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    Date Issued2008 (3)AuthorBrutkiewicz, Randy R. (3)
    Khan, Masood A. (3)
    Renukaradhya, Gourapura J. (3)Du, Wenjun (2)Gervay-Hague, Jacquelyn (2)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationGraduate School of Biomedical Sciences (3)Department of Microbiology and Immunology (2)Department of Pathology (2)Document TypeJournal Article (3)KeywordLife Sciences (3)Medicine and Health Sciences (3)Adoptive Transfer; Animals; Ascites; Cell Line, Tumor; Cytokines; Female; *Immunotherapy; Killer Cells, Natural; Lymphoma, B-Cell; Male; Mice; Mice, Inbred BALB C; Mice, Knockout; Myeloid Cells; Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell, alpha-beta; Spleen; Survival Rate; T-Lymphocyte Subsets (1)Animals; Antigen Presentation; Antigens, CD1; Antigens, CD1d; Apoptosis; Camptothecin; Caspases; Cells, Cultured; Ceramides; Coculture Techniques; Female; Galactosylceramides; Meperidine; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Protein Kinase C-delta; Signal Transduction; p38 Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases (1)View MoreJournalBlood (1)Immunology (1)Journal of virology (1)

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    Vesicular stomatitis virus matrix protein impairs CD1d-mediated antigen presentation through activation of the p38 MAPK pathway

    Renukaradhya, Gourapura J.; Khan, Masood A.; Shaji, Daniel; Brutkiewicz, Randy R. (2008-09-26)
    Natural killer T (NKT) cells are unique T lymphocytes that recognize CD1d-bound lipid antigens and play an important role in both innate and acquired immune responses against infectious diseases and tumors. We have already shown that a vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) infection results in the rapid inhibition of murine CD1d-mediated antigen presentation to NKT cells. In the present study, it was found that the VSV matrix (VSV-M) protein is an important element in this decrease in antigen presentation postinfection. The VSV-M protein altered the intracellular distribution of murine CD1d molecules, resulting in qualitative (but not quantitative) changes in cell surface CD1d expression. The M protein was distributed throughout the infected cell, and it was found to activate the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) p38 very early postinfection. Infection of CD1d(+) cells with a temperature-sensitive VSV-M mutant at the nonpermissive temperature both substantially reversed the inhibition of antigen presentation by CD1d and delayed the activation of p38. Thus, the VSV-M protein plays an important role in permitting the virus to evade important components of the innate immune response by regulating specific MAPK pathways.
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    Type I NKT cells protect (and type II NKT cells suppress) the host's innate antitumor immune response to a B-cell lymphoma

    Renukaradhya, Gourapura J.; Khan, Masood A.; Vieira, Marcus A. L.; Du, Wenjun; Gervay-Hague, Jacquelyn; Brutkiewicz, Randy R. (2008-04-18)
    Natural killer T (NKT) cells are a T-cell subpopulation known to possess immunoregulatory functions and recognize CD1d molecules. The majority of NKT cells express an invariant T-cell receptor (TCR) alpha chain rearrangement (Valpha14 Jalpha18 in mice; Valpha24 Jalpha18 in humans) and are called type I NKT cells; all other NKT cells are type II. In the current study, we have analyzed the roles for these NKT-cell subsets in the host's innate antitumor response against a murine B-cell lymphoma model in vivo. In tumor-bearing mice, we found that type I NKT cells conferred protection in a CD1d-dependent manner, whereas type II NKT cells exhibited inhibitory activity. Pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines secreted by splenocytes from tumor-bearing mice correlated with tumor progression. Myeloid cells (CD11b(+)Gr1(+)) were present in large numbers at the tumor site and in the spleen of tumor-bearing type I NKT-deficient mice, suggesting that antitumor immunosurveillance was inhibited by CD11b(+)Gr1(+) cells. Overall, these data suggest that there are distinct roles for NKT-cell subsets in response to a B-cell lymphoma in vivo, pointing to potential novel targets to be exploited in immunotherapeutic approaches against blood cancers.
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    Apoptosis-induced inhibition of CD1d-mediated antigen presentation: different roles for caspases and signal transduction pathways

    Khan, Masood A.; Sriram, Venkataraman; Renukaradhya, Gourapura J.; Du, Wenjun; Gervay-Hague, Jacquelyn; Brutkiewicz, Randy R. (2008-03-19)
    The stimulation of programmed cell death can either enhance or inhibit antigen presentation by classic major histocompatibility complex molecules. In the current study, we report that the induction of apoptosis by topoisomerase I inhibition or elevation of intracellular ceramide levels substantially impairs CD1d-mediated antigen presentation. In the former case, such a reduction occurred via the regulation of both the p38 mitogen-activated protein kinases and protein kinase C delta signal transduction pathways as well as the caspase cascade, whereas the latter was p38-(but not caspase)-dependent. Confocal microscopic analysis showed an altered intracellular distribution of CD1d following the inhibition topoisomerase I or by an increase in intracellular ceramide levels, that was prevented by p38 and caspase inhibitors. Thus, the induction of apoptosis in antigen presenting cells severely compromises CD1d-mediated antigen presentation by multiple mechanisms.
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