TRANCE, a tumor necrosis factor family member, enhances the longevity and adjuvant properties of dendritic cells in vivo

R Josien, HL Li, E Ingulli, S Sarma, B R. Wong… - The Journal of …, 2000 - rupress.org
R Josien, HL Li, E Ingulli, S Sarma, B R. Wong, M Vologodskaia, RM Steinman, Y Choi
The Journal of experimental medicine, 2000rupress.org
Mature dendritic cells (DCs) are powerful antigen presenting cells that have the unique
capacity to migrate to the T cell zone of draining lymph nodes after subcutaneous injection.
Here we report that treatment of antigen-pulsed mature DCs with tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-
related activation-induced cytokine (TRANCE), a TNF family member, before immunization
enhances their adjuvant capacity and elicits improved T cell priming in vivo, such that both
primary and memory T cell immune responses are enhanced. By enumerating migratory …
Mature dendritic cells (DCs) are powerful antigen presenting cells that have the unique capacity to migrate to the T cell zone of draining lymph nodes after subcutaneous injection. Here we report that treatment of antigen-pulsed mature DCs with tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-related activation-induced cytokine (TRANCE), a TNF family member, before immunization enhances their adjuvant capacity and elicits improved T cell priming in vivo, such that both primary and memory T cell immune responses are enhanced. By enumerating migratory DCs in the draining lymph nodes and by studying their function in stimulating naive T cells, we show that one of the underlying mechanisms for enhanced T cell responses is an increase in the number of ex vivo antigen-pulsed DCs that are found in the T cell areas of lymph nodes. These results suggest that the longevity and abundance of mature DCs at the site of T cell priming influence the strength of the DC-initiated T cell immunity in situ. Our findings have the potential to improve DC-based immunotherapy; i.e., the active immunization of humans with autologous DCs that have been pulsed with clinically significant antigens ex vivo.
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