Extracellular ATP and TNF-alpha synergize in the activation and maturation of human dendritic cells.

Standard

Extracellular ATP and TNF-alpha synergize in the activation and maturation of human dendritic cells. / Schnurr, M; Then, F; Galambos, Peter; Scholz, C; Siegmund, B; Endres, S; Eigler, A.

in: J IMMUNOL, Jahrgang 165, Nr. 8, 8, 2000, S. 4704-4709.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Schnurr, M, Then, F, Galambos, P, Scholz, C, Siegmund, B, Endres, S & Eigler, A 2000, 'Extracellular ATP and TNF-alpha synergize in the activation and maturation of human dendritic cells.', J IMMUNOL, Jg. 165, Nr. 8, 8, S. 4704-4709. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11035114?dopt=Citation>

APA

Schnurr, M., Then, F., Galambos, P., Scholz, C., Siegmund, B., Endres, S., & Eigler, A. (2000). Extracellular ATP and TNF-alpha synergize in the activation and maturation of human dendritic cells. J IMMUNOL, 165(8), 4704-4709. [8]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11035114?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Schnurr M, Then F, Galambos P, Scholz C, Siegmund B, Endres S et al. Extracellular ATP and TNF-alpha synergize in the activation and maturation of human dendritic cells. J IMMUNOL. 2000;165(8):4704-4709. 8.

Bibtex

@article{1f95140ae517460a9956281f37cc5797,
title = "Extracellular ATP and TNF-alpha synergize in the activation and maturation of human dendritic cells.",
abstract = "Extracellular ATP mediates numerous biological activities by interacting with plasma membrane P2 purinergic receptors. Recently, P2 receptors have been described on dendritic cells (DC), but their functional role remains unclear. Proposed functions include improved Ag presentation, cytokine production, chemotaxis, and induction of apoptosis. We investigated the effects of ATP and of other P2 receptor agonists on endocytosis, phenotype, IL-12 secretion, and T cell stimulatory capacity of human monocyte-derived DC. We found that in the presence of extracellular ATP, DC transiently increase their endocytotic activity. Subsequently, DC up-regulate CD86, CD54, and MHC-II; secrete IL-12; and exhibit an improved stimulatory capacity for allogeneic T cells. These effects were more pronounced when chemically modified ATP derivatives with agonistic activity on P2 receptors, which are resistent to degradation by ectonucleotidases, were applied. Furthermore, ATP and TNF-alpha synergized in the activation of DC. Stimulated with a combination of ATP and TNF-alpha, DC expressed the maturation marker CD83, secreted large amounts of IL-12, and were potent stimulators of T cells. In the presence of the P2 receptor antagonist suramin, the effects of ATP were completely abolished. Our results suggest that extracellular ATP may play an important immunomodulatory role by activating DC and by skewing the immune reaction toward a Th1 response through the induction of IL-12 secretion.",
author = "M Schnurr and F Then and Peter Galambos and C Scholz and B Siegmund and S Endres and A Eigler",
year = "2000",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "165",
pages = "4704--4709",
journal = "J IMMUNOL",
issn = "0022-1767",
publisher = "American Association of Immunologists",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Extracellular ATP and TNF-alpha synergize in the activation and maturation of human dendritic cells.

AU - Schnurr, M

AU - Then, F

AU - Galambos, Peter

AU - Scholz, C

AU - Siegmund, B

AU - Endres, S

AU - Eigler, A

PY - 2000

Y1 - 2000

N2 - Extracellular ATP mediates numerous biological activities by interacting with plasma membrane P2 purinergic receptors. Recently, P2 receptors have been described on dendritic cells (DC), but their functional role remains unclear. Proposed functions include improved Ag presentation, cytokine production, chemotaxis, and induction of apoptosis. We investigated the effects of ATP and of other P2 receptor agonists on endocytosis, phenotype, IL-12 secretion, and T cell stimulatory capacity of human monocyte-derived DC. We found that in the presence of extracellular ATP, DC transiently increase their endocytotic activity. Subsequently, DC up-regulate CD86, CD54, and MHC-II; secrete IL-12; and exhibit an improved stimulatory capacity for allogeneic T cells. These effects were more pronounced when chemically modified ATP derivatives with agonistic activity on P2 receptors, which are resistent to degradation by ectonucleotidases, were applied. Furthermore, ATP and TNF-alpha synergized in the activation of DC. Stimulated with a combination of ATP and TNF-alpha, DC expressed the maturation marker CD83, secreted large amounts of IL-12, and were potent stimulators of T cells. In the presence of the P2 receptor antagonist suramin, the effects of ATP were completely abolished. Our results suggest that extracellular ATP may play an important immunomodulatory role by activating DC and by skewing the immune reaction toward a Th1 response through the induction of IL-12 secretion.

AB - Extracellular ATP mediates numerous biological activities by interacting with plasma membrane P2 purinergic receptors. Recently, P2 receptors have been described on dendritic cells (DC), but their functional role remains unclear. Proposed functions include improved Ag presentation, cytokine production, chemotaxis, and induction of apoptosis. We investigated the effects of ATP and of other P2 receptor agonists on endocytosis, phenotype, IL-12 secretion, and T cell stimulatory capacity of human monocyte-derived DC. We found that in the presence of extracellular ATP, DC transiently increase their endocytotic activity. Subsequently, DC up-regulate CD86, CD54, and MHC-II; secrete IL-12; and exhibit an improved stimulatory capacity for allogeneic T cells. These effects were more pronounced when chemically modified ATP derivatives with agonistic activity on P2 receptors, which are resistent to degradation by ectonucleotidases, were applied. Furthermore, ATP and TNF-alpha synergized in the activation of DC. Stimulated with a combination of ATP and TNF-alpha, DC expressed the maturation marker CD83, secreted large amounts of IL-12, and were potent stimulators of T cells. In the presence of the P2 receptor antagonist suramin, the effects of ATP were completely abolished. Our results suggest that extracellular ATP may play an important immunomodulatory role by activating DC and by skewing the immune reaction toward a Th1 response through the induction of IL-12 secretion.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 165

SP - 4704

EP - 4709

JO - J IMMUNOL

JF - J IMMUNOL

SN - 0022-1767

IS - 8

M1 - 8

ER -