Impact of stress on diseases including gastrointestinal failure is well-known, but molecular mechanism is not understood. Here we show underlying molecular mechanism using EAE mice. Under stress conditions, EAE caused severe gastrointestinal failure with high-mortality. Mechanistically, autoreactive-pathogenic CD4+ T cells accumulated at specific vessels of boundary area of third-ventricle, thalamus, and dentate-gyrus to establish brain micro-inflammation via stress-gateway reflex. Importantly, induction of brain micro-inflammation at specific vessels by cytokine injection was sufficient to establish fatal gastrointestinal failure. Resulting micro-inflammation activated new neural pathway including neurons in paraventricular-nucleus, dorsomedial-nucleus-of-hypothalamus, and also vagal neurons to cause fatal gastrointestinal failure. Suppression of the brain micro-inflammation or blockage of these neural pathways inhibited the gastrointestinal failure. These results demonstrate direct link between brain micro-inflammation and fatal gastrointestinal disease via establishment of a new neural pathway under stress. They further suggest that brain micro-inflammation around specific vessels could be switch to activate new neural pathway(s) to regulate organ homeostasis.DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.25517.001
Adoptive T‐cell therapy is an effective strategy for cancer immunotherapy. However, infused T cells frequently become functionally exhausted, and consequently offer a poor prognosis after transplantation into patients. Adoptive transfer of tumor antigen‐specific stem cell memory T (TSCM) cells is expected to overcome this shortcoming as TSCM cells are close to naïve T cells, but are also highly proliferative, long‐lived, and produce a large number of effector T cells in response to antigen stimulation. We previously reported that activated effector T cells can be converted into TSCM‐like cells (iTSCM) by coculturing with OP9 cells expressing Notch ligand, Delta‐like 1 (OP9‐hDLL1). Here we show the methodological parameters of human CD8+ iTSCM cell generation and their application to adoptive cancer immunotherapy. Regardless of the stimulation by anti‐CD3/CD28 antibodies or by antigen‐presenting cells, human iTSCM cells were more efficiently induced from central memory type T cells than from effector memory T cells. During the induction phase by coculture with OP9‐hDLL1 cells, interleukin (IL)‐7 and IL‐15 (but not IL‐2 or IL‐21) could efficiently generate iTSCM cells. Epstein–Barr virus‐specific iTSCM cells showed much stronger antitumor potentials than conventionally activated T cells in humanized Epstein–Barr virus transformed‐tumor model mice. Thus, adoptive T‐cell therapy with iTSCM offers a promising therapeutic strategy for cancer immunotherapy.
| INTRODUC TI ONPolymyalgia rheumatica (PMR) is a systemic inflammatory disease of unknown etiology. It mainly affects elderly people and rarely arises in people younger than 50 years old. Typical clinical features of PMR include proximal myalgia (particularly in the shoulder girdles), morning stiffness of the trunk, and elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) and serum C-reactive protein (CRP) levels. 1,2 Glucocorticoids (GC) remain the mainstay therapy for PMR 2,3 because they produce dramatic responses in most patients. However, approximately half of patients with PMR experience relapse after tapering of the GC dose. 2,4 Moreover, long-term GC therapy can produce substantial adverse events, such as osteoporotic compression fractures of the spine, diabetes, infections and cardio-cerebral vascular events. 2,5,6 Abstract Objectives: Polymyalgia rheumatica (PMR) is a systemic inflammatory disease in the elderly of unknown etiology. While glucocorticoids are the mainstay of treatment for PMR, various glucocorticoid-related adverse events are common. Recently, several studies have reported the efficacy of tocilizumab (TCZ), an anti-interleukin-6 receptor antibody, for PMR treatment in addition to an accompanying reduction, or even tapering-off, of glucocorticoids in some cases. The objective of this study was to elucidate the efficacy of TCZ monotherapy in the absence of glucocorticoids for PMR. Method:We conducted a 2-year, prospective, single-center, open-label pilot study of TCZ monotherapy in patients with PMR. TCZ (8 mg/kg) was administered at fortnightly intervals for the first 2 months and monthly over the next 10 months.Subsequently, patients were observed for another year without any treatment. The primary endpoints were the remission rates at weeks 12 and 52, and the secondary endpoints were the relapse rate and safety over the total 104 weeks.Results: Thirteen patients were included in this study. Four of these patients achieved remission at week 12 (remission rate 31%). Four patients withdrew from the study due to adverse events (n = 2) and inefficacy (n = 2). At week 52, all 9 patients who had completed the first year achieved remission. Eight patients completed the drug-free second year, with 7 maintaining remission.Conclusions: TCZ monotherapy is well tolerated and can lead to remission in most patients with PMR in the absence of glucocorticoids. K E Y W O R D Sglucocorticoid, interleukin-6, monotherapy, polymyalgia rheumatica, tocilizumab agents. We used 15 infusions of TCZ. However, if fewer TCZ infusions are sufficient to control PMR and TCZ treatment could be ceased, then these cost problems would be negated. Therefore, the optimal number of infusions of TCZ required to control PMR activity must be determined in the future. In addition, as TCZ monotherapy is expected to reduce adverse events related to GCs, such as osteoporosis, diabetes, dyslipidemia, and so on, the additional costs associated with the treatment of these adverse events will be reduced.Several limitations of our study warran...
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