| Literature DB >> 26597009 |
Nicolas Poirier1, Melanie Chevalier2, Caroline Mary1, Jeremy Hervouet3, David Minault3, Paul Baker4, Simon Ville3, Stephanie Le Bas-Bernardet2, Nahzli Dilek1, Lyssia Belarif1, Elisabeth Cassagnau5, Linda Scobie4, Gilles Blancho2, Bernard Vanhove6.
Abstract
Novel therapies that specifically target activation and expansion of pathogenic immune cell subsets responsible for autoimmune attacks are needed to confer long-term remission. Pathogenic cells in autoimmunity include memory T lymphocytes that are long-lived and present rapid recall effector functions with reduced activation requirements. Whereas the CD28 costimulation pathway predominantly controls priming of naive T cells and hence generation of adaptive memory cells, the roles of CD28 costimulation on established memory T lymphocytes and the recall of memory responses remain controversial. In contrast to CD80/86 antagonists (CTLA4-Ig), selective CD28 antagonists blunt T cell costimulation while sparing CTLA-4 and PD-L1-dependent coinhibitory signals. Using a new selective CD28 antagonist, we showed that Ag-specific reactivation of human memory T lymphocytes was prevented. Selective CD28 blockade controlled both cellular and humoral memory recall in nonhuman primates and induced long-term Ag-specific unresponsiveness in a memory T cell-mediated inflammatory skin model. No modification of memory T lymphocytes subsets or numbers was observed in the periphery, and importantly no significant reactivation of quiescent viruses was noticed. These findings indicate that pathogenic memory T cell responses are controlled by both CD28 and CTLA-4/PD-L1 cosignals in vivo and that selectively targeting CD28 would help to promote remission of autoimmune diseases and control chronic inflammation.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26597009 DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1501810
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol ISSN: 0022-1767 Impact factor: 5.422