© The Rockefeller University Press, 0022-1007/1996/12/2429/ $5.00
The Journal of Experimental Medicine, Volume 184, Number 6, December 1, 1996 2429-2432
Dendritic Cells Are Recruited into the Airway Epithelium during the Inflammatory Response to a Broad Spectrum of Stimuli
Andrew S. McWilliam,
Sylvia Napoli,
Amanda M. Marsh,
Francis L. Pemper,
Delia J. Nelson,
Carolyn L. Pimm,
Philip A. Stumbles,
Timothy N.C. Wells, and
Patrick G. Holt
From the Division of Cell Biology, TVW Telethon Institute for Child Health Research, West Perth, Western Australia 6872
 |
Abstract
|
|---|
A key rate-limiting step in the adaptive immune response at peripheral challenge sites is the transmission of antigen signals to T cells in regional lymph nodes. Recent evidence suggests that specialized dendritic cells (DC) fulfill this surveillance function in the resting state, but their relatively slow turnover in most peripheral tissues brings into question their effectiveness in signaling the arrival of highly pathogenic sources of antigen which require immediate mobilization of the full range of host defenses for maintenance of homeostasis. However, the present report demonstrates that recruitment of a wave of DC into the respiratory tract mucosa is a universal feature of the acute cellular response to local challenge with bacterial, viral, and soluble protein antigens. Consistent with this finding, we also demonstrate that freshly isolated respiratory mucosal DC respond in vitro to a variety of CC chemokines as well as complementary cleavage products and N-formyl-methionyl-leucine-phenylalanine. This suggests that rapid amplification of specific antigen surveillance at peripheral challenge sites is an integral feature of the innate immune response at mucosal surfaces, and serves as an "early warning system" to alert the adaptive immune system to incoming pathogens.
Address correspondence to Andrew S. McWilliam or Patrick G. Holt, Division of Cell Biology, TVW Telethon Institute for Child Health Research, PO Box 855, West Perth, Western Australia 6872. T.N.C. Well's present address is Geneva Biomedical Research Institute, Glaxo Wellcome Research & Development, Geneva.
The host response to invading pathogens is classically viewed as a two-tiered system, comprising a series of innate (inflammatory) and acquired (adaptive) immune mechanisms which operate over distinct time scales (1). Thus, the first line of defense is provided by the rapid recruitment of phagocytic granulocytes (usually neutrophils) into sites of tissue injury in response to locally produced chemotactic factors. This is followed up to 48 h later by a second wave of mononuclear cells containing large numbers of macrophages which are effective in both the uptake of persisting antigen and its subsequent presentation to the T cell system. In this classical scheme, the adaptive immune system serves as an optional backup to innate host defenses, and is called upon only in situations where significant amounts of antigen persist at the challenge site beyond the time frame of the acute inflammatory response.
While this scheme appears inherently economical, it could equally be viewed as flawed in at least one respect; viz, the delayed recruitment of adaptive immune mechanisms into the host response provides a temporal window for the establishment and spread of incoming pathogens. This danger would appear to be greatest in the case of pathogens not previously encountered by the host, i.e., for which neither antibody nor T-effector memory cells are available. Under such circumstances, host survival may ultimately be determined by the rapidity with which naive T cells are primed against antigens displayed by the pathogen at the challenge site, a process which occurs initially in local draining lymph nodes.
Recent evidence suggest that dendritic cells (DC) function as first-line sentinels in immune surveillance of peripheral tissues (2), including mucosal surfaces such as those in the lung and airways (3, 4). These DC migrate into peripheral tissues from a circulating monocytelike precursor pool, and differentiate locally to a stage in which they are specialized for acquisition and processing of antigen, but remain unable to effectively present the antigen locally to T cells (2). This latter function, in particular a unique capacity for potent activation of naive T cells, is acquired after their migration to regional lymph nodes (2).
Thus, individual DC present a "snapshot"of the antigens encountered during their transient sojourn through their respective peripheral tissue sites, presumably including those antigens derived from incoming pathogens.
The effectiveness of such a surveillance system in the context of infectious disease is presumably a direct function of the DC traffic (i.e., cell number/unit time) between peripheral tissue sites and their respective regional lymph nodes. In relatively quiescent tissues such as skin and muscle, mean DC transit times are estimated to normally be in the order of weeks (5–7). However, DC turnover is considerably more rapid at the main mucosal surfaces in direct contact with the outside environment (viz, the gastrointestinal and respiratory tracts) where resident populations are renewed every 3–4 d (7, 8).
 |
Materials and Methods
|
|---|
Experimental Animals.
Specified pathogen-free adult PVG rats were supplied by the Animal Resource Centre (Murdoch, Western Australia). All animal experimentation was carried out with the prior approval of the Institute for Child Health Animal Ethics and Experimentation Committee which complies with conditions set down by the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council.
Bacterial Models.
(a) Moraxella catarrhalis was grown in Mueller Hinton broth, washed extensively with saline, and suspended at
109 CFU/ml. The suspension was heated at 60°C for 1 h and passed through a 26 gauge needle several times to break up any bacterial clumps. Rats were exposed by aerosol to the suspension for 1 h using a Tri-R inhalation exposure apparatus (Tri-R Instruments, New York). (b) Bordetella pertussis (Welcome strain 28; provided by Dr. P. Novotny, Kent, England) was grown on Charcoal agar, washed in sterile PBS, and
109 organisms in 50 µl were deposited directly onto the tracheal surface of adult rats by intratracheal intubation.
Viral Model.
Sendai virus was provided by Dr. Jane Allan (University of Western Australia, Perth, Western Australia) and grown for 3 d in the allantoic cavity of eggs. Allantoic fluid was stored at –70°C until used. Adult rats were inoculated intranasally with 103 HAU in 50 µl of virus containing allantoic fluid. Control animals were similarly inoculated with virus-free allantoic fluid. Infection of airway epithelium was confirmed by staining with mAb WS16 against the nucleoprotein antigen of Sendai virus (provided by Dr. A. Portner, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, TN). There was no influx of DC or T cells into the airway epithelium of control animals.
Antigen Sensitization.
For antigen sensitization experiments, animals were intraperitoneally primed with 100 µg of ovalbumin (OVA; Sigma Chemical Co., St. Louis, MO) in 0.5 ml PBS containing 10 mg aluminium hydroxide (Wyeth Amphojel). 14 d later, the animals were challenged with a 30 min aerosol of 1% (wt/vol) OVA in PBS.
Immunohistochemical Analysis.
Tracheas were removed and immediately fixed in cold ethanol for 30 min. The tissue was then rehydrated in PBS, embedded in 100% OCT, and frozen in liquid nitrogen–cooled iso-pentane. Tangential sections 8–10 µm were cut on a cryostat and immunostained as detailed in reference 4. Eosinophils were identified by cytochemical staining (4). Sections were counterstained with hematoxylin, dehydrated, and mounted. Primary antibodies used were Ox6 (rat MHC class II; 9), Ox12 (rat kappa light chains on B cells; 9), R73 (rat TcR
β; 10), ED2 (rat macrophage; 11), and RP3 (rat neutrophils; 12). DC identification criteria were pleiomorphic morphology, together with positive staining with Ox6 and negative staining for Ox12, R73, and ED2, as detailed previously (4, 13).
DC Chemotaxis.
The assay system was based upon that described in 14, except that 6.5 mm Costar Transwells (Costar Corp., Cambridge, MA) with polycarbonate membranes (3-µm pore size) were used. Briefly, DC were enriched to 75–82% purity from collagenase digests of respiratory tract tissue by flow cytometry gating for Ox6+, Ox12–, and ED2–-cells, as previously described (13). 600 µl medium (RPMI plus 2.5% fetal calf serum) containing putative chemoattractant was placed in the lower chamber, and 105 enriched DC in 100 µl medium were placed in the insert; after incubation for 1 h at 37°C, the top surface of the inserts was washed free of cells and the insert was fixed in cold ethanol for 10 min. The polycarbonate membranes were excised, and the contralateral surface immunostained with MoAb Ox6; migrating cells were observed under a x25 objective and enumerated as mean number cells/high power field.
The chemoattractants used were 10% Zymosan–activated normal rat serum (the active agents being complement cleavage products, in particular C5a), N-formyl-methionyl-leucine-phenylalanine (f MLP; 10–8 M; Sigma Chemical Co.), rat MCP-1, GRO/KC, GROβ (all at 100 ng/ml), rat RANTES (200 ng/ ml), and murine eotaxin (100 ng/ml) from Peprotech (London, UK), human MCP-4 (100 ng/ml; Glaxo Wellcome, Geneva, Switzerland), and human IL-8 (100 ng/ml; Genzyme Corp., Boston, MA). The human IL-8 used here was shown to chemoattract rat neutrophils in this assay, in preliminary experiments.
 |
Results and Discussion
|
|---|
The present study sought to ascertain whether a similar DC response occurred after challenge of the airways with live infectious organisms (both viral and bacterial pathogens) to which animals had not been previously exposed, and an inert protein antigen (OVA) to which the animals were presensitized by parenteral immunization.
In principle, groups of normal adult rats were subjected to local airways challenge with aerosol or a liquid bolus delivered directly onto the airway surface, containing either heat-killed or live bacteria (M. catarrhalis or B. pertussis, respectively), live parainfluenza type1 virus (Sendai), or OVA; for the latter stimulus, comparisons were made between OVA-preprimed and naive animals. Animals were killed in groups at strategic (generally daily) intervals, and tracheal tissue samples cryopreserved for subsequent immunohistochemical analysis of cell populations within the airway epithelium, using methods detailed previously (4).
The time frame of interest in the present studies was the duration of the host acute cellular inflammatory responses triggered by the various stimuli, and the latter was defined in each model by a series of initial trials. Representative data are shown in Fig. 1. The acute cellular response to microbial agents depicted in A–C of Fig. 1 demonstrate the transient influx of PMN, which is the hallmark of the acute host response to this class of stimuli. These cells are enumerated in tangential sections through the tracheal epithelium after immunostaining with the PMN-specific mAb RP3 (12). The PMN response is most rapid following challenge with proinflammatory bacterial cell wall extract (Fig. 1 A). In the case of intranasally delivered live virus, we were able to identify the time of onset of the PMN response (starting on day 3) as occurring within 24 h of the first detectable expression of viral protein within infected airway epithelial cells (Fig. 1 C, arrow). It was of interest to note the intensity of the T cell chemotactic responses, which were initiated in both systems which used live pathogens (see particularly the virus model in Fig. 1 C), in contrast to the inflammatory response to bacterial cell wall products which did not include a significant T cell component.

View larger version (29K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[Download PPT slide]
|
Figure 1 Quantitative cellular responses within tracheal epithelium during inflammation. Data shown are from representative experiments ( 5 for each model); each point is a mean value derived from four to six animals. (A) Inhalation of aerosolized heat-killed M. catarrhalis produced an acute inflammatory reaction in which Ox6+ DC and RP3+ neutrophils were the only inflammatory cell type detected in the epithelium. Peak numbers were detected at 1 d after aerosol. (B) Live B. pertussis organisms inoculated intratracheally resulted in an influx of Ox6+ DC and RP3+ neutrophils with maximum cell numbers occurring at day 1. The T cell influx began at day 2 and peaked at day 4. (C ) Intranasal Sendai virus initiated a cellular response which commenced with an Ox6+ DC influx shortly after the earliest detection of intraepithelial Sendai virus nucleoprotein immunostaining at day 2 (C, arrow) and shortly before changes could be detected in other cell types. Maximum DC numbers were found at day 5, and coincided with maximal neutrophil and T cell numbers. (D) After intraperitoneal priming with ovalbumin and Al(OH)6, animals were challenged 14 d later with an aerosol of ovalbumin and cellular changes within the epithelium measured. In this instance Ox6+ DC, eosinophil, and T cell numbers peaked at day 1 after challenge.
| |
These responses contrast with that of animals challenged with an inert protein antigen to which they are presensitised (Fig. 1 D); the acute phase of this latter response was characterized by the influx of eosinophils as opposed to PMN, and a relatively small number of T cells. No cellular response was seen in unprimed animals. Macrophage influx was not a significant feature of the initial cellular response in any of these models.
However, the feature common to all these challenge models is the transient waves of DC which are recruited into the epithelium coincident with the early phase of respective cellular inflammatory responses. The most intense response is that triggered by high-level local stimulation with pro-inflammatory bacterial cell wall extract, in which intraepithelial airway DC density transiently increases to levels up to threefold those of resting tissue (Fig. 1 A), before their migration on to regional lymph nodes (13). The more subtle stimuli, such as infection with live virus and bacteria and even inhalation of inert nominal antigen, also clearly evoke qualitatively similar responses, involving the transient build up of intraepithelial DC numbers in challenged airway tissue to levels that are two- to threefold those of resting tissues.
We have additionally screened a broad panel of chemotactic agents for capacity to attract respiratory mucosal DC in vitro (Fig. 2). Consistent with findings in Fig. 1 indicating rapid in vivo recruitment of DC in response to bacterial stimuli, complement cleavage products, and f MLP exhibit potent chemoattractant activity in vitro. Additionally, MCP-1, -4, RANTES, and eotaxin, all of which are members of the CC chemokine family, exhibited significant chemoattractant activity, whereas the CXC chemokines IL-8, GRO/KC, and GRO/β, were inactive. These findings are comparable to those recently reported using putative DC cultured from human blood in the presence of GM-CSF and IL-4, which also responded to a broad spectrum of chemotactic stimuli (14); however, the blood-derived DC were unresponsive to MCP-1, which may reflect subtle species differences in receptor expression, or possibly variations related to the degree of maturation of respective DC populations at the time of assay.

View larger version (17K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[Download PPT slide]
|
Figure 2 In vitro responses of respiratory tract DC to different chemotactic agents. Freshly prepared respiratory tract DC were assessed for responsiveness to a range of chemotactic agents in a 1 h chemotaxis assay, as detailed in Materials and Methods. Each data point represents results from an individual experiment, each of which included complementary cleavage products plus the medium control.
| |
These findings indicate that current perceptions of the scope of innate host defense responses need to be broadened to include the rapid activation of an in-built "early warning system" at sites of inflammation to facilitate the most rapid possible flow of information on the presence of previously unencountered antigens to the adaptive immune system. This mechanism fulfills an essential prediction of the model proposed recently (1, 15) for the evolution of the immune system, viz, that DC may be evolution's answer to the problem posed by organisms that evade primitive (innate) first-line defense systems.
Submitted: 10 June 1996
Revised: 30 September 1996
This work was supported by Glaxo Wellcome, the Raine Foundation of Western Australia, and the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia.
 |
References
|
|---|
1 Janeway CA. The immune response evolved to discriminate infectious nonself from noninfectious self, Immunol Today, 1992, 13, 11–16.[Medline]
2 Steinman RM. The dendritic cell system and its role in immunogenicity, Annu Rev Immunol, 1991, 9, 271–296.[Medline]
3 Holt PG, Schon-Hegrad MA & Oliver J. MHC class II antigen-bearing dendritic cells in pulmonary tissues of the rat: regulation of antigen presentation activity by endogenous macrophage populations, J Exp Med, 1988, 167, 262–274.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
4 Schon-Hegrad MA, Oliver J, McMenamin PG & Holt PG. Studies on the density, distribution, and surface phenotype of intraepithelial class II MHC antigen (Ia)-bearing dendritic cells (DC) in the conducting airways, J Exp Med, 1991, 173, 1345–1356.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
5 Hart DNJ & Fabre JW. Demonstration and characterization of Ia-positive dendritic cells in the interstitial connective tissues of rat heart and other tissues, but not brain , J Exp Med, 1981, 154, 347–361.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
6 Chen H-D, Ma C, Yuan J-T, Wang Y-K & Silvers WK. Occurrence of donor Langerhans cells in mouse and rat chimeras and their replacement in skin grafts, J Invest Dermatol, 1986, 86, 630–633.[Medline]
7 Fossum S. Dendritic leukocytes: features of their in vivophysiology, Res Immunol, 1989, 140, 883–891.[Medline]
8 Holt PG, Haining S, Nelson DJ & Sedgwick JD. Origin and steady-state turnover of class II MHC-bearing dendritic cells in the epithelium of the conducting airways, J Immunol, 1994, 153, 256–261.[Abstract]
9 Mason DW, Arthur RP, Dallman MJ, Green JR, Spickett GP & Thomas ML. Functions of rat T-lymphocyte subsets isolated by means of monoclonal antibodies, Immunol Rev, 1983, 74, 57–82.[Medline]
10 Hünig T, Wallny HJ, Hartley JK, Lawetzky A & Tiefenthaler G. A monoclonal antibody to a constant determinant of the rat T cell antigen receptor that induces T cell activation. Differential reactivity with subsets of immature and mature T lymphocytes, J Exp Med, 1989, 169, 73–86.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
11 Damoiseaux JG, Dopp EA, Neefjes JJ, Beelen RH & Dijkstra CD. Heterogeneity of macrophages in the rat evidenced by variability in determinants: two new anti–rat macrophage antibodies against a heterodimer of 160 and 95 kd (CD11/CD18), J Leukocyte Biol, 1989, 46, 556–564.[Abstract]
12 Sekiya S, Gotoh S, Yamashita T, Watanabe T, Saitoh S & Sendo F. Selective depletion of rat neutrophils by in vivo administration of a monoclonal antibody, J Leukocyte Biol, 1989, 46, 96–102.[Abstract]
13 McWilliam AS, Nelson D, Thomas JA & Holt PG. Rapid dendritic cell recruitment is a hallmark of the acute inflammatory response at mucosal surfaces, J Exp Med, 1994, 179, 1331–1336.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
14 Sozzani S, Sallusto F, Luini W, Zhou D, Piemonti L, Allavena P, Van Damme J, Valitutti S, Lanzavecchia A & Mantovani A. Migration of dendritic cells in response to formyl peptides, C5a, and a distinct set of chemokines, J Immunol, 1995, 155, 3292–3295.[Abstract]
15 Ibrahim MAA, Chain BM & Katz DR. The injured cell: the role of the dendritic cell system as a sentinel receptor pathway, Immunol Today, 1995, 16, 181–186.[Medline]

CiteULike
Complore
Connotea
Del.icio.us
Digg
Facebook
Reddit
Technorati
Twitter What's this?
This article has been cited by other articles:
-
McGill, J., Heusel, J. W., Legge, K. L.
(2009). Innate immune control and regulation of influenza virus infections. J. Leukoc. Biol.
86: 803-812
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Day, J., Friedman, A., Schlesinger, L. S.
(2009). Modeling the immune rheostat of macrophages in the lung in response to infection. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
106: 11246-11251
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Cosio, M. G., Saetta, M., Agusti, A.
(2009). Immunologic Aspects of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease. NEJM
360: 2445-2454
[Full Text]
-
Cho, Y. S., Oh, S. Y., Zhu, Z.
(2008). Tyrosine Phosphatase SHP-1 in Oxidative Stress and Development of Allergic Airway Inflammation. Am. J. Respir. Cell Mol. Bio.
39: 412-419
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
McGill, J., Van Rooijen, N., Legge, K. L.
(2008). Protective influenza-specific CD8 T cell responses require interactions with dendritic cells in the lungs. JEM
205: 1635-1646
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Beamer, C. A., Holian, A.
(2008). Silica suppresses Toll-like receptor ligand-induced dendritic cell activation. FASEB J.
22: 2053-2063
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Robson, N. C., Phillips, D. J., McAlpine, T., Shin, A., Svobodova, S., Toy, T., Pillay, V., Kirkpatrick, N., Zanker, D., Wilson, K., Helling, I., Wei, H., Chen, W., Cebon, J., Maraskovsky, E.
(2008). Activin-A: a novel dendritic cell-derived cytokine that potently attenuates CD40 ligand-specific cytokine and chemokine production. Blood
111: 2733-2743
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Grayson, M. H., Ramos, M. S., Rohlfing, M. M., Kitchens, R., Wang, H. D., Gould, A., Agapov, E., Holtzman, M. J.
(2007). Controls for Lung Dendritic Cell Maturation and Migration during Respiratory Viral Infection. J. Immunol.
179: 1438-1448
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Cook, D. N., Bottomly, K.
(2007). Innate Immune Control of Pulmonary Dendritic Cell Trafficking. Proc Am Thorac Soc
4: 234-239
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Regamey, N., Obregon, C., Ferrari-Lacraz, S., van Leer, C., Chanson, M., Nicod, L. P., Geiser, T.
(2007). Airway Epithelial IL-15 Transforms Monocytes into Dendritic Cells. Am. J. Respir. Cell Mol. Bio.
37: 75-84
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Strickland, D. H., Stumbles, P. A., Zosky, G. R., Subrata, L. S., Thomas, J. A., Turner, D. J., Sly, P. D., Holt, P. G.
(2006). Reversal of airway hyperresponsiveness by induction of airway mucosal CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells. JEM
203: 2649-2660
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Klinke, D. J. II
(2006). An age-structured model of dendritic cell trafficking in the lung.. Am. J. Physiol. Lung Cell. Mol. Physiol.
291: L1038-L1049
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Pichavant, M., Taront, S., Jeannin, P., Breuilh, L., Charbonnier, A.-S., Spriet, C., Fourneau, C., Corvaia, N., Heliot, L., Brichet, A., Tonnel, A.-B., Delneste, Y., Gosset, P.
(2006). Impact of Bronchial Epithelium on Dendritic Cell Migration and Function: Modulation by the Bacterial Motif KpOmpA. J. Immunol.
177: 5912-5919
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Wikstrom, M. E., Batanero, E., Smith, M., Thomas, J. A., von Garnier, C., Holt, P. G., Stumbles, P. A.
(2006). Influence of Mucosal Adjuvants on Antigen Passage and CD4+ T Cell Activation during the Primary Response to Airborne Allergen. J. Immunol.
177: 913-924
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Wozniak, K. L., Vyas, J. M., Levitz, S. M.
(2006). In Vivo Role of Dendritic Cells in a Murine Model of Pulmonary Cryptococcosis. Infect. Immun.
74: 3817-3824
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Hu, Y., Ivashkiv, L. B.
(2006). Costimulation of Chemokine Receptor Signaling by Matrix Metalloproteinase-9 Mediates Enhanced Migration of IFN-{alpha} Dendritic Cells. J. Immunol.
176: 6022-6033
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Megiovanni, A. M., Sanchez, F., Robledo-Sarmiento, M., Morel, C., Gluckman, J. C., Boudaly, S.
(2006). Polymorphonuclear neutrophils deliver activation signals and antigenic molecules to dendritic cells: a new link between leukocytes upstream of T lymphocytes. J. Leukoc. Biol.
79: 977-988
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Wands, J. M., Roark, C. L., Aydintug, M. K., Jin, N., Hahn, Y.-S., Cook, L., Yin, X., Dal Porto, J., Lahn, M., Hyde, D. M., Gelfand, E. W., Mason, R. J., O'Brien, R. L., Born, W. K.
(2005). Distribution and leukocyte contacts of {gamma}{delta} T cells in the lung. J. Leukoc. Biol.
78: 1086-1096
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Ordway, D., Henao-Tamayo, M., Orme, I. M., Gonzalez-Juarrero, M.
(2005). Foamy Macrophages within Lung Granulomas of Mice Infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis Express Molecules Characteristic of Dendritic Cells and Antiapoptotic Markers of the TNF Receptor-Associated Factor Family. J. Immunol.
175: 3873-3881
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Vermaelen, K., Pauwels, R.
(2005). Pulmonary Dendritic Cells. Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med.
172: 530-551
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Holt, P. G.
(2005). Pulmonary Dendritic Cells in Local Immunity to Inert and Pathogenic Antigens in the Respiratory Tract. Proc Am Thorac Soc
2: 116-120
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Osterholzer, J. J., Ames, T., Polak, T., Sonstein, J., Moore, B. B., Chensue, S. W., Toews, G. B., Curtis, J. L.
(2005). CCR2 and CCR6, but Not Endothelial Selectins, Mediate the Accumulation of Immature Dendritic Cells within the Lungs of Mice in Response to Particulate Antigen. J. Immunol.
175: 874-883
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Akadegawa, K., Ishikawa, S., Sato, T., Suzuki, J., Yurino, H., Kitabatake, M., Ito, T., Kuriyama, T., Matsushima, K.
(2005). Breakdown of Mucosal Immunity in the Gut and Resultant Systemic Sensitization by Oral Antigens in a Murine Model for Systemic Lupus Erythematosus. J. Immunol.
174: 5499-5506
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Thorley, A. J., Goldstraw, P., Young, A., Tetley, T. D.
(2005). Primary Human Alveolar Type II Epithelial Cell CCL20 (Macrophage Inflammatory Protein-3{alpha})-Induced Dendritic Cell Migration. Am. J. Respir. Cell Mol. Bio.
32: 262-267
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Turnbull, E. L., Yrlid, U., Jenkins, C. D., MacPherson, G. G.
(2005). Intestinal Dendritic Cell Subsets: Differential Effects of Systemic TLR4 Stimulation on Migratory Fate and Activation In Vivo. J. Immunol.
174: 1374-1384
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Chiu, B.-C., Freeman, C. M., Stolberg, V. R., Hu, J. S., Zeibecoglou, K., Lu, B., Gerard, C., Charo, I. F., Lira, S. A., Chensue, S. W.
(2004). Impaired Lung Dendritic Cell Activation in CCR2 Knockout Mice. Am. J. Pathol.
165: 1199-1209
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Rial, A., Lens, D., Betancor, L., Benkiel, H., Silva, J. S., Chabalgoity, J. A.
(2004). Intranasal Immunization with a Colloid-Formulated Bacterial Extract Induces an Acute Inflammatory Response in the Lungs and Elicits Specific Immune Responses. Infect. Immun.
72: 2679-2688
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Chaput, N., Schartz, N. E. C., Andre, F., Taieb, J., Novault, S., Bonnaventure, P., Aubert, N., Bernard, J., Lemonnier, F., Merad, M., Adema, G., Adams, M., Ferrantini, M., Carpentier, A. F., Escudier, B., Tursz, T., Angevin, E., Zitvogel, L.
(2004). Exosomes as Potent Cell-Free Peptide-Based Vaccine. II. Exosomes in CpG Adjuvants Efficiently Prime Naive Tc1 Lymphocytes Leading to Tumor Rejection. J. Immunol.
172: 2137-2146
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Huh, J. C., Strickland, D. H., Jahnsen, F. L., Turner, D. J., Thomas, J. A., Napoli, S., Tobagus, I., Stumbles, P. A., Sly, P. D., Holt, P. G.
(2003). Bidirectional Interactions between Antigen-bearing Respiratory Tract Dendritic Cells (DCs) and T Cells Precede the Late Phase Reaction in Experimental Asthma: DC Activation Occurs in the Airway Mucosa but Not in the Lung Parenchyma. JEM
198: 19-30
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Gueirard, P., Ave, P., Balazuc, A.-M., Thiberge, S., Huerre, M., Milon, G., Guiso, N.
(2003). Bordetella bronchiseptica Persists in the Nasal Cavities of Mice and Triggers Early Delivery of Dendritic Cells in the Lymph Nodes Draining the Lower and Upper Respiratory Tract. Infect. Immun.
71: 4137-4143
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Stick, S. M., Holt, P. G.
(2003). The Airway Epithelium as Immune Modulator: The LARC Ascending. Am. J. Respir. Cell Mol. Bio.
28: 641-644
[Full Text]
-
Hamilton, J. A.
(2003). Nondisposable materials, chronic inflammation, and adjuvant action. J. Leukoc. Biol.
73: 702-712
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Fields, R. C., Schoenecker, J. G., Hart, J. P., Hoffman, M. R., Pizzo, S. V., Lawson, J. H.
(2003). Protease-Activated Receptor-2 Signaling Triggers Dendritic Cell Development. Am. J. Pathol.
162: 1817-1822
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Kaneider, N. C., Kaser, A., Dunzendorfer, S., Tilg, H., Wiedermann, C. J.
(2003). Sphingosine Kinase-Dependent Migration of Immature Dendritic Cells in Response to Neurotoxic Prion Protein Fragment. J. Virol.
77: 5535-5539
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
de la Rosa, G., Longo, N., Rodriguez-Fernandez, J. L., Puig-Kroger, A., Pineda, A., Corbi, A. L., Sanchez-Mateos, P.
(2003). Migration of human blood dendritic cells across endothelial cell monolayers: adhesion molecules and chemokines involved in subset-specific transmigration. J. Leukoc. Biol.
73: 639-649
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Dodge, I. L., Carr, M. W., Cernadas, M., Brenner, M. B.
(2003). IL-6 Production by Pulmonary Dendritic Cells Impedes Th1 Immune Responses. J. Immunol.
170: 4457-4464
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Cavanaugh, V. J., Deng, Y., Birkenbach, M. P., Slater, J. S., Campbell, A. E.
(2003). Vigorous Innate and Virus-Specific Cytotoxic T-Lymphocyte Responses to Murine Cytomegalovirus in the Submaxillary Salivary Gland. J. Virol.
77: 1703-1717
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Kato, H., Fujihashi, K., Kato, R., Dohi, T., Fujihashi, K., Hagiwara, Y., Kataoka, K., Kobayashi, R., McGhee, J. R.
(2003). Lack of oral tolerance in aging is due to sequential loss of Peyer's patch cell interactions. Int Immunol
15: 145-158
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Yang, D., Chen, Q., Gertz, B., He, R., Phulsuksombati, M., Ye, R. D., Oppenheim, J. J.
(2002). Human dendritic cells express functional formyl peptide receptor-like-2 (FPRL2) throughout maturation. J. Leukoc. Biol.
72: 598-607
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Holt, P.G., Sly, P.D.
(2002). Interactions between respiratory tract infections and atopy in the aetiology of asthma. Eur Respir J
19: 538-545
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Colino, J., Shen, Y., Snapper, C. M.
(2002). Dendritic Cells Pulsed with Intact Streptococcus pneumoniae Elicit both Protein- and Polysaccharide-specific Immunoglobulin Isotype Responses In Vivo through Distinct Mechanisms. JEM
195: 1-14
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Byersdorfer, C. A., Chaplin, D. D.
(2001). Visualization of Early APC/T Cell Interactions in the Mouse Lung Following Intranasal Challenge. J. Immunol.
167: 6756-6764
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Jahnsen, F L, Moloney, E D, Hogan, T, Upham, J W, Burke, C M, Holt, P G
(2001). Rapid dendritic cell recruitment to the bronchial mucosa of patients with atopic asthma in response to local allergen challenge. Thorax
56: 823-826
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Jotwani, R., Palucka, A. K., Al-Quotub, M., Nouri-Shirazi, M., Kim, J., Bell, D., Banchereau, J., Cutler, C. W.
(2001). Mature Dendritic Cells Infiltrate the T Cell-Rich Region of Oral Mucosa in Chronic Periodontitis: In Situ, In Vivo, and In Vitro Studies. J. Immunol.
167: 4693-4700
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Lambrecht, B.N., Prins, J-;B., Hoogsteden, H.C.
(2001). Lung dendritic cells and host immunity to infection. Eur Respir J
18: 692-704
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Gajewska, B. U., Swirski, F. K., Alvarez, D., Ritz, S. A., Goncharova, S., Cundall, M., Snider, D. P., Coyle, A. J., Gutierrez-Ramos, J.-C., Stampfli, M. R., Jordana, M.
(2001). Temporal-Spatial Analysis of the Immune Response in a Murine Model of Ovalbumin-Induced Airways Inflammation. Am. J. Respir. Cell Mol. Bio.
25: 326-334
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Cutler, C. W., Jotwani, R., Pulendran, B.
(2001). Dendritic Cells: Immune Saviors or Achilles' Heel?. Infect. Immun.
69: 4703-4708
[Full Text]
-
Dixon, G. L. J., Newton, P. J., Chain, B. M., Katz, D., Andersen, S. R., Wong, S., van der Ley, P., Klein, N., Callard, R. E.
(2001). Dendritic Cell Activation and Cytokine Production Induced by Group B Neisseria meningitidis: Interleukin-12 Production Depends on Lipopolysaccharide Expression in Intact Bacteria. Infect. Immun.
69: 4351-4357
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Stumbles, P. A., Strickland, D. H., Pimm, C. L., Proksch, S. F., Marsh, A. M., McWilliam, A. S., Bosco, A., Tobagus, I., Thomas, J. A., Napoli, S., Proudfoot, A. E. I., Wells, T. N. C., Holt, P. G.
(2001). Regulation of Dendritic Cell Recruitment into Resting and Inflamed Airway Epithelium: Use of Alternative Chemokine Receptors as a Function of Inducing Stimulus. J. Immunol.
167: 228-234
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Bell, S. J., Rigby, R., English, N., Mann, S. D., Knight, S. C., Kamm, M. A., Stagg, A. J.
(2001). Migration and Maturation of Human Colonic Dendritic Cells. J. Immunol.
166: 4958-4967
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Yang, D., Chen, Q., Le, Y., Wang, J. M., Oppenheim, J. J.
(2001). Differential Regulation of Formyl Peptide Receptor-Like 1 Expression During the Differentiation of Monocytes to Dendritic Cells and Macrophages. J. Immunol.
166: 4092-4098
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Sellati, T. J., Waldrop, S. L., Salazar, J. C., Bergstresser, P. R., Picker, L. J., Radolf, J. D.
(2001). The Cutaneous Response in Humans to Treponema pallidum Lipoprotein Analogues Involves Cellular Elements of Both Innate and Adaptive Immunity. J. Immunol.
166: 4131-4140
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Delemarre, F. G. A., Hoogeveen, P. G., de Haan-Meulman, M., Simons, P. J., Drexhage, H. A.
(2001). Homotypic cluster formation of dendritic cells, a close correlate of their state of maturation. Defects in the biobreeding diabetes-prone rat. J. Leukoc. Biol.
69: 373-380
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Gonzalez-Juarrero, M., Orme, I. M.
(2001). Characterization of Murine Lung Dendritic Cells Infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Infect. Immun.
69: 1127-1133
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Baltes, N., Tonpitak, W., Gerlach, G.-F., Hennig-Pauka, I., Hoffmann-Moujahid, A., Ganter, M., Rothkotter, H.-J.
(2001). Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae Iron Transport and Urease Activity: Effects on Bacterial Virulence and Host Immune Response. Infect. Immun.
69: 472-478
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Yoneyama, H., Matsuno, K., Zhang, Y., Murai, M., Itakura, M., Ishikawa, S., Hasegawa, G., Naito, M., Asakura, H., Matsushima, K.
(2001). Regulation by Chemokines of Circulating Dendritic Cell Precursors, and the Formation of Portal Tract-Associated Lymphoid Tissue, in a Granulomatous Liver Disease. JEM
193: 35-50
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Lee, P. T., Holt, P. G., McWilliam, A. S.
(2000). Role of Alveolar Macrophages in Innate Immunity in Neonates . Evidence for Selective Lipopolysaccharide Binding Protein Production by Rat Neonatal Alveolar Macrophages. Am. J. Respir. Cell Mol. Bio.
23: 652-661
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
CRAPO, J. D., HARMSEN, A. G., SHERMAN, M. P., MUSSON, R. A.
(2000). Pulmonary Immunobiology and Inflammation in Pulmonary Diseases. Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med.
162: 1983-1986
[Full Text]
-
HOLT, P. G.
(2000). Antigen Presentation in the Lung. Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med.
162: S151-156
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Abrams, J. R., Kelley, S. L., Hayes, E., Kikuchi, T., Brown, M. J., Kang, S., Lebwohl, M. G., Guzzo, C. A., Jegasothy, B. V., Linsley, P. S., Krueger, J. G.
(2000). Blockade of T Lymphocyte Costimulation with Cytotoxic T Lymphocyte-Associated Antigen 4-Immunoglobulin (Ctla4ig) Reverses the Cellular Pathology of Psoriatic Plaques, Including the Activation of Keratinocytes, Dendritic Cells, and Endothelial Cells. JEM
192: 681-694
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Yang, D., Chen, Q., Stoll, S., Chen, X., Howard, O. M. Z., Oppenheim, J. J.
(2000). Differential Regulation of Responsiveness to fMLP and C5a Upon Dendritic Cell Maturation: Correlation with Receptor Expression. J. Immunol.
165: 2694-2702
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Fortsch, D., Rollinghoff, M., Stenger, S.
(2000). IL-10 Converts Human Dendritic Cells into Macrophage-Like Cells with Increased Antibacterial Activity Against Virulent Mycobacterium tuberculosis. J. Immunol.
165: 978-987
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Loehr, B. I., Willson, P., Babiuk, L. A., van Drunen Littel-van den Hurk, S.
(2000). Gene Gun-Mediated DNA Immunization Primes Development of Mucosal Immunity against Bovine Herpesvirus 1 in Cattle. J. Virol.
74: 6077-6086
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
KRADIN, R. L., SAKAMOTO, H., PREFFER, F. I., DOMBKOWSKI, D., SPRINGER, K. M., LEARY, C. P.
(2000). Accumulation of Macrophages with Dendritic Cell Characteristics in the Pulmonary Response to Listeria. Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med.
161: 535-542
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Stämpfli, M. R., Cwiartka, M., Gajewska, B. U., Alvarez, D., Ritz, S. A., Inman, M. D., Xing, Z., Jordana, M.
(1999). Interleukin-10 Gene Transfer to the Airway Regulates Allergic Mucosal Sensitization in Mice. Am. J. Respir. Cell Mol. Bio.
21: 586-596
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Kaser, A., Dunzendorfer, S., Offner, F. A., Ryan, T., Schwabegger, A., Cruikshank, W. W., Wiedermann, C. J., Tilg, H.
(1999). A Role for IL-16 in the Cross-Talk Between Dendritic Cells and T Cells. J. Immunol.
163: 3232-3238
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Yang, D., Howard, O. M. Z., Chen, Q., Oppenheim, J. J.
(1999). Cutting Edge: Immature Dendritic Cells Generated from Monocytes in the Presence of TGF-{beta}1 Express Functional C-C Chemokine Receptor 6. J. Immunol.
163: 1737-1741
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Lee, S.-C., Jaffar, Z. H., Wan, K.-S., Holgate, S. T., Roberts, K.
(1999). Regulation of Pulmonary T Cell Responses to Inhaled Antigen: Role in Th1- and Th2-Mediated Inflammation. J. Immunol.
162: 6867-6879
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Lefrancois, L., Parker, C. M., Olson, S., Muller, W., Wagner, N., Puddington, L.
(1999). The Role of {beta}7 Integrins in CD8 T Cell Trafficking During an Antiviral Immune Response. JEM
189: 1631-1638
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Iwasaki, A., Kelsall, B. L.
(1999). I. Mucosal dendritic cells: their specialized role in initiating T cell responses. Am. J. Physiol. Gastrointest. Liver Physiol.
276: G1074-G1078
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Robert, C., Fuhlbrigge, R. C., Kieffer, J. D., Ayehunie, S., Hynes, R. O., Cheng, G., Grabbe, S., von Andrian, U. H., Kupper, T. S.
(1999). Interaction of Dendritic Cells with Skin Endothelium: A New Perspective on Immunosurveillance. JEM
189: 627-636
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Fearnley, D.B., Whyte, L.F., Carnoutsos, S.A., Cook, A.H., Hart, D.N.J.
(1999). Monitoring Human Blood Dendritic Cell Numbers in Normal Individuals and in Stem Cell Transplantation. Blood
93: 728-736
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Nardelli, B., Tiffany, H. L., Bong, G. W., Yourey, P. A., Morahan, D. K., Li, Y., Murphy, P. M., Alderson, R. F.
(1999). Characterization of the Signal Transduction Pathway Activated in Human Monocytes and Dendritic Cells by MPIF-1, a Specific Ligand for CC Chemokine Receptor 1. J. Immunol.
162: 435-444
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Porgador, A., Staats, H. F., Itoh, Y., Kelsall, B. L.
(1998). Intranasal Immunization with Cytotoxic T-Lymphocyte Epitope Peptide and Mucosal Adjuvant Cholera Toxin: Selective Augmentation of Peptide-Presenting Dendritic Cells in Nasal Mucosa-Associated Lymphoid Tissue. Infect. Immun.
66: 5876-5881
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Suda, T., McCarthy, K., Vu, Q., McCormack, J., Schneeberger, E. E.
(1998). Dendritic Cell Precursors Are Enriched in the Vascular Compartment of the Lung. Am. J. Respir. Cell Mol. Bio.
19: 728-737
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Brokaw, J. J., White, G. W., Baluk, P., Anderson, G. P., Umemoto, E. Y., McDonald, D. M.
(1998). Glucocorticoid-Induced Apoptosis of Dendritic Cells in the Rat Tracheal Mucosa. Am. J. Respir. Cell Mol. Bio.
19: 598-605
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Yanagihara, S., Komura, E., Nagafune, J., Watarai, H., Yamaguchi, Y.
(1998). EBI1/CCR7 Is a New Member of Dendritic Cell Chemokine Receptor That Is Up-Regulated upon Maturation. J. Immunol.
161: 3096-3102
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Stagg, A. J., Tuffrey, M., Woods, C., Wunderink, E., Knight, S. C.
(1998). Protection against Ascending Infection of the Genital Tract by Chlamydia trachomatis Is Associated with Recruitment of Major Histocompatibility Complex Class II Antigen-Presenting Cells into Uterine Tissue. Infect. Immun.
66: 3535-3544
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
D'Amico, G., Bianchi, G., Bernasconi, S., Bersani, L., Piemonti, L., Sozzani, S., Mantovani, A., Allavena, P.
(1998). Adhesion, Transendothelial Migration, and Reverse Transmigration of In Vitro Cultured Dendritic Cells. Blood
92: 207-214
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Bhardwaj, N.
(1997). Interactions of Viruses with Dendritic Cells: A Double-edged Sword. JEM
186: 795-799
[Full Text]