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Antigen-specific T lymphocytes regulate lipopolysaccharide-induced apoptosis of dendritic cells in vivo.
124
Citations
15
References
1998
Year
Mature DcImmunologyCell DeathImmunologic MechanismAntigen ProcessingImmunotherapyInflammationPotent Accessory PropertiesCell SignalingImmunological MemoryAntigen-specific TAutoimmunityT Cell ImmunityCell BiologyDendritic CellsRegulate Lipopolysaccharide-induced ApoptosisImmunomodulationDendritic Cell BiologyCellular Immune ResponseSystems BiologyMedicine
The potent accessory properties of dendritic cells (DC) develop sequentially during a process termed "maturation." Splenic DC undergo functional maturation in vivo in response to the bacterial product LPS and migrate from the marginal zone to the T cell areas. The redistribution of fully mature DC, which present Ags encountered in the periphery, in the T cell area is likely to result in T cell priming. Unexpectedly, we found that DC rapidly die by apoptosis once they have entered the T cell zone. Injection of OVA peptide in OVA-specific, TCR-transgenic mice strongly delays the LPS-induced apoptosis of DC in situ. We conclude that mature DC are programmed to die unless they receive a survival signal from T cells and that the regulation of DC survival may be a mechanism aimed at controlling the initiation and the termination of the immune response.
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