| Literature DB >> 17111349 |
Tobias Rothoeft1, Sandra Balkow, Mathias Krummen, Stefan Beissert, Georg Varga, Karin Loser, Pia Oberbanscheidt, Frank van den Boom, Stephan Grabbe.
Abstract
The adaptive immune response is initiated when naive T cells interact with dendritic cells (DC). However, the physicodynamics as well as the molecules that constitute the contact plane (immunological synapse) between DC and T cells are not well understood. We show here that for the formation of stable conjugates, T cells need to be preactivated by DC in a CD80/86- and antigen dose-dependent manner. When activated, T cells induce cytoskeletal reorganization within DC via CD40-CD40L signaling. Polarization of the actin and fascin cytoskeleton in DC is associated with sustained DC-T cell contacts, strong T cell proliferation and a Th1 response. Organized contact planes with clearly separated patches containing TCR or CD11a are also formed. Thus, DC-T cell interactions take place in a sequential, interdependent fashion: first, DC "license" naive T cells to engage DC in an antigen dose- and CD80/86-dependent fashion. Then, these preactivated T cells induce cytoskeletal reorientation in DC, resulting in sustained DC-T cell contacts and subsequent T cell activation. These results demonstrate that T cells control the mode of interaction based on information gathered from DC.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 17111349 DOI: 10.1002/eji.200636145
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Immunol ISSN: 0014-2980 Impact factor: 5.532