ACD can configure probes for the various manual and automated assays for CD8 for RNAscope Assay, or for Basescope Assay compatible for your species of interest.
J Virol.
2017 Mar 15
Ayala VI, Deleage C, Trivett MT, Jain S, Coren LV, Breed MW, Kramer JA, Thomas JA, Estes JD, Lifson JD, Ott DE.
PMID: 28298605 | DOI: 10.1128/JVI.02507-16
Follicular helper CD4 T cells, TFH, residing in B-cell follicles within secondary lymphoid tissues, are readily infected by AIDS viruses and are a major source of persistent virus despite relative control of viral replication. This persistence is due at least in part to a relative exclusion of effective antiviral CD8 T cells from B-cell follicles. To determine whether CD8 T cells could be engineered to enter B-cell follicles, we genetically modified unselected CD8 T cells to express CXCR5, the chemokine receptor implicated in cellular entry into B-cell follicles. Engineered CD8 T cells expressing CXCR5 (CD8hCXCR5) exhibited ligand specific signaling and chemotaxis in vitro. Six infected rhesus macaques were infused with differentially fluorescent dye-labeled autologous CD8hCXCR5 and untransduced CD8 T cells and necropsied 48h later. Flow cytometry of both spleen and lymph node samples revealed higher frequencies of CD8hCXCR5 than untransduced cells, consistent with preferential trafficking to B-cell follicle-containing tissues. Confocal fluorescence microscopy of thin-sectioned lymphoid tissues demonstrated strong preferential localization of CD8hCXCR5 T cells within B-cell follicles with only rare cells in extrafollicular locations. CD8hCXCR5 T cells were present throughout the follicles with some observed near infected TFH In contrast, untransduced CD8 T cells were found in the extrafollicular T-cell zone. Our ability to direct localization of unselected CD8 T cells into B-cell follicles using CXCR5 expression provides a strategy to place highly effective virus-specific CD8 T cells into these AIDS virus sanctuaries and potentially suppress residual viral replication.IMPORTANCE AIDS virus persistence in individuals under effective drug therapy or those who spontaneously control viremia remains an obstacle to definitive treatment. Infected follicular helper CD4 T cells, TFH, present inside B-cell follicles represent a major source of this residual virus. While effective CD8 T-cell responses can control viral replication in conjunction with drug therapy or in rare cases spontaneously, most antiviral CD8 T cells do not enter B-cell follicles and those that do fail to robustly control viral replication in the TFHpopulation. Thus, these sites are a sanctuary and a reservoir for replicating AIDS viruses. Here, we demonstrate that engineering unselected CD8 T cells to express CXCR5, a chemokine receptor on TFH associated with B-cell follicle localization, redirects them into B-cell follicles. These proof of principle results open a pathway for directing engineered antiviral T cells into these viral sanctuaries to help eliminate this source of persistent virus.
JCI insight
2021 Jun 22
Peng, T;Phasouk, K;Bossard, E;Klock, A;Jin, L;Laing, KJ;Johnston, C;Williams, NA;Czartoski, JL;Varon, D;Long, AN;Bielas, JH;Snyder, TM;Robins, H;Koelle, DM;McElrath, MJ;Wald, A;Corey, L;Zhu, J;
PMID: 34156975 | DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.149950
Kidney Int.
2018 Sep 21
Kleczko EK, Marsh KH, Tyler LC, Furgeson SB, Bullock BL, Altmann CJ, Miyazaki M, Gitomer BY, Harris PC, Weiser-Evans MCM, Chonchol MB, Clambey ET, Nemenoff RA, Hopp K.
PMID: 30249452 | DOI: 10.1016/j.kint.2018.06.025
Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) is the most prevalent inherited nephropathy. To date, therapies alleviating the disease have largely focused on targeting abnormalities in renal epithelial cell signaling. ADPKD has many hallmarks of cancer, where targeting T cells has brought novel therapeutic interventions. However, little is known about the role and therapeutic potential of T cells in ADPKD. Here, we used an orthologous ADPKD model, Pkd1 p.R3277C (RC), to begin to define the role of T cells in disease progression. Using flow cytometry, we found progressive increases in renal CD8+ and CD4+ T cells, correlative with disease severity, but with selective activation of CD8+ T cells. By immunofluorescence, T cells specifically localized to cystic lesions and increased levels of T-cell recruiting chemokines (CXCL9/CXCL10) were detected by qPCR/in situ hybridization in the kidneys of mice, patients, and ADPKD epithelial cell lines. Importantly, immunodepletion of CD8+ T cells from one to three months in C57Bl/6 Pkd1RC/RC mice resulted in worsening of ADPKD pathology, decreased apoptosis, and increased proliferation compared to IgG-control, consistent with a reno-protective role of CD8+ T cells. Thus, our studies suggest a functional role for T cells, specifically CD8+ T cells, in ADPKD progression. Hence, targeting this pathway using immune-oncology agents may represent a novel therapeutic approach for ADPKD.
Journal of neuroinflammation
2023 Jun 12
van Gent, M;Ouwendijk, WJD;Campbell, VL;Laing, KJ;Verjans, GMGM;Koelle, DM;
PMID: 37308917 | DOI: 10.1186/s12974-023-02820-y
Nature
2021 Mar 24
Dudek, M;Pfister, D;Donakonda, S;Filpe, P;Schneider, A;Laschinger, M;Hartmann, D;Hüser, N;Meiser, P;Bayerl, F;Inverso, D;Wigger, J;Sebode, M;Öllinger, R;Rad, R;Hegenbarth, S;Anton, M;Guillot, A;Bowman, A;Heide, D;Müller, F;Ramadori, P;Leone, V;Garcia-Caceres, C;Gruber, T;Seifert, G;Kabat, AM;Malm, JP;Reider, S;Effenberger, M;Roth, S;Billeter, AT;Müller-Stich, B;Pearce, EJ;Koch-Nolte, F;Käser, R;Tilg, H;Thimme, R;Böttler, T;Tacke, F;Dufour, JF;Haller, D;Murray, PJ;Heeren, R;Zehn, D;Böttcher, JP;Heikenwälder, M;Knolle, PA;
PMID: 33762736 | DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-03233-8
bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology
2023 Feb 18
Mahadevan, KK;McAndrews, KM;LeBleu, VS;Yang, S;Lyu, H;Li, B;Sockwell, AM;Kirtley, ML;Morse, SJ;Moreno Diaz, BA;Kim, MP;Feng, N;Lopez, AM;Guerrero, PA;Sugimoto, H;Arian, KA;Ying, H;Barekatain, Y;Kelly, PJ;Maitra, A;Heffernan, TP;Kalluri, R;
PMID: 36824971 | DOI: 10.1101/2023.02.15.528757
Journal of virology, 87(5), 2979–2982.
Ouwendijk WJ, Abendroth A, Traina-Dorge V, Getu S, Steain M, Wellish M, Andeweg AC, Osterhaus AD, Gilden D, Verjans GM, Mahalingam R (2013).
PMID: 23269790 | DOI: 10.1128/JVI.03181-12.
Science translational medicine
2022 Mar 23
Selvanesan, BC;Chandra, D;Quispe-Tintaya, W;Jahangir, A;Patel, A;Meena, K;Alves Da Silva, RA;Friedman, M;Gabor, L;Khouri, O;Libutti, SK;Yuan, Z;Li, J;Siddiqui, S;Beck, A;Tesfa, L;Koba, W;Chuy, J;McAuliffe, JC;Jafari, R;Entenberg, D;Wang, Y;Condeelis, J;DesMarais, V;Balachandran, V;Zhang, X;Lin, K;Gravekamp, C;
PMID: 35320003 | DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.abc1600
PLoS Pathog.
2015 Oct 23
Wang JW, Jiang R, Peng S, Chang YN, Hung CF, Roden RB.
PMID: 26495972 | DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1005243.
Persistent papillomas developed in ~10% of out-bred immune-competent SKH-1 mice following MusPV1 challenge of their tail, and in a similar fraction the papillomas were transient, suggesting potential as a model. However, papillomas only occurred in BALB/c or C57BL/6 mice depleted of T cells with anti-CD3 antibody, and they completely regressed within 8 weeks after depletion was stopped. Neither CD4+ nor CD8+ T cell depletion alone in BALB/c or C57BL/6 mice was sufficient to permit visible papilloma formation. However, low levels of MusPV1 were sporadically detected by either genomic DNA-specific PCR analysis of local skin swabs or in situ hybridization of the challenge site with an E6/E7 probe. After switching to CD3+ T cell depletion, papillomas appeared upon 14/15 of mice that had been CD4+ T cell depleted throughout the challenge phase, 1/15 of CD8+ T cell depleted mice, and none in mice without any prior T cell depletion. Both control animals and those depleted with CD8-specific antibody generated MusPV1 L1 capsid-specific antibodies, but not those depleted with CD4-specific antibody prior to T cell depletion with CD3 antibody. Thus, normal BALB/c or C57BL/6 mice eliminate the challenge dose, whereas infection is suppressed but not completely cleared if their CD4 or CD8 T cells are depleted, and recrudescence of MusPV1 is much greater in the former following treatment with CD3 antibody, possibly reflecting their failure to generate capsid antibody. Systemic vaccination of C57BL/6 mice with DNA vectors expressing MusPV1 E6 or E7 fused to calreticulin elicits potent CD8 T cell responses and these immunodominant CD8 T cell epitopes were mapped. Adoptive transfer of a MusPV1 E6-specific CD8+ T cell line controlled established MusPV1 infection and papilloma in RAG1-knockout mice. These findings suggest the potential of immunotherapy for HPV-related disease and the importance of host immunogenetics in the outcome of infection.
International Journal of Molecular Sciences
2023 Jan 30
Kaur, S;Awad, D;Finney, R;Meyer, T;Singh, S;Cam, M;Karim, B;Warner, A;Roberts, D;
| DOI: 10.3390/ijms24032612
Nat. Commun.
2018 Mar 28
Meyer MA, Baer JM, Knolhoff BL, Nywening TM, Panni RZ, Su X, Weilbaecher KN, Hawkins WG, Ma C, Fields RC, Linehan DC, Challen GA, Faccio R, Aft RL, DeNardo DG.
PMID: 29593283 | DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-03600-6
Tumors employ multiple mechanisms to evade immune surveillance. One mechanism is tumor-induced myelopoiesis, whereby the expansion of immunosuppressive myeloid cells can impair tumor immunity. As myeloid cells and conventional dendritic cells (cDCs) are derived from the same progenitors, we postulated that myelopoiesis might impact cDC development. The cDC subset, cDC1, which includes human CD141+DCs and mouse CD103+ DCs, supports anti-tumor immunity by stimulating CD8+ T-cell responses. Here, to understand how cDC1 development changes during tumor progression, we investigated cDC bone marrow progenitors. We found localized breast and pancreatic cancers induce systemic decreases in cDC1s and their progenitors. Mechanistically, tumor-produced granulocyte-stimulating factor downregulates interferon regulatory factor-8 in cDC progenitors, and thus results in reduced cDC1 development. Tumor-induced reductions in cDC1 development impair anti-tumor CD8+ T-cell responses and correlate with poor patient outcomes. These data suggest immune surveillance can be impaired by tumor-induced alterations in cDC development.
Clinical cancer research : an official journal of the American Association for Cancer Research
2023 Jun 16
Pich-Bavastro, C;Yerly, L;Di Domizio, J;Tissot-Renaud, S;Gilliet, M;Kuonen, F;
PMID: 37327314 | DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-23-0219
Description | ||
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sense Example: Hs-LAG3-sense | Standard probes for RNA detection are in antisense. Sense probe is reverse complent to the corresponding antisense probe. | |
Intron# Example: Mm-Htt-intron2 | Probe targets the indicated intron in the target gene, commonly used for pre-mRNA detection | |
Pool/Pan Example: Hs-CD3-pool (Hs-CD3D, Hs-CD3E, Hs-CD3G) | A mixture of multiple probe sets targeting multiple genes or transcripts | |
No-XSp Example: Hs-PDGFB-No-XMm | Does not cross detect with the species (Sp) | |
XSp Example: Rn-Pde9a-XMm | designed to cross detect with the species (Sp) | |
O# Example: Mm-Islr-O1 | Alternative design targeting different regions of the same transcript or isoforms | |
CDS Example: Hs-SLC31A-CDS | Probe targets the protein-coding sequence only | |
EnEm | Probe targets exons n and m | |
En-Em | Probe targets region from exon n to exon m | |
Retired Nomenclature | ||
tvn Example: Hs-LEPR-tv1 | Designed to target transcript variant n | |
ORF Example: Hs-ACVRL1-ORF | Probe targets open reading frame | |
UTR Example: Hs-HTT-UTR-C3 | Probe targets the untranslated region (non-protein-coding region) only | |
5UTR Example: Hs-GNRHR-5UTR | Probe targets the 5' untranslated region only | |
3UTR Example: Rn-Npy1r-3UTR | Probe targets the 3' untranslated region only | |
Pan Example: Pool | A mixture of multiple probe sets targeting multiple genes or transcripts |
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