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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Consequences of cell death: exposure to necrotic tumor cells, but not primary tissue cells or apoptotic cells, induces the maturation of immunostimulatory dendritic cells.

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TLDR
In this article, the authors investigated whether exposure to apoptotic or necrotic cells affected dendritic cells' maturation and found that only exposure to the latter induces maturation.
Abstract
Cell death by necrosis is typically associated with inflammation, in contrast to apoptosis. We have identified additional distinctions between the two types of death that occur at the level of dendritic cells (DCs) and which influence the induction of immunity. DCs must undergo changes termed maturation to act as potent antigen-presenting cells. Here, we investigated whether exposure to apoptotic or necrotic cells affected DC maturation. We found that immature DCs efficiently phagocytose a variety of apoptotic and necrotic tumor cells. However, only exposure to the latter induces maturation. The mature DCs express high levels of the DC-restricted markers CD83 and lysosome-associated membrane glycoprotein (DC-LAMP) and the costimulatory molecules CD40 and CD86. Furthermore, they develop into powerful stimulators of both CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells. Cross-presentation of antigens to CD8(+) T cells occurs after uptake of apoptotic cells. We demonstrate here that optimal cross-presentation of antigens from tumor cells requires two steps: phagocytosis of apoptotic cells by immature DCs, which provides antigenic peptides for major histocompatibility complex class I and class II presentation, and a maturation signal that is delivered by exposure to necrotic tumor cells, their supernatants, or standard maturation stimuli, e.g., monocyte-conditioned medium. Thus, DCs are able to distinguish two types of tumor cell death, with necrosis providing a control that is critical for the initiation of immunity.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The inflammasome: a molecular platform triggering activation of inflammatory caspases and processing of proIL-beta.

TL;DR: In this article, the inflammasome is identified as a caspase-activating complex that comprises caspases-1, casp-5, Pycard/Asc, and NALP1, a Pyrin domain-containing protein sharing structural homology with NODs.
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Mouse and human dendritic cell subtypes

TL;DR: The dynamics of the DC network in response to microbial invasion is studied, because many DC subtypes arise from separate developmental pathways, and their development and function are modulated by exogenous factors.
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Taking dendritic cells into medicine

TL;DR: Some medical implications of DC biology that account for illness and provide opportunities for prevention and therapy are presented.
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Antigen Presentation and T Cell Stimulation by Dendritic Cells

TL;DR: Dendritic cells take up antigens in peripheral tissues, process them into proteolytic peptides, and load these peptides onto major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I and II molecules, thus initiating antigen-specific immune responses, or immunological tolerance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cytokines in atherosclerosis: pathogenic and regulatory pathways.

TL;DR: Based on the current knowledge of the role of cytokines in atherosclerosis, some novel therapeutic strategies to combat this disease are proposed and the potential of circulating cytokine levels as biomarkers of coronary artery disease is discussed.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Dendritic cells and the control of immunity

TL;DR: Once a neglected cell type, dendritic cells can now be readily obtained in sufficient quantities to allow molecular and cell biological analysis and the realization that these cells are a powerful tool for manipulating the immune system is realized.
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Tolerance, danger, and the extended family.

TL;DR: The possibility that the immune system does not care about self and non-self, that its primary driving force is the need to detect and protect against danger, and that it does not do the job alone, but receives positive and negative communications from an extended network of other bodily tissues is discussed.
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Macrophages that have ingested apoptotic cells in vitro inhibit proinflammatory cytokine production through autocrine/paracrine mechanisms involving TGF-beta, PGE2, and PAF.

TL;DR: The results suggest that binding and/or phagocytosis of apoptotic cells induces active antiinflammatory or suppressive properties in human macrophages, likely that resolution of inflammation depends not only on the removal of apoptosis but on active suppression of inflammatory mediator production.
Journal ArticleDOI

T-cell help for cytotoxic T lymphocytes is mediated by CD40–CD40L interactions

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that signalling through CD40 can replace CD4+ T-helper cells in priming of helper-dependent CD8+ CTL responses.
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A conditioned dendritic cell can be a temporal bridge between a CD4 + T-helper and a T-killer cell

TL;DR: It is found that the three cells need not meet simultaneously but that the helper cell can first engage and ‘condition’ the dendritic cell, which then becomes empowered to stimulate a killer cell.
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