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1.
MALA-2, mouse homologue of human adhesion molecule ICAM-1 (CD54)   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
In humans, lymphocyte adhesion to cells is mediated by the protein heterodimer CD11a/CD18 (Leu-CAMa, LFA-1) and its ligand CD54 (ICAM-1). Although the murine CD11a/CD18 is well characterized, the mouse homologue of human ICAM-1 has not been identified. In the present study a rat monoclonal antibody to the murine lymphocyte activation antigen MALA-2 was found to inhibit in a dose-dependent manner the phorbol ester-enhanced aggregation of mouse lymphoblasts, an adhesion-specific assay, and hence to define an adhesion molecule. By immunofluorescence flow cytometry the antigen expression was low on spleen cells but it largely increased after stimulation with mitogens. The antigen was expressed by some, but not all, lymphoid cell lines, and myelomonocytic and mastocytoma cells were also positive. In frozen tissue sections MALA-2 was mainly detected on germinal center B cells, dendritic cells, macrophages and vascular endothelium, including high endothelial venules. Cell surface labeling followed by immunoprecipitation and gel electrophoresis indicated that the antigen is a sialoglycoprotein which has a relative molecular mass of 95 kDa and displays a faster electrophoretic mobility under non-reducing conditions. The function, cellular distribution and molecular properties of MALA-2 are indistinguishable from those of human ICAM-1.  相似文献   

2.
Although representing a major immunological apparatus, it is not known how the immune system of the intestinal mucosa differentiates between dietary antigens (resulting in systemic tolerance) and potential pathogens. It is thought that intraepithelial T lymphocytes (IEL) may play a central role in local intestinal immunity and are likely to be important in immunity to gastrointestinal neoplasms and rejection responses to gut allografts. However, the biology of IEL and their unusual immunological microenvironments in the gastrointestinal mucosa are little understood. IEL are predominantly CD8+ TcR alpha beta+ CD3+ T cells which differ from lamina propria and peripheral T cells in many respects. IEL show low expression of CD5, CD6, LFA-1 (CD11a/CD18) and VLA-4, and high expression of HML-1. TcR gamma delta + IEL, although a minority population, are also phenotypically distinct, insofar as they are 50% CD8+, mainly V delta 1+ V gamma 9- and CD4- CD5-. IEL show poor proliferative responses to PHA, anti-CD3 and phorbol ester/calcium ionophore in vitro and have no clear functional role: they neither provide helper nor suppressor functions for Ig synthesis by B cells and do not mediate spontaneous cytotoxicity. However, there is evidence that IEL show preferential activation in response to sheep erythrocytes, presumably signalling via CD2. As normal and inflamed intestinal epithelia do not express ICAM-1, it seems unlikely that the LFA-1/ICAM-1 interaction is of importance to IEL activation. Rather, the CD2 (LFA-2) interaction with LFA-3 expressed by enterocytes may serve both to anchor IEL and to provide an accessory stimulus for activation. Nevertheless, the questions of antigenic specificity and immunological role remain unanswered.  相似文献   

3.
J E Harvey  D B Jones 《Immunology》1990,70(2):203-209
The distribution of leucocyte common antigen (LCA) protein subspecies and the cellular adhesion molecules LFA-1 (CD11a), ICAM-1 (CD54) and p150,95 (CD11c) has been established within frozen sections of human foetal thymus. Whereas over 95% of foetal cortical thymocytes and approximately 85% of medullary thymocytes were CD45RO positive, CD45RA was only expressed by approximately 29% of medullary thymocytes. The majority of foetal thymocytes also expressed CD11a, whereas CD54 was expressed by thymic epithelial and accessory cells and also apparently by some cortical thymocytes adjacent to epithelial cells. The distribution of CD54 and the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II molecule HLA-DR, demonstrated with a monoclonal antibody to a monomorphic determinant, was similar. The CD11c molecule was present on a population of dendritic-type accessory cells, but was absent from the large, scavenger, KiM8-positive macrophages occurring throughout the thymic cortex.  相似文献   

4.
Activation of certain adhesion molecules within vascular endothelium and the surrounding extravascular space is a critical event in the recruitment and targeting of an inflammatory response or autoimmune attack to a particular tissue site. We have recently demonstrated that the adhesion of lymphocytes to cultured retroocular fibroblasts obtained from patients with Graves' ophthalmopathy (GO) is mediated predominantly by the interaction of lymphocyte function-associated antigen-1 (LFA-1), expressed on lymphocytes, with intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1), expressed by these cells following exposure to interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma), tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), IL-1 alpha or purified thyroid-stimulating immunoglobulins. We now report the expression and localization in situ of several adhesion molecules, ICAM-1, endothelial leucocyte adhesion molecule-1 (ELAM-1), vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 (VCAM-1), and LFA-3 in retroocular tissues derived from patients with severe GO (n = 4) and normal individuals (n = 3). Serial cryostat sections of tissue specimens were processed for immunoperoxidase staining using various MoAbs against ICAM-1, ELAM-1, VCAM-1 and LFA-3. In addition, consecutive sections were stained with MoAbs against LFA-1, CD45RO (UCHL-1)DR-human leucocyte antigen (HLA-DR), CD11b/CD18 (Mac-1), and CD11c/CD18 (p150,95). In GO-retroocular tissues, strong immunoreactivity for ICAM-1 and LFA-3 was detected in blood vessels (> 90%), in perimysial fibroblasts surrounding extraocular muscle fibres, and in connective tissue distinct from extraocular muscle. No ICAM-1 or LFA-3 immunoreactivity was present in extraocular muscle cells themselves. ICAM-1 and LFA-3 immunoreactivity in normal tissues was minimal or absent both in connective and muscle tissues. Vascular endothelium was strongly positive for ELAM-1 and VCAM-1 in GO-retroocular tissues, while VCAM-1 immunoreactivity was minimal (< 5% of blood vessels) and ELAM-1 immunoreactivity was generally absent in normal retroocular tissue. LFA-1-expressing, activated mononuclear cells and memory T lymphocytes (CD3+/CD45RO+) were only detected in GO-retrocular tissues, and were mainly localized around blood vessels and in areas of ICAM-1-expressing connective and perimysial tissue. HLA-DR expression was restricted to GO-tissue specimens, with strong immunoreactivity detected in blood vessels, macrophages and connective tissue and perimysial fibroblasts. No HLA-DR was detectable in extraocular muscle cells. In conclusion, infiltration of the orbit in GO by mononuclear cells, and their targeting within the orbit, may depend upon the coordinate expression of certain adhesion and MHC molecules.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
The expression of adhesion molecules by cells of the small intestinal mucosa was compared in gut biopsies from children with autoimmune small intestinal enteropathy and normal controls and related to HLA-DR expression by the same tissue. Jejunal biopsies were stained by IFL with monoclonal antibodies to LFA-1 (TS1/22 and CD11a/25.3.1) and ICAM-1 (RR1/1 and 84H10) molecules. LFA-1 and ICAM-1 positive cells were observed in the lamina propria in all cases and the counts were increased in autoimmune enteropathy compared with controls. In addition, in 4 of 7 cases of autoimmune enteropathy crypt enterocytes were positives for ICAM-1 when stained with RR1/1 and 3 of the 4 were also positive for LFA-1 when stained with both LFA-1 reagents. We speculate on the role of adhesion molecule expression in autoimmune enteropathy.  相似文献   

6.
Adhesion molecules play an important role in the functioning of the immune system, particularly with regard to cell-cell interactions and antigen presentation. Several adhesion molecules are expressed on Hodgkin's disease-derived cell lines and these are important in their molecular interactions as antigen presenting cells (APC). There are no data regarding the expression of many of these adhesion molecules on Reed-Sternberg cells and its mononuclear variant (Hodgkin's cells (HC)) present in pathological material. To obtain this information we undertook an immunohistological study on material from 18 cases of Hodgkin's disease using a panel of MoAbs to examine the expression of adhesion molecules on HC. The HC were shown to express the integrin beta 1 subfamily molecules, LFA-1 (CD11a) and p150,95 (CD11c) in high density but lacked CR3 (CD11b). All of the immunoglobulin gene superfamily adhesion molecules studied were present to some degree on HC, with ICAM-2, in particular, showing moderate to strong expression in most cases. The Hermes antigen CD44 was present in high density but leukosialin (CD43), another molecule present on diverse leucocyte types, was, in general, not detected on HC. These new data showing that ICAM-1, ICAM-2 and LFA-3 are, like LFA-1, expressed on HC emphasize the ability of HC to act as APC. The known adhesion molecule phenotype of the recently defined haematopoietic lineage of human dendritic cells (DC) is broadly similar to that of HC, perhaps supporting the hypothesis that some HC represent a malignancy of an APC (DC) lineage.  相似文献   

7.
CD147 is a 50 000-60 000 MW glycoprotein of the immunoglobulin superfamily broadly expressed on haemopoietic cell lines and peripheral blood cells. In the present study, six monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) directed against the CD147 protein were generated. The antigen defined by the generated CD147 mAbs is widely expressed on haemopoietic cell lines, peripheral blood cells and is a lymphocyte activation-associated cell surface molecule. The generated CD147 mAbs precipitated a broad protein band from U937 cells of 45 000-65 000 MW under reducing conditions. Functional analysis indicated that the CD147 mAbs markedly induced homotypic cell aggregation of U937 cells, but not K562 cells. The CD147 mAb-induced cell aggregation was inhibited by leucocyte function-antigen-1 (LFA-1) and intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) mAbs. However, the expression of LFA-1 and ICAM-1 molecules on U937 was not altered by CD147 mAb treatment. The U937 cell aggregation induced by CD147 mAb was also inhibited by ethylenediamine tetra-acetic acid (EDTA), sodium azide and when incubated at 4 degrees. We therefore propose that the binding of CD147 mAb to CD147 molecule, which mimics the natural ligand binding, may generate intracellular signals that activate LFA-1/ICAM-1 intercellular adhesion pathway.  相似文献   

8.
Intestinal intraepithelial lymphocytes (IEL) were studied, after isolation in humans, for their surface antigens with a large variety of monoclonal antibodies. They show peculiar characteristics when compared with peripheral blood lymphocytes and intestinal lamina propria lymphocytes. Although a majority of human intraepithelial lymphocytes (IEL) express an alpha/beta type of T cell receptor (TcR), 13% express a gamma/delta TcR, a percentage which was significantly higher than that found in blood and in lamina propria. In contrast to observations in mice, there was no evidence that normal human TcR gamma/delta+ intestinal IEL might use preferential variable segments of gamma genes. About 10% of human intestinal IEL expressed the alpha chain but not the beta chain of CD8, thus resembling a subset of CD8 alpha+beta- IEL, which was recently described in mice and found to be of thymoindependent origin. In addition, 10% of human IEL had a unique phenotype of immature T cells, as they bore only CD7, but no other T cell or natural killer cell markers. Finally, even the major population of IEL which expressed the usual markers of the T cell lineage (CD3, TcR alpha/beta, CD2, CD4 or CD8 alpha/beta) differed from peripheral blood T lymphocytes by their peculiar expression of surface antigens associated with activation. Indeed, 80% of IEL were CD45R0+, CD45A-, but co-expression of CD11a, CD29 and LFA-3 was inconstant. In addition, 90% of IEL expressed HML-1.  相似文献   

9.
J Harvey  D B Jones    D H Wright 《Immunology》1989,68(1):13-17
The expression of the 220,000 MW (p220) glycoprotein component of the leucocyte common antigen (LCA) family by intestinal mucosal lymphocytes was studied using the CD45R monoclonal antibody WR16. In normal intestine, a proportion of CD3+ mucosal T cells were WR16+ and this population resided predominantly in the mid-villus and crypt region of lamina propria. In the inflammatory infiltrates of both coeliac disease and Crohn's disease the CD3+, WR16+ population was markedly reduced. The monoclonal antibody UCHL1 identifies the 180,000 MW member of the LCA family and is expressed on T cells and in macrophages. CD3+ lymphocytes expressing this marker were widespread in normal lamina propria and epithelium. In contrast with WR16, UCHL1+ cells remained at a high level in coeliac disease and Crohn's disease. Our results support the view that loss of the p220 molecule occurs upon T-cell activation in inflammation.  相似文献   

10.
Extravasation of leucocytes in tissues is mediated by leucocyte—endothelial cell interactions in which adhesion molecules play an important role. Until now, two pathways have been unravelled, i.e., the LFA-1/ICAM-1 and the VLA-4/VCAM-1 pathways. ELAM-1 has been shown to be involved in granulocyte accumulation and recently also in lymphocyte migration. The role of HECA-452 is under investigation. In this study we have investigated the expression of the above-mentioned adhesion molecules in lung tissue of patients with pulmonary sarcoidosis and usual interstitial pneumonitis (UIP), and in mediastinal lymph nodes of patients with sarcoidosis. ICAM-1 (CD54) was broadly distributed on the endothelium of all the vessels found in sarcoidosis and UIP. VCAM-1 was present on the endothelium of the venules, capillaries, and arterioles in both sarcoidosis and UIP. ELAM-1 reacted with endothelial cells lining venules and capillaries in chronic progressive sarcoidosis and in the active phase of UIP but not in the stationary phases of both diseases. HECA-452 activity could be detected only on high endothelial venules within sarcoid lymph nodes. In lung tissues, macrophages bearing the ICAM-1 antigen were present in sarcoid tissue but not in the interstitium and alveolar space of UIP. LFA-1 (CD11a/CD18) and VLA-4 (CD49d/CD29) were present on all leucocytes found but seemed to be more highly expressed on lymphocytes in sarcoidosis. These findings suggest that the LFA-1/ICAM-1 and VLA-4/VCAM-1 pathways are involved in leucocyte migration in both types of lung disease, while in the active phases of sarcoidosis and UIP, ELAM-1 is also involved.  相似文献   

11.
The effect of inflammatory mediators on the expression of several surface adhesion molecules on the human mast-cell line (HMC)-1 was studied. By flow cytometry, it could be shown that among several surface adhesion molecules (ICAM-UCDS4, VLA-4/CD49d, Mac-UCD11b, LFA-1/CD11a, LFA-2/CD2, LFA-3/CDS8, VCAM-1), only the constitutively expressed immunoglobulin family member intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) is modulated by proinflammatory cytokines on HMC-1 mast cells. Stimulation with tumor necrosis factor-a (TNF-α) and interferon-γ (IFN-γ) resulted, in addition to interleukin-(lL-)4, in selective upregulation of ICAM-1 expression. Costimulation of either IL-4 or IFN-γ with TNF-α further increased the ICAM-1 expression as compared to the stimuli alone. In contrast, stem-cell factor (SCF), granulocyte/macrophage colonystimulating factor (GM-CSF), IL-10, IL-8, monocyte chemotactic and activating factor (MCAF), and the complement split product C5a failed to modulate the expression of any adhesion molecule examined. The levels of cytoplasmic free calcium in HMC-1 mast cells were not altered by cross-linking surface ICAM-1, suggesting linkage of other intracellular signaling pathways. This cytokine-induced upregulation of ICAM-1 expression might reveal a putative regulatory mechanism of mast-cell interaction with effector cells bearing the counterparts of ICAM-1 (CD54), the molecules Mac-1 (CD11b/CD18) and leukosialin (CD43), and the principal ligand LFA-1 (CD11a/CD18).  相似文献   

12.
After binding to the CD4 receptor, the human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1) may enter the T cell and induce the formation of multinucleated giant cells (syncytia). As well as the CD4 molecule, other molecules, such as the lymphocyte function-associated antigen 1 (LFA-1, CD11a/CD18) have been shown to be involved in HIV-1-mediated cell fusion. This study was designed to define regions on the human CD11a/CD18 molecule important for the HIV-1-induced syncytium formation. A CD11a/CD18 MoAb panel discriminating at least five distinct and spatially distant domains on the LFA-1 molecule was used. Comparison of the functional activity of different MoAbs demonstrated that all epitopes of the LFA-1 molecule were not of equal importance in HIV-1-induced syncytium formation between H9.III cells chronically infected with HIV-1 and uninfected CD4+ SupT1 cells. We also demonstrated that CD11a/CD18 MoAbs inhibit syncytia formation only at the level of the uninfected SupT1 cells, suggesting that the LFA-1 molecule expressed on SupT1 cells interacts with ligand(s) expressed on the infected H9.III cells. Two potential LFA-1 receptors on the H9.III cells were tested: the ICAM-1 molecule (intercellular adhesion molecule 1, CD54) and the HIV-1 transmembrane glycoprotein 41 (gp41). A CD54 MoAb (84H10) partially inhibited syncytia formation, thus demonstrating the involvement of the ICAM-1 molecule in the HIV-1-mediated cell fusion. However, the CD11a/CD18 MoAbs do not inhibit binding of the viral envelope glycoprotein gp41 to the cell surface, irrespective of the MoAb concentration used. Although we have not been successful in identifying all candidate fusion receptors for the LFA-1 molecule, these data suggest that some LFA-1 regions are important for syncytium formation and, therefore, in the cell-to-cell transmission of virus and in the spread of infection.  相似文献   

13.
Two alternative integrins involved in mucosal homing (alpha 4 beta 7) or epithelial retention (alpha E beta 7) of lymphocytes were examined in the human gut. The distribution of the beta 7 subunit [monoclonal antibody (mAb) M301] was bimodal in that it was strongly expressed by alpha E beta 7 + cells but weakly by alpha 4 beta 7 + cells. More than 90% of intraepithelial lymphocytes (IEL), including the minor subsets of CD4+, T-cell receptor (TCR) gamma/delta +, and CD3- cells, expressed alpha E beta 7 as did most lamina propria CD8+ (88%) and a fraction (36%) of CD4+ lymphocytes. Conversely, B-lineage cells (CD19+) and macrophages (CD68+) were negative. In gut-associated lymphoid tissue (GALT: Peyer's patches and appendix) only a few (< 5%) cells were positive for alpha E beta 7 (confined to CD8+ lymphocytes and CD11c+ putative dendritic cells). A relatively small fraction of IEL (30-50%) expressed alpha 4 beta 7 (mAb Act-1), while most (70%) lamina propria T and B lymphocytes, blasts, plasma cells and macrophages were positive. In GALT, T lymphocytes expressed similar levels of alpha 4 beta 7 as in the lamina propria whereas relatively few B lymphocytes (< 50%) were positive. Isolated lamina propria CD8+, CD4+, CD19+, and CD38+ cells contained mRNA for alpha 4 and the former three subsets as well as appendix CD8+ cells also for beta 7 while only lamina propria CD8+ cells had mRNA for alpha E. Together, the results suggested that alpha E beta 7 and alpha 4 beta 7 are differentially regulated in inductive sites and effector sites of the human gut. Because lymphoid cells at both sites expressed mainly alpha 4 beta 7, this integrin may be a homing receptor on memory and effector cells bound for lamina propria as well as on naive lymphocytes extravasating in GALT. Conversely, because alpha E beta 7 was mainly expressed by CD8+ cells in epithelium and lamina propria, it was probably induced after extravasation, in agreement with the observation that IEL and a fraction of lamina propria T lymphocytes (mainly CD8+ cells) generally expressed higher levels of beta 7 than most CD4+ and B cells. Also a subset of putative dendritic cells located near the follicle-associated epithelium of GALT expressed alpha E beta 7, perhaps reflecting epithelial interaction during primary immune responses.  相似文献   

14.
Cryostat sections of normal human adult gastrointestinal mucosae were studied by double-label immunofluorescence with antibodies to CD3, CD4, CD8, CD5 and CD6, in parallel with antibodies beta F1 and TCR delta 1 against beta-chains and delta-chains of the T-cell receptor (TcR) types TcR2 (alpha/beta) and TcR1 (gamma/delta), respectively. Virtually no TcR1+ were found within the lamina propria. In the epithelial compartment, TcR1+ cells were infrequent: in the small bowel, congruent to 2% of T cells were TcR1+. In the colonic epithelium, the percentage of T cells expressing gamma/delta-chains was higher, with a mean value approximating 15-20%, although this apparently large percentage increase compared with small bowel reflects in part a much lower density of colonic IEL, as absolute numbers of TCR delta 1+ cells were comparable. Of the TcR1+ population, about half were CD4- CD8-, 'double negatives' and the remainder were CD8+. TcR1+ cells were also CD5- CD6-, irrespective of expression of CD8. No CD4+ cells expressing TcR1 were observed: essentially all CD4+ cells were beta F1+, with some variability of labelling intensity. Approximately 30-50% of the CD8+ subset expressed the beta F1 antigen strongly. However, in the remaining TcR1- CD8+ cells, which were all of the CD5- CD6- phenotype, expression of the beta F1 antigen was only detectable when streptavidin and biotin conjugates were used for amplification of labelling. Thus, the CD8+ CD5- subset, a prominent population of the epithelial compartment of the small bowel, was either TcR2dull in the majority or TcR1+ in a minority. Our data imply that gamma/delta TcR1 cells may be actively excluded from intestinal lamina propria, and that any preferential localization that does occur is limited and is rather a feature of the colonic mucosa, rather than the small bowel.  相似文献   

15.
Intercellular adhesion molecule-3 (ICAM-3, CD50), a member of the immunoglobulin gene superfamily, is a major ligand for the lymphocyte functionassociated antigen 1 (LFA-1, CD18/CD11a) in the resting immune system and plays a role as a signaling and costimulatory molecule on T lymphocytes. In this study we have generated a large panel of anti-ICAM-3 monoclonal antibodies (mAb) and show that the biological effects of these antibodies are critically dependent on the epitope recognized. By using an adhesion assay employing COS cells expressing LFA-1 binding to recombinant chimeric ICAM-3-Fc proteins (which overcomes the confounding effects of interleukocyte LFA-1/ICAM binding events), we have been able to examine the effects of these antibodies in blocking IFA-1/ICAM-3 adhesion. Our data suggests that only a small minority of ICAM-3 mAb, recognizing a distinct epitope, are able to mimic the effects of LFA-1 binding to ICAM-3. Moreover these antibodies are functionally distinct as defined by their costimulatory activity and ability to elicit interleukin-2 production and cell proliferation in T lymphocytes.  相似文献   

16.
Expression of various CD45 isoforms (RA, RB and R0) on CD3+, CD4+ and CD8+ intraepithelial and lamina propria T cells was examined in situ by a three-color immunofluorescence technique in jejunal biopsy specimens from 32 patients with celiac disease and 18 controls. The median percentage of CD3+ intraepithelial lymphocytes (IEL) that expressed CD45R0 increased from 52% in controls to 69% in untreated celiac disease (p less than 0.01). Furthermore, the percentages of CD4+ and CD8+ IEL strongly positive for CD45R0 rose respectively from 94% and 24% in controls to 100% and 55% in untreated celiac disease. Conversely, CD45R0 was strongly expressed on most CD3+ lamina propria lymphocytes (LPL) both in control (81%) and diseased (77%-81%) mucosa. A variable fraction of the intraepithelial and lamina propria CD3+ T cells expressed mainly CD45RB (controls, 46% and 20%, respectively; celiac disease, 29% and 15%). Only 2% IEL and 4% LPL were positive for CD45RA. Expression of different CD45R isoforms thus identified three distinct CD8+ T cell subsets in human intestinal mucosa. In addition, our results suggested that antigen-primed CD8+CD45R0+ memory cells accumulate in the jejunal epithelium of patients with untreated celiac disease.  相似文献   

17.
Sarcoidosis is a multisystem disease of unknown etiology characterized by non-caseating granulomata, formed mainly from macrophages surrounded by lymphocytes and plasma cells. Using a novel method for the preparation of blood leucocytes for flow cytometry, we report increased expression of LeuCAMs (CD11/CD18) on peripheral blood leucocytes of 11 Caucasian and 10 Afro-Caribbean patients with sarcoidosis compared with age-, sex- and race-matched controls. Whilst the percentages of the cells expressing CD11/CD18 were no different, the density, expressed as mean fluorescence intensity (MFI), was greater for all leucocytes in sarcoids than in normal individuals. The expression of intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1), a ligand for LFA-1 which is expressed on all leucocytes, was not significantly different from normal, whereas HLA-DR was expressed more intensely on sarcoid monocytes (P less than 0.01) and blood lymphocytes (P less than 0.005) than control cells. Our findings are consistent with leucocyte activation although we were unable to confirm reports of elevated tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) in the patients' plasma using an ELISA. Increased expression of adhesion molecules on peripheral blood leucocytes may play a role in the cellular extravasation, aggregation, and granuloma formation seen in sarcoidosis.  相似文献   

18.
Expression of the gamma/delta T-cell receptor (TcR) for antigen on CD3+ intraepithelial lymphocytes (IEL) was studied in situ by two-colour immunofluorescence on jejunal tissue sections from 24 patients with coeliac disease and 17 controls. The proportion of intraepithelial TcR gamma/delta+ cells was significantly increased (P less than 0.002) in untreated (median 20%, range 11-53%) as well as in treated (gluten-free diet) coeliac disease (median 23%, range 16-55%) compared with controls (median 2%, range 0-39%). Although TcR alpha/beta+ IEL dominated both in controls and coeliac disease, T cells expressing the TcR gamma/delta were preferentially located within the epithelium rather than in the lamina propria. Paired staining for TcR gamma/delta and CD8 revealed that most (approximately 90%) intraepithelial TcR gamma/delta+ lymphocytes in coeliac disease were CD8-. A remarkably large fraction (median 67%, range 58-94%) of intraepithelial TcR gamma/delta+ cells expressed the V delta 1/J delta 1-encoded epitope revealed by monoclonal antibody delta TCS1. Our results suggested that increase of the intraepithelial TcR gamma/delta+ CD8- subset of T cells is particularly related to coeliac disease.  相似文献   

19.
Lymphocytic colitis (LC) is a disease of unknown aetiology. Among other pathogenetic possibilities, an abnormal reaction to a luminal antigen has been discussed. To clarify this fact, we characterized the inflammatory infiltrate in LC and compared it with the Th1 response-related coeliac disease (CD). Biopsies from 10 LC and 10 CD patients were analyzed by immunohistochemistry for detection of T-bet, the master regulator of Th1 response and its antagonist GATA-3 in T cells employing double labellings. In LC, 10–20% of intraepithelial lymphocytes (IEL) expressed GATA-3 and the remaining T-bet, whereas in CD, all IEL were T-bet-positive. The T cells in the lamina propria of LC (65–70% CD4+; 30–35% CD8+) showed a mixed expression pattern of T-bet and GATA-3. The majority of the CD4+ T cells were GATA-3+, while T-bet and GATA-3 were expressed at a similar frequency by the CD8+ T cells. Most of the T cells in the lamina propria of CD specimens were CD4+, showing a predominant T-bet expression. Also, most of the CD8+ lamina propria T cells in CD were T-bet+. We conclude that in contrast to CD, which exhibits immunophenotypical features of a Th1-response, LC shows features of a mixed Th1/Th2 immune response.  相似文献   

20.
We previously demonstrated that CD82, expressed on both T cells and antigen-presenting cells (APC), plays an important role as a co-stimulatory molecule especially in the early phase of T cell activation. We also showed that the CD82 expression level is up-regulated on activated T cells and memory T cells. This up-regulation enhances both T cell-T cell and T cell-APC interactions. In this study, we further investigated the mechanism of CD82-mediated cell-cell adhesion. The enhanced adhesion between CD82-overexpressing Jurkat cells was completely blocked by anti-ICAM-1 / LFA-1 monoclonal antibodies. Increased interaction of LFA-1 with ICAM-1 was further confirmed by enhanced adhesion of CD82-overexpressing Jurkat cells to immobilized ICAM-1-Ig. CD82 co-immunoprecipitated with LFA-1 from Jurkat cells and CD82 and LFA-1 colocalized at an adhesion foci. These results suggest that the T cell stimulation via anti-CD3 cross-linking or phorbol myristate acetate treatment up-regulates CD82 expression, leading to the colocalization of CD82 and LFA-1, and results in enhanced interaction between LFA-1 and ICAM-1. In addition, a blocking experiment using monoclonal antibodies suggested that CD82 and LFA-1 molecules on APC are also important for the optimal activation of T cells. This is the first report that describes the enhancement of cell-cell interaction through LFA-1 and ICAM-1 by the overexpression of another cell surface molecule, CD82.  相似文献   

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