophan catabolism, may instead favor pathology and serve to accommodate the seemingly paradoxical association of chronic inflammation with fungal persistence. Recent data support a view in which IL-23/IL-17 antagonistic strategies, including the administration of synthetic kynurenines, could represent a new means of harnessing progressive or potentially harmful inflammation

    A Defect in Tryptophan Catabolism Impairs Tolerance in Nonobese Diabetic Mice

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    The predisposition of nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice to develop autoimmunity reflects deficiencies in both peripheral and central tolerance. Several defects have been described in these mice, among which aberrant antigen-presenting cell function and peroxynitrite formation. Prediabetes and diabetes in NOD mice have been targeted with different outcomes by a variety of immunotherapies, including interferon (IFN)-γ. This cytokine may be instrumental in specific forms of tolerance by virtue of its ability to activate immunosuppressive tryptophan catabolism. Here, we provide evidence that IFN-γ fails to induce tolerizing properties in dendritic cells from highly susceptible female mice early in prediabetes. This effect is associated with impaired tryptophan catabolism, is related to transient blockade of the Stat1 pathway of intracellular signaling by IFN-γ, and is caused by peroxynitrite production. However, the use of a peroxynitrite inhibitor can rescue tryptophan catabolism and tolerance in those mice. This is the first report of an experimental autoimmune disease in which defective tolerance is causally linked to impaired tryptophan catabolism

    Amino-acid sensing and degrading pathways in immune regulation

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    Abstract Indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenases (IDOs) − belonging in the heme dioxygenase family and degrading tryptophan − are responsible for the de novo synthesis of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD + ). As such, they are expressed by a variety of invertebrate and vertebrate species. In mammals, IDO1 has remarkably evolved to expand its functions, so to become a prominent homeostatic regulator, capable of modulating infection and immunity in multiple ways, including local tryptophan deprivation, production of biologically active tryptophan catabolites, and non-enzymatic cell-signaling activity. Much like IDO1, arginase 1 (Arg1) is an immunoregulatory enzyme that catalyzes the degradation of arginine. Here, we discuss the possible role of amino-acid degradation as related to the evolution of the immune systems and how the functions of those enzymes are linked by an entwined pathway selected by phylogenesis to meet the newly arising needs imposed by an evolving environment

    IDO Mediates TLR9-Driven Protection from Experimental Autoimmune Diabetes

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    Abstract Originally predicated on the recognition of an increasing prevalence of allergy, the hygiene hypothesis was later found to accommodate the contrasting epidemiologic trends in developed countries for infectious vs autoimmune diseases. Experimentally, reduced exposure to infections will increase the risk of disease in several models of experimental autoimmunity. Although TLRs were initially considered as stimulatory molecules capable of activating early defense mechanisms against invading pathogens, emerging data suggest that they can also exert a regulatory function. In the present study, we evaluated whether TLR3 and TLR9, recognizing microbial dsDNA and CpG-containing DNA sequences, respectively, play a role in the protection from experimental autoimmune diabetes induced in C57BL/6 mice by streptozotocin. In wild-type animals, the disease was accompanied by up-regulation of IDO in pancreatic lymph nodes and would be greatly exacerbated by in vivo administration of an IDO inhibitor. Conversely, administration of a CpG-containing oligodeoxynucleotide greatly attenuated the disease in an IDO-dependent fashion. TLR9-, but not TLR3-deficient mice developed a more robust disease, an event accompanied by lack of IDO induction in pancreatic lymph nodes. Thus, our data suggest that the TLR9-IDO axis may represent a valuable target in the prevention/therapy of type 1 diabetes

    CTLA-4–Ig Activates Forkhead Transcription Factors and Protects Dendritic Cells from Oxidative Stress in Nonobese Diabetic Mice

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    Prediabetes and diabetes in nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice have been targeted by a variety of immunotherapies, including the use of a soluble form of cytotoxic T lymphocyte antigen 4 (CTLA-4) and interferon (IFN)-γ. The cytokine, however, fails to activate tolerogenic properties in dendritic cells (DCs) from highly susceptible female mice early in prediabetes. The defect is characterized by impaired induction of immunosuppressive tryptophan catabolism, is related to transient blockade of the signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT)1 pathway of intracellular signaling by IFN-γ, and is caused by peroxynitrite production. Here, we show that soluble CTLA-4 imparts suppressive properties to DCs from early prediabetic NOD female mice through mechanisms that rely on autocrine signaling by IFN-γ. Although phosphorylation of STAT1 in response to IFN-γ is compromised in those mice, CTLA-4 obviates the defect. IFN-γ–driven expression of tryptophan catabolism by CTLA-4–immunoglobulin is made possible through the concomitant activation of the Forkhead Box class O (FOXO) transcription factor FOXO3a, induction of the superoxide dismutase gene, and prevention of peroxynitrite formation

    IL-23 and IL-12 Have Overlapping, but Distinct, Effects on Murine Dendritic Cells

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    Abstract IL-23 is a recently discovered heterodimeric cytokine that shares biological properties with proinflammatory cytokines. The biologically active heterodimer consists of p19 and the p40 subunit of IL-12. IL-23 has been shown to possess biological activities on T cells that are similar as well distinct from those of IL-12. We have constructed single-chain IL-23 and IL-12 fusion proteins (IL-23-Ig and IL-12-Ig) and have compared the two recombinant proteins for effects on murine dendritic cells (DC). Here we show that the IL-23-Ig can bind a significant proportion of splenic DC of both the CD8α− and CD8α+ subtypes. Furthermore, IL-23and IL-12-Ig exert biological activities on DC that are only in part overlapping. While both proteins induce IL-12 production from DC, only IL-23-Ig can act directly on CD8α+ DC to promote immunogenic presentation of an otherwise tolerogenic tumor peptide. In addition, the in vitro effects of IL-23-Ig did not appear to require IL-12Rβ2 or to be mediated by the production of IL-12. These data may establish IL-23 as a novel cytokine with major effects on APC

    High doses of CpG oligodeoxynucleotides stimulate a tolerogenic TLR9–TRIF pathway

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    CpG-rich oligodeoxynucleotides activate the immune system, leading to innate and acquired immune responses. The immune-stimulatory effects of CpG-rich oligodeoxynucleotides are being exploited as a therapeutic approach. Here we show that at high doses, CpG-rich oligodeoxynucleotides promote an opposite, tolerogenic response in mouse plasmacytoid dendritic cells in vivo and in a human in vitro model. Unveiling a previously undescribed role for TRIF and TRAF6 proteins in Toll-like receptor 9 (TLR9) signalling, we demonstrate that physical association of TLR9, TRIF and TRAF6 leads to activation of noncanonical NF-κB signalling and the induction of IRF3- and TGF-β-dependent immune-suppressive tryptophan catabolism. In vivo, the TLR9-TRIF circuit--but not MyD88 signalling--was required for CpG protection against allergic inflammation. Our findings may be relevant to an increased understanding of the complexity of Toll-like receptor signalling and optimal exploitation of CpG-rich oligodeoxynucleotides as immune modulators

    The Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array (NuSTAR)

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    The Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array (NuSTAR) is a NASA Small Explorer mission that will carry the first focusing hard X-ray (5 -- 80 keV) telescope to orbit. NuSTAR will offer a factor 50 -- 100 sensitivity improvement compared to previous collimated or coded mask imagers that have operated in this energy band. In addition, NuSTAR provides sub-arcminute imaging with good spectral resolution over a 12-arcminute field of view. After launch, NuSTAR will carry out a two-year primary science mission that focuses on four key programs: studying the evolution of massive black holes through surveys carried out in fields with excellent multiwavelength coverage, understanding the population of compact objects and the nature of the massive black hole in the center of the Milky Way, constraining explosion dynamics and nucleosynthesis in supernovae, and probing the nature of particle acceleration in relativistic jets in active galactic nuclei. A number of additional observations will be included in the primary mission, and a guest observer program will be proposed for an extended mission to expand the range of scientific targets. The payload consists of two co-aligned depth-graded multilayer coated grazing incidence optics focused onto solid state CdZnTe pixel detectors. To be launched in early 2012 on a Pegasus rocket into a low-inclination Earth orbit. Data will be publicly available at GSFC's High Energy Astrophysics Science Archive Research Center (HEASARC) following validation at the science operations center located at Caltech.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, to appear in Proceedings of the SPIE, Space Telescopes and Instrumentation 2010: Ultraviolet to Gamma Ra
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