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Alan G. Ramsay, Amy J. Johnson, Abigail M. Lee, Güllü Gorgün, Rifca Le Dieu, William Blum, John C. Byrd, John G. Gribben
Published in Volume 118, Issue 7
J Clin Invest. 2008; 118(7):2427–2437 doi:10.1172/JCI35017
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Figure 3
CLL B cells induce defective immunological synapse formation in healthy allogeneic T cells by direct cell contact.

(A) Healthy T cells (T) were cocultured for 48 h with either healthy allogeneic B cells (B) or allogeneic CLL B cells and subsequently used in conjugation assays with or without sAg-pulsed third-party allogeneic healthy donor B cells (APCs, stained blue). Conjugates were selected at random for imaging and were scored for accumulation of F-actin (stained red) at the immune synapse. Note the prevention of the synapse defect when cell adhesion was blocked by pretreatment of CLL B cells with anti–ICAM-1 monoclonal antibody prior to primary coculture with healthy T cells. Data are the mean ± SD from 3 independent experiments, with 50 conjugates analyzed per experiment. The confocal images shown are CD8+ T cells. Original magnification, ×63. (B) T cell conjugates from A were scored by visual counting using a confocal microscope. Each data set shows the mean ± SD from 3 independent experiments, with 50 random T cells analyzed per experiment. (C) Healthy T cells cocultured for 48 h with either healthy allogeneic B cells or allogeneic CLL B cells in transwell culture plates and subsequently used in conjugation assays with or without sAg-pulsed third-party allogeneic healthy donor B cells (APCs). Conjugates were selected at random for imaging and were scored for accumulation of F-actin at the immune synapse. Data are the mean ± SD from 3 independent experiments, with 50 conjugates analyzed per experiment.