Evidence suggests that distinct splenic dendritic cell (DC) subsets activate either CD4+ or CD8+ T cells in vivo. This bias has been partially ascribed to differential antigen presentation; however, all DC subsets can activate both T cell lineages in vitro. Therefore, we tested whether the organization of DC and T cell subsets in the spleen dictated this preference. We discovered that CD4+ and CD8+ T cells segregated within splenic T cell zones prior to immunization. After intravenous immunization, the two major conventional DC populations, distinguished by 33D1 and XCR1 staining, migrated into separate regions of the T cell zone: 33D1+ DCs migrated into the CD4+ T cell area, whereas XCR1+ DCs migrated into the CD8+ T cell area. Thus, the post-immunization location of each DC subset correlated with the T cell lineage it preferentially primes. Preventing this co-localization selectively impaired either CD4+ or CD8+ T cell immunity to blood-borne antigens.
Calabro et al. show that 33D1+ dendritic cells present in the bridging channel of the spleen are essential for alloantibody response to transfused red blood cells.
Interleukin 17 (IL-17) is an inflammatory cytokine that plays a protective role against intracellular parasites. The role of IL-17 during Leishmania infection remains controversial and poorly defined. We evaluated whether IL-17 participates in the host immune response to Leishmania infantum. IL-17A is present in sera from patients with visceral leishmaniasis and decreases after successful treatment. In C57BL/6 infected mice, higher production of IL-17A coincided with the peak of parasitism. Il17ra(-/-) mice were more susceptible to infection and also exhibited reduced inflammatory infiltration and interferon γ (IFN-γ)-expressing CD4+ T-cell frequencies than wild-type mice. The frequencies of FoxP3+ CD4+ T cells and interleukin 10 (IL-10)-expressing CD4+ T cells were increased in Il17ra(-/-) mice. We also demonstrated that IL-17A acts synergistically with IFN-γ to potentiate NO production and leishmanicidal activity in infected macrophages. Therefore, our results indicate that L. infantum induces IL-17A production, which promotes the control of parasite replication by strengthening T-helper type 1 responses and NO production and prevents regulatory T-cell and IL-10-expressing T-cell expansion.
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