Literature DB >> 10447749

Potent immunostimulatory dendritic cells can be cultured in bulk from progenitors in normal infant and adult myasthenic human thymus.

M E Hill1, D J Ferguson, J M Austyn, J Newsom-Davis, H N Willcox.   

Abstract

Low density cells can readily be enriched from thymus tissue both of children undergoing cardiac surgery and of older patients with myasthenia gravis, and can be cryostored in bulk. When fresh or thawed cells are cultured with granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor and stem cell factor with or without tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), they generate numerous cells with the characteristic ultrastructural, phenotypic and functional properties of dendritic cells. These proved to be very potent, both as stimulators of primary mixed leucocyte responses and as costimulators in oxidative mitogenesis. Especially after exposure to TNF-alpha, these dendritic cells also processed a natural epitope from a 437-residue polypeptide and presented it efficiently to an autoimmune T-cell clone (of T helper type 0 phenotype). Thus, immunostimulatory dendritic cells can be cultured in relative abundance from progenitors in infant and adult human thymus. Both are convenient sources of potent antigen-presenting cells of identifiable origins, e.g. for use in selecting human T-cell lines.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10447749      PMCID: PMC2326831          DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2567.1999.00799.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Immunology        ISSN: 0019-2805            Impact factor:   7.397


  27 in total

1.  The human thymic dendritic cell phenotype and its modification in culture.

Authors:  M Lafontaine; D Landry; S Montplaisir
Journal:  Cell Immunol       Date:  1992-07       Impact factor: 4.868

2.  Improved methods for the generation of dendritic cells from nonproliferating progenitors in human blood.

Authors:  A Bender; M Sapp; G Schuler; R M Steinman; N Bhardwaj
Journal:  J Immunol Methods       Date:  1996-09-27       Impact factor: 2.303

Review 3.  The hematopoietic development of dendritic cells: a distinct pathway for myeloid differentiation.

Authors:  J W Young; R M Steinman
Journal:  Stem Cells       Date:  1996-07       Impact factor: 6.277

Review 4.  The dendritic cell lineage in haemopoiesis.

Authors:  C D Reid
Journal:  Br J Haematol       Date:  1997-02       Impact factor: 6.998

5.  Myasthenic thymus and thymoma are selectively enriched in acetylcholine receptor-reactive T cells.

Authors:  N Sommer; N Willcox; G C Harcourt; J Newsom-Davis
Journal:  Ann Neurol       Date:  1990-09       Impact factor: 10.422

6.  Thymic dendritic cell precursors: relationship to the T lymphocyte lineage and phenotype of the dendritic cell progeny.

Authors:  L Wu; C L Li; K Shortman
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  1996-09-01       Impact factor: 14.307

7.  Targeted expression of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II molecules demonstrates that dendritic cells can induce negative but not positive selection of thymocytes in vivo.

Authors:  T Brocker; M Riedinger; K Karjalainen
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  1997-02-03       Impact factor: 14.307

8.  Studies on T cell maturation on defined thymic stromal cell populations in vitro.

Authors:  E J Jenkinson; G Anderson; J J Owen
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  1992-09-01       Impact factor: 14.307

9.  CD34+ hematopoietic progenitors from human cord blood differentiate along two independent dendritic cell pathways in response to GM-CSF+TNF alpha.

Authors:  C Caux; B Vanbervliet; C Massacrier; C Dezutter-Dambuyant; B de Saint-Vis; C Jacquet; K Yoneda; S Imamura; D Schmitt; J Banchereau
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  1996-08-01       Impact factor: 14.307

10.  Human dendritic cells. Enrichment and characterization from peripheral blood.

Authors:  W C Van Voorhis; L S Hair; R M Steinman; G Kaplan
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  1982-04-01       Impact factor: 14.307

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  2 in total

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Authors:  Maryam Rakhimova; Birgit Esslinger; Anja Schulze-Krebs; Eckhart G Hahn; Detlef Schuppan; Walburga Dieterich
Journal:  J Clin Immunol       Date:  2008-08-12       Impact factor: 8.317

2.  The glycoprotein-hormones activin A and inhibin A interfere with dendritic cell maturation.

Authors:  Sabine E Segerer; Nora Müller; Jens van den Brandt; Michaela Kapp; Johannes Dietl; Holger M Reichardt; Lorenz Rieger; Ulrike Kämmerer
Journal:  Reprod Biol Endocrinol       Date:  2008-05-06       Impact factor: 5.211

  2 in total

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