scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Topic

Cytotoxic T cell

About: Cytotoxic T cell is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 92492 publications have been published within this topic receiving 4768477 citations. The topic is also known as: killer T cell & cytotoxic T lymphocyte.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Ex vivo analysis shows that a population of CD4+ perforin+ T cells is present in the circulation at low numbers in healthy donors and is markedly expanded in donors with chronic viral infections, in particular HIV infection, at all stages of the disease, including early primary infection.
Abstract: The cytotoxic potential of CD8 + T cells and NK cells plays a crucial role in the immune response to pathogens. Although in vitro studies have reported that CD4 + T cells are also able to mediate perforin-mediated killing, the in vivo existence and relevance of cytotoxic CD4 + T cells have been the subject of debate. Here we show that a population of CD4 + perforin + T cells is present in the circulation at low numbers in healthy donors and is markedly expanded in donors with chronic viral infections, in particular HIV infection, at all stages of the disease, including early primary infection. Ex vivo analysis shows that these cells have cytotoxic potential mediated through the release of perforin. In comparison with more classical CD4 + T cells, this subset displays a distinct surface phenotype and functional profile most consistent with end-stage differentiated T cells and include Ag experienced CD4 + T cells. The existence of CD4 + cytotoxic T cells in vivo at relatively high levels in chronic viral infection suggests a role in the immune response.

539 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: Treatment of peripheral lymphocyte populations with monoclonal antibody plus C eliminated effector cytotoxic T lymphocytes, their precursors, and the mitogenic response to Con A, but did not affect the response to LPS.
Abstract: Fusion of cells of the mouse myeloma line, P3/X63-Ag8 with spleen cells from AKR/J mice immunized against C3H thymocytes or from (BALB/c × BALB.K)F 1 mice immunized against AKR/J thymocytes gave rise to hybrid cell lines that continuously secrete antibodies specific for the Thy-1.2 and Thy-1.1 antigens, respectively. Monoclonal antibodies from four such cell lines were analyzed in detail. All were 19S IgM, and, in the presence of complement (C), had high lytic titers on T cells of the appropriate antigenicity. Their specificity was shown by lysis of thymocytes from Thy-1 congenic mouse strains, A/J(Thy-1.2) and A.Thy 1.1. Furthermore, they lyse only 60 to 70% of lymph node cells, suggesting cytotoxicity for mature T cells and not B cells. Treatment of peripheral lymphocyte populations with monoclonal antibody plus C eliminated effector cytotoxic T lymphocytes, their precursors, and the mitogenic response to Con A, but did not affect the response to LPS. Purified, fluorescein-labeled monoclonal anti-Thy-1 antibody could be used to distinguish T and B cells. Purified antibody coupled to Sepharose 6MB was used to separate viable T and B cells. Two independently isolated anti-Thy-1.2 hybridomas are indistinguishable and bind the same determinant whereas a third is unique and may bind a separate site.

539 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is reported that Interleukin-15 (IL-15) can induce TNF-α production in RA through activation of synovial T cells through activation in peripheral blood cells activated by IL-15.
Abstract: Tumor necrosis factor-alpha occupies a central role in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) pathogenesis. We now report that interleukin-15 (IL-15) can induce TNF-alpha production in RA through activation of synovial T cells. Peripheral blood (PB) T cells activated by IL-15 induced significant TNF-alpha production by macrophages via a cell-contact-dependent mechanism. Freshly isolated RA synovial T cells possessed similar capability, and in vitro, IL-15 was necessary to maintain this activity. IL-15 also induced direct TNF-alpha production by synovial T cells. In contrast, IL-2 induced significantly lower TNF-alpha production in either cell-contact-dependent or direct culture, and IL-8 and MIP-1 alpha were ineffective. Antibodies against CD69, LFA-1 or ICAM-1 significantly inhibited the ability of T cells to activate macrophages by cell contact.

539 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jul 1987-Nature
TL;DR: The hypothesis that interactions between HIV-specific CTL and infected macrophages induce major inflammatory reactions in seropositive patients is proposed.
Abstract: Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is implicated in the development of AIDS (acquired immune deficiency syndrome). HIV infection leads to the generation of HIV-specific thymus-derived (T) lymphocytes in humans and apes. We describe an experimental system permitting the quantitative and systematic analysis of HIV-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL). Functional, HIV-specific CTL are obtained by broncho-alveolar lavage (BAL) from the lungs of seropositive patients with lymphocytic alveolitis. These alveolar CTL: (1) recognize and kill HIV-infected alveolar macrophages in vitro under autologous, but not heterologous, conditions; (2) correspond to standard CTL as they express the CD3 and CD8 surface markers, but not the CD4 marker; and (3) are restricted by class I HLA transplantation antigens in their cytotoxic activities. We propose the hypothesis that interactions between HIV-specific CTL and infected macrophages induce major inflammatory reactions in seropositive patients.

538 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Even low-level viremia among HIV controllers was associated with measurable T cell dysfunction, which has implications for current prophylactic vaccine strategies.
Abstract: Background Spontaneous control of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection has been documented in a minority of HIV-infected individuals. The mechanisms behind this outcome remain largely unknown, and a better understanding of them will likely influence future vaccine strategies. Methods HIV-specific T cell and antibody responses as well as host genetics were examined in untreated HIV-infected patients who maintain comparatively low plasma HIV RNA levels (hereafter, controllers), including those with levels of 10,000 copies/mL (chronic progressors, n = 30). Results CD8+ T cells from both controller groups preferentially target Gag over other proteins in the context of diverse HLA class I alleles, whereas responses are more broadly distributed in persons with progressive infection. Elite controllers represent a distinct group of individuals who have significantly more CD4 and CD8 T cells that secrete interferon-gamma and interleukin-2 and lower levels of HIV-neutralizing antibodies. Individual responses were quite heterogeneous, and none of the parameters evaluated was uniquely associated with the ability to control viremia. Conclusions Elite controllers are a distinct group, even when compared to persons with low level viremia, but they exhibit marked genetic and immunologic heterogeneity. Even low-level viremia among HIV controllers was associated with measurable T cell dysfunction, which has implications for current prophylactic vaccine strategies.

537 citations


Network Information
Related Topics (5)
T cell
109.5K papers, 5.5M citations
94% related
Immune system
182.8K papers, 7.9M citations
93% related
Cytokine
79.2K papers, 4.4M citations
93% related
Cell culture
133.3K papers, 5.3M citations
92% related
Antigen
170.2K papers, 6.9M citations
91% related
Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20251
20241
20234,029
20224,295
20212,914
20202,932