Antigen-antibody immune complexes empower dendritic cells to efficiently prime specific CD8+ CTL responses in vivo

DH Schuurhuis, A Ioan-Facsinay… - The Journal of …, 2002 - journals.aai.org
DH Schuurhuis, A Ioan-Facsinay, B Nagelkerken, JJ van Schip, C Sedlik, CJM Melief
The Journal of Immunology, 2002journals.aai.org
Dendritic cells (DCs) require a maturation signal to acquire efficient CTL-priming capacity. In
vitro FcγR-mediated internalization of Ag-Ab immune complexes (ICs) can induce
maturation of DCs. In this study, we show that IC-induced DC maturation in vitro enables
DCs to prime peptide-specific CD8+ CTLs in vivo, independently of CD4+ Th cells.
Importantly, OVA/anti-OVA IC-treated DCs not only primed CD8+ CTLs to an exogenously
loaded peptide nonrelated to OVA, but also efficiently primed CTLs against the dominant …
Abstract
Dendritic cells (DCs) require a maturation signal to acquire efficient CTL-priming capacity. In vitro FcγR-mediated internalization of Ag-Ab immune complexes (ICs) can induce maturation of DCs. In this study, we show that IC-induced DC maturation in vitro enables DCs to prime peptide-specific CD8+ CTLs in vivo, independently of CD4+ Th cells. Importantly, OVA/anti-OVA IC-treated DCs not only primed CD8+ CTLs to an exogenously loaded peptide nonrelated to OVA, but also efficiently primed CTLs against the dominant CTL epitope derived from the OVA Ag present in the ICs. Our studies show that ICs fulfill a dual role in priming of CD8+ CTL responses to exogenous Ags: enhancement of Ag uptake by DCs and activation of DCs, resulting in “license to kill.” These findings indicate that the presence of specific Abs can crucially affect the induction of cytotoxic cellular responses.
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