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A high proportion of T lymphocytes that infiltrate H-2-incompatible heart allografts in vivo express genes encoding cytotoxic cell-specific serine proteases, but do not express the MEL-14-defined lymph node homing receptor

The role of cytotoxic cells in in vivo immune functions such as allograft rejection is unknown. To begin to assess the function of cytolytic cells in vivo we have begun with cytolytic cell-specific functional molecules: we have isolated and characterized cytolytic cell- specific cDNA clones from cyt...

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Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1988
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2188904/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3280725
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description The role of cytotoxic cells in in vivo immune functions such as allograft rejection is unknown. To begin to assess the function of cytolytic cells in vivo we have begun with cytolytic cell-specific functional molecules: we have isolated and characterized cytolytic cell- specific cDNA clones from cytolytic T cell clones, both encoding distinct serine esterases. The HF gene encodes a trypsin-like enzyme while the C11 gene encodes an enzyme with likely specificity for acidic residues. Here we demonstrate, using in situ hybridization with RNA probe, that both genes are expressed selectively in a subset of T lymphocytes that have infiltrated cardiac allografts. The phenotype of these cells is consistent with the most frequent phenotype of active CTL raised in vitro: they are predominantly CD4-, CD8+, MEL-14- T cell blasts. Thus the expression of these genes, each of which encodes serine esterase found in killer cell granules in vitro, is a valid marker for these cells in vivo as well. The kinetics of their accumulation is consistent with, but not proof of, a putative role in allograft rejection. It is likely that HF and C11 gene expression will be of diagnostic value.
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spelling pubmed-21889042008-04-17 A high proportion of T lymphocytes that infiltrate H-2-incompatible heart allografts in vivo express genes encoding cytotoxic cell-specific serine proteases, but do not express the MEL-14-defined lymph node homing receptor J Exp Med Articles The role of cytotoxic cells in in vivo immune functions such as allograft rejection is unknown. To begin to assess the function of cytolytic cells in vivo we have begun with cytolytic cell-specific functional molecules: we have isolated and characterized cytolytic cell- specific cDNA clones from cytolytic T cell clones, both encoding distinct serine esterases. The HF gene encodes a trypsin-like enzyme while the C11 gene encodes an enzyme with likely specificity for acidic residues. Here we demonstrate, using in situ hybridization with RNA probe, that both genes are expressed selectively in a subset of T lymphocytes that have infiltrated cardiac allografts. The phenotype of these cells is consistent with the most frequent phenotype of active CTL raised in vitro: they are predominantly CD4-, CD8+, MEL-14- T cell blasts. Thus the expression of these genes, each of which encodes serine esterase found in killer cell granules in vitro, is a valid marker for these cells in vivo as well. The kinetics of their accumulation is consistent with, but not proof of, a putative role in allograft rejection. It is likely that HF and C11 gene expression will be of diagnostic value. The Rockefeller University Press 1988-03-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2188904/ /pubmed/3280725 Text en This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Articles
A high proportion of T lymphocytes that infiltrate H-2-incompatible heart allografts in vivo express genes encoding cytotoxic cell-specific serine proteases, but do not express the MEL-14-defined lymph node homing receptor
title A high proportion of T lymphocytes that infiltrate H-2-incompatible heart allografts in vivo express genes encoding cytotoxic cell-specific serine proteases, but do not express the MEL-14-defined lymph node homing receptor
title_full A high proportion of T lymphocytes that infiltrate H-2-incompatible heart allografts in vivo express genes encoding cytotoxic cell-specific serine proteases, but do not express the MEL-14-defined lymph node homing receptor
title_fullStr A high proportion of T lymphocytes that infiltrate H-2-incompatible heart allografts in vivo express genes encoding cytotoxic cell-specific serine proteases, but do not express the MEL-14-defined lymph node homing receptor
title_full_unstemmed A high proportion of T lymphocytes that infiltrate H-2-incompatible heart allografts in vivo express genes encoding cytotoxic cell-specific serine proteases, but do not express the MEL-14-defined lymph node homing receptor
title_short A high proportion of T lymphocytes that infiltrate H-2-incompatible heart allografts in vivo express genes encoding cytotoxic cell-specific serine proteases, but do not express the MEL-14-defined lymph node homing receptor
title_sort high proportion of t lymphocytes that infiltrate h-2-incompatible heart allografts in vivo express genes encoding cytotoxic cell-specific serine proteases, but do not express the mel-14-defined lymph node homing receptor
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2188904/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3280725