Given the anticipated clinical importance of helper and regulatory CD4؉ T cells reactive against human papillomavirus-16 E7 in the cervical carcinoma setting, we performed this study to identify novel E7-derived T helper (Th) epitopes and to characterize functional anti-E7 Th responses in normal donors and patients with cervical intraepithelial neoplasia I-III or cervical cancer.Candidate pan-HLA-DR (D region) binding peptides were identified and synthesized based on results obtained using a predictive computer algorithm, then applied in short-term in vitro T-cell sensitization assays. Using IFN-␥/ IL-5 (interleukin 5) enzyme-linked immunospot assays as readouts for Th1-type and Th2-type CD4؉ T-cell responses, respectively, we identified three E7-derived T helper epitopes (E7 1-12 , E7 48 -62 , and E7 62-75 ), two of which are novel.Normal donor CD4 ؉ T cells failed to react against these E7 peptides, whereas patients with premalignant cervical intraepithelial neoplasia I-III lesions displayed preferential Th1-type responses against all three E7 epitopes. Th1-type responses were still observed to the E7 48 -62 but not to the E7 1-12 and E7 62-75 peptides in cancer patients, where these latter two epitopes evoked Th2-type responses. Notably all responders to the E7 1-12 and E7 62-75 peptides expressed the HLA-DR4 or -DR15 alleles, whereas all responders to the E7 48 -62 peptide failed to express the HLA-DR4 allele.Our results are consistent with a model in which cervical cancer progression is linked to an undesirable Th1-to Th2-type shift in functional CD4 ؉ T cell responses to two novel E7-derived epitopes. These peptides may prove important in vaccines to promote and maintain protective Th1-type antihuman papillomavirus immunity and in the immune monitoring of treated patients harboring HPV-16 ؉ malignancies.
Dendritic cells (DCs) are under investigation as immunotherapeutic agents in the treatment of cancer and infectious diseases. One of the important factors in skewing the immune response toward clinically beneficial TH1-type immunity is interleukin-12p70. IL-12p70 is synthesized and secreted in response to inflammatory cytokines, bacterial/viral components, and CD40 ligation. This study investigated the production of IL-12 by DCs at the single-cell level using a sensitive intracellular cytokine flow cytometry-based assay system. The authors observed that immature DCs could be stimulated with several compounds to produce IL-12, but that IL-12 production was a feature of a minority of activated DCs. IL-12+ DCs were characterized as being partially matured (ie, absent or low CD83 expression, with variable expression of CD1a and CD64). Interestingly, activated DCs lacked expression of the CD16 and CD64 Fc gammaR, which may have important implications for exogenous antigen-loading strategies.
An antigenic determinant present in the cytoplasm, but not on the surface membrane of human Ia+ cells, is defined by a monoclonal antibody (VIC-Y1) and is shown by immunoprecipitation and by NEPHGE to be expressed by Ia oligomers. Immunoprecipitations of cellfree translates and of purified Ia subunits indicate that the VIC-Y1 determinant is located on the Ia gamma-(invariant) chain, as well as on two other related molecules, provisionally termed gamma 2 and gamma 3. Within our experimental conditions, the three forms of gamma-chains co-precipitate exclusively with Ia oligomers. As detected by VIC-Y1 and in the limits of our assays, gamma-chains could not be found at the cell surface; their tissue distribution, determined by cytoplasmic indirect immunofluorescence with VIC-Y1, closely resembles that of Ia antigens, with the possible exception of acute lymphatic leukemia cells (Ia+, gamma-chain-).
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.