Publications by authors named "David C Gondek"

Chlamydiae, obligate intracellular bacteria, cause significant human and veterinary associated diseases. Having emerged an estimated 700-million years ago, these bacteria have twice adapted to humans as a host species, causing sexually transmitted infection (C. trachomatis) and respiratory associated disease (C.

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Chlamydia trachomatis infection is the most common bacterial sexually transmitted disease in the United States. Chlamydia infections that ascend to the upper genital tract can persist, trigger inflammation, and result in serious sequelae such as infertility. However, mouse models in which the vaginal vault is inoculated with C.

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Infection with the obligate intracellular bacterium Chlamydia trachomatis is controlled primarily by IFN-gamma and Th1 immunity. In this study, we used cells from a Chlamydia-specific CD4(+) TCR-transgenic mouse to assess the role of IFN-gamma in development of Th1 immunity. We show that secretion of host IFN-gamma or the ability of host cells to respond to secreted IFN-gamma is not required to initiate a Th1 immune response.

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Granzyme B (GZB) has been implicated as an effector mechanism in regulatory T cells (T(reg)) suppression. In a model of T(reg)-dependent graft tolerance, it is shown that GZB- deficient mice are unable to establish long-term tolerance. Moreover, mice overexpressing the inhibitor of GZB, serine protease inhibitor 6, are also resistant to tolerization to alloantigen.

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Contrary to the proinflammatory role of mast cells in allergic disorders, the results obtained in this study establish that mast cells are essential in CD4+CD25+Foxp3+ regulatory T (T(Reg))-cell-dependent peripheral tolerance. Here we confirm that tolerant allografts, which are sustained owing to the immunosuppressive effects of T(Reg) cells, acquire a unique genetic signature dominated by the expression of mast-cell-gene products. We also show that mast cells are crucial for allograft tolerance, through the inability to induce tolerance in mast-cell-deficient mice.

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CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells (T(reg)) play an important role in maintaining immunologic tolerance. Glucocorticoid-induced TNFR family-related gene (GITR) expressed preferentially at high levels on T(reg) has been shown to be a key player of regulating T(reg)-mediated suppression. A recent study reports that NF-kappaB-inducing kinase (NIK) expression in thymic stroma is important for the normal production of T(reg) but not for its suppression capacity.

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CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells (Treg) are potent immunosuppressive cells that are pivotal in the regulation of peripheral tolerance. In this report, we identify granzyme B (GZ-B) as one of the key components of Treg-mediated suppression. Induction of regulatory activity is correlated with the up-regulation of GZ-B expression.

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Gammaherpesviruses can persist in the host in the face of an aggressive immune response. T cells recognize Ags expressed in both the productive and latent phases of the virus life cycle, however little is known about their relative roles in the long-term control of the infection. In this study we used the murine gammaherpesvirus 68 model system to investigate the relative properties of CD8 T cells recognizing lytic and latent viral Ags.

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