54 research outputs found

    Fast and flexible selection with a single switch

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    Selection methods that require only a single-switch input, such as a button click or blink, are potentially useful for individuals with motor impairments, mobile technology users, and individuals wishing to transmit information securely. We present a single-switch selection method, "Nomon," that is general and efficient. Existing single-switch selection methods require selectable options to be arranged in ways that limit potential applications. By contrast, traditional operating systems, web browsers, and free-form applications (such as drawing) place options at arbitrary points on the screen. Nomon, however, has the flexibility to select any point on a screen. Nomon adapts automatically to an individual's clicking ability; it allows a person who clicks precisely to make a selection quickly and allows a person who clicks imprecisely more time to make a selection without error. Nomon reaps gains in information rate by allowing the specification of beliefs (priors) about option selection probabilities and by avoiding tree-based selection schemes in favor of direct (posterior) inference. We have developed both a Nomon-based writing application and a drawing application. To evaluate Nomon's performance, we compared the writing application with a popular existing method for single-switch writing (row-column scanning). Novice users wrote 35% faster with the Nomon interface than with the scanning interface. An experienced user (author TB, with > 10 hours practice) wrote at speeds of 9.3 words per minute with Nomon, using 1.2 clicks per character and making no errors in the final text.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, 1 table, presented at NIPS 2009 Mini-symposi

    CD4+CD25+ Regulatory T Cells Can Mediate Suppressor Function in the Absence of Transforming Growth Factor Ī²1 Production and Responsiveness

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    CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells inhibit organ-specific autoimmune diseases induced by CD4+CD25āˆ’T cells and are potent suppressors of T cell activation in vitro. Their mechanism of suppression remains unknown, but most in vitro studies suggest that it is cell contactā€“dependent and cytokine independent. The role of TGF-Ī²1 in CD4+CD25+ suppressor function remains unclear. While most studies have failed to reverse suppression with antiā€“transforming growth factor (TGF)-Ī²1 in vitro, one recent study has reported that CD4+CD25+ T cells express cell surface TGF-Ī²1 and that suppression can be completely abrogated by high concentrations of antiā€“TGF-Ī² suggesting that cell-associated TGF-Ī²1 was the primary effector of CD4+CD25+-mediated suppression. Here, we have reevaluated the role of TGF-Ī²1 in CD4+CD25+-mediated suppression. Neutralization of TGF-Ī²1 with either monoclonal antibody (mAb) or soluble TGF-Ī²RII-Fc did not reverse in vitro suppression mediated by resting or activated CD4+CD25+ T cells. Responder T cells from Smad3āˆ’/āˆ’ or dominant-negative TGF-Ī² type RII transgenic (DNRIITg) mice, that are both unresponsive to TGF-Ī²1ā€“induced growth arrest, were as susceptible to CD4+CD25+-mediated suppression as T cells from wild-type mice. Furthermore, CD4+CD25+ T cells from neonatal TGF-Ī²1āˆ’/āˆ’ mice were as suppressive as CD4+CD25+ from TGF-Ī²1+/+ mice. Collectively, these results demonstrate that CD4+CD25+ suppressor function can occur independently of TGF-Ī²1

    Transforming Growth Factor-Ī² Production and Myeloid Cells Are an Effector Mechanism through Which CD1d-restricted T Cells Block Cytotoxic T Lymphocyteā€“mediated Tumor Immunosurveillance: Abrogation Prevents Tumor Recurrence

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    Our previous work demonstrated that cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL)-mediated tumor immunosurveillance of the 15-12RM tumor could be suppressed by a CD1d-restricted lymphocyte, most likely a natural killer (NK) T cell, which produces interleukin (IL)-13. Here we present evidence for the effector elements in this suppressive pathway. T cellā€“reconstituted recombination activating gene (RAG)2 knockout (KO) and RAG2/IL-4 receptor Ī± double KO mice showed that inhibition of immunosurveillance requires IL-13 responsiveness by a nonā€“T nonā€“B cell. Such nonlymphoid splenocytes from tumor-bearing mice produced more transforming growth factor (TGF)-Ī², a potent inhibitor of CTL, ex vivo than such cells from naive mice, and this TGF-Ī² production was dependent on the presence in vivo of both IL-13 and CD1d-restricted T cells. Ex vivo TGF-Ī² production was also abrogated by depleting either CD11b+ or Gr-1+ cells from the nonlymphoid cells of tumor-bearing mice. Further, blocking TGF-Ī² or depleting Gr-1+ cells in vivo prevented the tumor recurrence, implying that TGF-Ī² made by a CD11b+ Gr-1+ myeloid cell, in an IL-13 and CD1d-restricted T cellā€“dependent mechanism, is necessary for down-regulation of tumor immunosurveillance. Identification of this stepwise regulation of immunosurveillance, involving CD1-restricted T cells, IL-13, myeloid cells, and TGF-Ī², explains previous observations on myeloid suppressor cells or TGF-Ī² and provides insights for targeted approaches for cancer immunotherapy, including synergistic blockade of TGF-Ī² and IL-13

    Regulation of Tumor Immune Surveillance and Tumor Immune Subversion by TGF-Ī²

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    Transforming growth factor-Ī² (TGF-Ī²) is a highly pleiotropic cytokine playing pivotal roles in immune regulation. TGF-Ī² facilitates tumor cell survival and metastasis by targeting multiple cellular components. Focusing on its immunosuppressive functions, TGF-Ī² antagonists have been employed for cancer treatment to enhance tumor immunity. TGF-Ī² antagonists exert anti-tumor effects through #1 activating effector cells such as NK cells and cytotoxic CD8+ T cells (CTLs), #2 inhibiting regulatory/suppressor cell populations, #3 making tumor cells visible to immune cells, #4 inhibiting the production of tumor growth factors. This review focuses on the effect of TGF-Ī² on T cells, which are differentiated into effector T cells or newly identified tumor-supporting T cells

    Significance of antiprothrombin antibodies in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus: clinical evaluation of the antiprothrombin assay and the antiphosphatidylserine/prothrombin assay, and comparison with other antiphospholipid antibody assays

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    Antibodies against prothrombin are detected by enzyme immunoassays (EIA) in sera of patients with antiphospholipid syndrome (APS). However, there are two methods for antiprothrombin EIA; one that uses high binding plates (aPT-A), and another that utilizes phosphatidylserine bound plates (aPS/PT). We aimed to evaluate and compare aPT-A and aPS/PT in a clinical setting. We performed EIA for anti-PT, anti-PS/PT, IgG, and IgM anticardiolipin antibodies (aCL), and IgG Ī²2-glycoprotein I-dependent aCL (aĪ²2GPI/CL) with serum samples from 139 systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) patients (16 with history of at least one thrombotic episode) and 148 controls. We observed that: (1) although titers of anti-PT and anti-PS/PT were significantly related with each other (P < 0.0001, Ļ = 0.548), titer of anti-PT and anti-PS/PT differed greatly in some samples; (2) odds ratio and 95% confidence interval for each assay was 3.556 (1.221ā€“10.355) for aPT-A, 4.591 (1.555ā€“15.560) for aPS/PT, 4.204 (1.250ā€“14.148) for IgG aCL, 1.809 (0.354ā€“9.232) for IgM aCL, and 7.246 (2.391ā€“21.966) for aĪ²2GPI/CL. We conclude that, while all EIA performed in this study except IgM aCL are of potential value in assessing the risk of thrombosis, aPS/PT and aĪ²2GPI/CL seemed to be highly valuable in clinical practice, and that autoantibodies detected by anti-PT and anti-PS/PT are not completely identical

    Adipose Inflammation Initiates Recruitment of Leukocytes to Mouse Femoral Artery: Role of Adipo-Vascular Axis in Chronic Inflammation

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    Background: Although inflammation within adipose tissues is known to play a role in metabolic syndrome, the causative connection between inflamed adipose tissue and atherosclerosis is not fully understood. In the present study, we examined the direct effects of adipose tissue on macro-vascular inflammation using intravital microscopic analysis of the femoral artery after adipose tissue transplantation. Methods and Results: We obtained subcutaneous (SQ) and visceral (VIS) adipose tissues from C57BL/6 mice fed normal chow (NC) or a high fat diet (HF), then transplanted the tissues into the perivascular area of the femoral artery of recipient C57/BL6 mice. Quantitative intravital microscopic analysis revealed an increase in adherent leukocytes after adipose tissue transplantation, with VIS found to induce significantly more leukocyte accumulation as compared to SQ. Moreover, adipose tissues from HF fed mice showed significantly more adhesion to the femoral artery. Simultaneous flow cytometry demonstrated upregulation of CD11b on peripheral granulocyte and monocytes after adipose tissue transplantation. We also observed dominant expressions of the inflammatory cytokine IL-6, and chemokines MCP-1 and MIP-1b in the stromal vascular fraction (SVF) of these adipose tissues as well as sera of recipient mice after transplantation. Finally, massive accumulations of pro-inflammatory and dendritic cells were detected in mice with VIS transplantation as compared to SQ, as well as in HF mice as compared to those fed NC
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