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Title: Mediastinal lymph node CD8alpha- DC initiate antigen presentation following intranasal coadministration of alpha-GalCer. Author: Ko SY, Lee KA, Youn HJ, Kim YJ, Ko HJ, Heo TH, Kweon MN, Kang CY. Journal: Eur J Immunol; 2007 Aug; 37(8):2127-37. PubMed ID: 17615581. Abstract: Our previous study revealed that alpha-galactosylceramide (alpha-GalCer) is a potent nasal vaccine adjuvant inducing both potent humoral and cellular immune responses and affording complete protection against viral infections and tumors. However, the antigen-presenting cells (APC) that are activated by NKT cells and thereby initiate the immune responses following intranasal coadministration of protein antigen and alpha-GalCer are poorly understood. We assessed here where antigen presentation occurs and which APC subset mediates the early stages of immune responses when protein antigen and alpha-GalCer are intranasally administered. We show that dendritic cells (DC), but not B cells, initiated the mucosal immune responses at mediastinal lymph nodes. Of the DC subsets, the CD8alpha-B220-CD11c+ DC subset played the most prominent role in the direct and cross-presentation of protein antigen to naive T cells and in triggering the naive T cells to differentiate into effector T cells. This might be mainly caused by a relatively larger population of CD1dhigh cells of CD8alpha-B220-CD11c+ DC subset than those of other DC subsets. These results indicate that CD8alpha-B220-CD11c+ DC is the principal subset becoming immunogenic after interaction with NKT cells and abrogating tolerance to intranasally administered protein antigen when alpha-GalCer is coadministered as a nasal vaccine adjuvant.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]