
Publication: Cross-presentation by dendritic cells from live cells induces protective immune responses in vivo.
Publié dans: Blood 2010 Jun; 115(22): 4412-20
Auteurs: Matheoud D, Perié L, Hoeffel G, Vimeux L, Parent I, Marañón C, Bourdoncle P, Renia L, Prevost-Blondel A, Lucas B, Feuillet V, Hosmalin A
Résumé
Cross-presentation is an essential mechanism that allows dendritic cells (DCs) to efficiently present exogenous antigens to CD8(+) T cells. Among cellular antigen sources, apoptotic cells are commonly considered as the best for cross-presentation by DCs. However, the potential of live cells as a source of antigen has been overlooked. Here we explored whether DCs were able to capture and cross-present antigens from live cells. DCs internalized cytosolic and membrane material into vesicles from metabolically labeled live cells. Using time-lapse confocal microscopy in whole spleens, we showed that DCs internalized material from live cells in vivo. After ovalbumin uptake from live cells, DCs cross-primed ovalbumin-specific naive OT-I CD8(+) T cells in vitro. Injected into mice previously transferred with naive OT-I T cells, they also cross-primed in vivo, even in the absence of endogenous DCs able to present the epitope in the recipient mice. Interestingly, DCs induced stronger natural CD8(+) T-cell responses and protection against a lethal tumor challenge after capture of antigens from live melanoma cells than from apoptotic melanoma cells. The potential for cross-presentation from live cells uncovers a new type of cellular intercommunication and must be taken into account for induction of tolerance or immunity against self, tumors, grafts, or pathogens.
Lien vers Pubmed [PMID] – 20308597
Lien vers le DOI – 10.1182/blood-2009-11-255935