Lipopolysaccharide-activated dendritic cells:“exhausted” or alert and waiting?

K Abdi, NJ Singh, P Matzinger - The Journal of Immunology, 2012 - journals.aai.org
K Abdi, NJ Singh, P Matzinger
The Journal of Immunology, 2012journals.aai.org
LPS-activated dendritic cells (DCs) are thought to follow a set program in which they secrete
inflammatory cytokines (such as IL-12) and then become refractory to further stimulation
(ie,“exhausted”). In this study, we show that mouse DCs do indeed lose their responsiveness
to LPS, but nevertheless remain perfectly capable of making inflammatory cytokines in
response to signals from activated T cells and to CD40-ligand and soluble T cell-derived
signals. Furthermore, far from being rigidly programmed by the original activating stimulus …
Abstract
LPS-activated dendritic cells (DCs) are thought to follow a set program in which they secrete inflammatory cytokines (such as IL-12) and then become refractory to further stimulation (ie,“exhausted”). In this study, we show that mouse DCs do indeed lose their responsiveness to LPS, but nevertheless remain perfectly capable of making inflammatory cytokines in response to signals from activated T cells and to CD40-ligand and soluble T cell-derived signals. Furthermore, far from being rigidly programmed by the original activating stimulus, the DCs retained sufficient plasticity to respond differentially to interactions with Th0, Th1, Th2, and Th17 T cells. These data suggest that LPS activation does not exhaust DCs but rather primes them for subsequent signals from T cells.
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