Natural killer cells support the induction of protective immunity during dendritic cell-mediated vaccination against Leishmania major |
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Authors: | Katharina A Remer Bianca Roeger Christine Hambrecht Heidrun Moll |
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Affiliation: | University of Würzburg, Institute for Molecular Infection Biology, Würzburg, Germany |
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Abstract: | Dendritic cell (DC)‐mediated vaccination against Leishmania major induces a parasite‐specific T helper 1 (Th1) response and long‐lasting protective immunity in susceptible mice. As the cytokine interleukin‐12 required for induction of this Th1 response is not derived from the transferred DC, but has to be produced by the vaccinated host, we examined cross‐presentation of transferred DC via resident DC of the host and cross‐activation with natural killer (NK) cells as mechanisms supporting the induction of protective immunity after DC‐mediated vaccination. Co‐culture with DC that had been conditioned ex vivo by loading with L. major lysate and stimulation with CpG‐containing oligodeoxynucleotides did not result in the activation of naive DC in vitro. Furthermore, L. major antigen from conditioned DC was not cross‐presented to a significant extent in vivo. In contrast, co‐culture of DC with NK cells led to cross‐activation of both cell populations with induction of interferon‐γ, which was dependent on the activation status of the conditioned DC. Transient depletion of NK cells during vaccination of L. major‐susceptible mice with conditioned DC resulted in reduced protection. Our findings indicate that cross‐presentation of conditioned DC after DC‐based vaccination against L. major plays a minor role in the induction of protective immunity. However, we demonstrated for the first time that the capacity of DC to mediate protection against L. major is supported by cross‐activation with NK cells of the host and NK‐cell‐derived interferon‐γ. |
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Keywords: | cross‐activation dendritic cells Leishmania major natural killer cells vaccination |
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