Plasmodium vivax is the most widely distributed human malaria parasite. Previous studies have shown that circulating microparticles during P. vivax acute attacks are indirectly associated with severity. Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are therefore major components of circulating plasma holding insights into pathological processes. Here, we demonstrate that plasma-derived EVs from Plasmodium vivax patients (PvEVs) are preferentially uptaken by human spleen fibroblasts (hSFs) as compared to the uptake of EVs from healthy individuals. Moreover, this uptake induces specific upregulation of ICAM-1 associated with the translocation of NF-kB to the nucleus. After this uptake, P. vivax-infected reticulocytes obtained from patients show specific adhesion properties to hSFs, reversed by inhibiting NF-kB translocation to the nucleus. Together, these data provide physiological EV-based insights into the mechanisms of human malaria pathology and support the existence of P. vivax-adherent parasite subpopulations in the microvasculature of the human spleen.
Clinical transplantation of human islets has a disappointingly low rate of success. We report here the identification of a possible causative factor: endotoxin present in the collagenase preparations used to disperse the pancreatic tissue before islet purification and transplantation. Supporting evidence includes (1) detection of unexpectedly high levels of endotoxin in most collagenase solutions currently used to digest human pancreases; (2) demonstration that supernatants generated during islet separation are able to induce the inflammatory cytokines interleukin (IL)-1, IL-6, and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) in macrophages; and (3) induction of IL-1, IL-6, and TNF-alpha in the islets during the separation procedure. Cytokine expression was assessed by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction and, for TNF-alpha, confirmed by enzyme-linked immunoabsorbent assay. It is proposed that endotoxin and locally induced cytokines carried over with the graft activate the endothelium and promote lymphomonocytic infiltration of grafted islets and surrounding liver tissue favoring primary nonfunction and early rejection. These results also have implications for the numerous experimental procedures that use collagenase, and they point to possible ways to improve islet preparation and transplantation protocols.
Human islet transplantation has a high rate of failure, often due to primary nonfunction, which suggests that islets are damaged during the processing of the pancreas. The preparation of human islets for transplantation is still a complex process that requires large teams of surgical and laboratory personnel. To overcome this problem, we have adopted the use of the IBM 2991 COBE cell separator and a metrizamide/Ficoll density medium that is easy to prepare. Twenty-seven pancreatic glands have been processed using the COBE cell separator, 23 of which were purified in metrizamide/Ficoll gradients and 4 in bovine serum albumin gradients. The results show an improvement of recovery and viability in these preparations when compared retrospectively with manual gradients. More importantly, the time required for purification was shortened to one fourth the usual time and total processing time is about half as long. Moreover, a team of two laboratory staff was regularly able to prepare islets for transplantation, reducing the separation time from 7 hr to 3.5 hr. We conclude that the automatic cell separator and metrizamide-based separation medium are useful modifications of current islet purification methods.
SUMMARYAccording to the 'aberrant HLA expression' hypothesis, endocrine autoimmunity is driven by presentation of self antigens by target cells over-expressing HLA molecules. In autoimmune thyroid diseases (AITD), thyroid follicular cells (thyrocytes) over-express HLA class I and HLA class II molecules. Since efficient presentation of endogenous peptides via class I requires transporters that translocate endogenous peptides from the cytoplasm to the endoplasmic reticulum, i.e. transporters associated with antigen processing (TAP) -1 and -2, the capability of thyrocytes to express TAP and whether TAP is hyperexpressed in AITD glands are issues relevant to the above hypothesis. Results from immunofluorescence and Northern blotting studies on primary thyrocyte cultures and on a thyroid cell line demonstrate that thyrocytes express constitutively TAP-1 at a low level, and that this expression is readily induced by interferon-gamma (IFN-g) and to a lesser extent by IFN-a. In AITD, but not in non-autoimmune glands, thyrocytes hyperexpress TAP-1, as demonstrated by both immunohistopathology and flow cytometry. The cytokine pattern does not bear, as assessed by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), a clear relationship with TAP-1 expression. These results have broad implications and suggest that the core concept of the 'aberrant HLA expression' hypothesis of endocrine autoimmunity could be incorporated in the currently prevailing view of 'autoimmunity by breach of peripheral tolerance'.
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