871 results match your criteria: "Center for Infectious Medicine[Affiliation]"

Resident T17 cells "break bad" in kidney autoimmunity.

Sci Immunol

August 2020

Center for Infectious Medicine, Department of Medicine Huddinge, Karolinska Institutet, Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden. Email:

Resident memory T17 cells (T17 cells) are induced by microbial infections in kidneys and amplify renal autoimmunity.

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Chloroquine Triggers Cell Death and Inhibits PARPs in Cell Models of Aggressive Hepatoblastoma.

Front Oncol

July 2020

Pediatric Research Center, Children's Hospital, Helsinki University Hospital, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.

Hepatoblastoma (HB) is the most common pediatric liver malignancy. Despite advances in chemotherapeutic regimens and surgical techniques, the survival of patients with advanced HB remains poor, underscoring the need for new therapeutic approaches. Chloroquine (CQ), a drug used to treat malaria and rheumatologic diseases, has been shown to inhibit the growth and survival of various cancer types.

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Human endometrial MAIT cells are transiently tissue resident and respond to Neisseria gonorrhoeae.

Mucosal Immunol

March 2021

Center for Infectious Medicine, Department of Medicine Huddinge, Karolinska Institutet, Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden.

Mucosa-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells are non-classical T cells important in the mucosal defense against microbes. Despite an increasing interest in the immunobiology of the endometrial mucosa, little is known regarding human MAIT cells in this compartment. The potential role of MAIT cells as a tissue-resident local defense against microbes in the endometrium is largely unexplored.

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Outcome of COVID-19 in multiple myeloma patients in relation to treatment.

Eur J Haematol

December 2020

Center for Hematology and Regenerative Medicine, Department of Medicine, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden.

COVID-19 has emerged as a global pandemic. Cancer patients have been reported to be at higher risk for adverse outcome of COVID-19. Studies are ongoing to decipher the risk factors and risk groups among cancer patients as well as strategies to refine treatment approaches.

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CD8 T cell exhaustion is a hallmark of many cancers and chronic infections. In mice, T cell factor 1 (TCF-1) maintains exhausted CD8 T cell responses, whereas thymocyte selection-associated HMG box (TOX) is required for the epigenetic remodeling and survival of exhausted CD8 T cells. However, it has remained unclear to what extent these transcription factors play analogous roles in humans.

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Sample Preparation of Optically Cleared Liver Tissue to Identify Liver Macrophages Using 3D Microscopy.

Methods Mol Biol

March 2021

Department of Medicine Huddinge, Center for Infectious Medicine, ANA Futura, Karolinska Institutet, Karolinska University Hospital Huddinge, Stockholm, Sweden.

Histology, or the study of tissue microanatomy, is essential to understanding the in situ function of varying cell types within an organ. How cells are distributed throughout organs provides an indication of how they interact with other cells and structures within the organ microanatomy. The tortuous shape and large size of liver macrophages limits the value of standard tissue thickness of 5-10 μm.

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Targeted Nutrition in Chronic Disease.

Nutrients

June 2020

Department of Medicine Huddinge (MedH), Center for Infectious Medicine (CIM), Karolinska Institutet, ANA Futura, 141 52 Huddinge, Sweden.

Today, chronic disease is a major public health problem around the world that is rapidly increasing with a growing and aging population [...

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Mucosa-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells are abundant antimicrobial T cells in humans and recognize antigens derived from the microbial riboflavin biosynthetic pathway presented by the MHC-Ib-related protein (MR1). However, the mechanisms responsible for MAIT cell antimicrobial activity are not fully understood, and the efficacy of these mechanisms against antibiotic resistant bacteria has not been explored. Here, we show that MAIT cells mediate MR1-restricted antimicrobial activity against Escherichia coli clinical strains in a manner dependent on the activity of cytolytic proteins but independent of production of pro-inflammatory cytokines or induction of apoptosis in infected cells.

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Coxsackievirus B (CVB) enteroviruses are common human pathogens known to cause severe diseases including myocarditis, chronic dilated cardiomyopathy, and aseptic meningitis. CVBs are also hypothesized to be a causal factor in type 1 diabetes. Vaccines against CVBs are not currently available, and here we describe the generation and preclinical testing of a novel hexavalent vaccine targeting the six known CVB serotypes.

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Deciphering Natural Killer Cell Homeostasis.

Front Immunol

March 2021

Center for Infectious Medicine, Department of Medicine Huddinge, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.

Natural killer (NK) cells have a central role within the innate immune system, eliminating virally infected, foreign and transformed cells through their natural cytotoxic capacity. Release of their cytotoxic granules is tightly controlled through the balance of a large repertoire of inhibitory and activating receptors, and it is the unique combination of these receptors expressed by individual cells that confers immense diversity both in phenotype and functionality. The diverse, yet unique, NK cell repertoire within an individual is surprisingly stable over time considering the constant renewal of these cells at steady state.

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Mucosa-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells are innate-like antimicrobial T cells recognizing a breadth of important pathogens via presentation of microbial riboflavin metabolite Ags by MHC class Ib-related (MR1) molecules. However, the interaction of human MAIT cells with adaptive immune responses and the role they may play in settings of vaccinology remain relatively little explored. In this study we investigated the interplay between MAIT cell-mediated antibacterial effector functions and the humoral immune response.

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Cytotoxic lymphocytes, including natural killer (NK) cells and T cells are distinguished by their ability to eliminate target cells through release of secretory lysosomes. Conventional lysosomes and secretory lysosomes are part of the pleomorphic endolysosomal system and characterized by its highly dynamic nature. Several calcium-permeable TRP calcium channels play an essential role in endolysosomal calcium signaling to ensure proper function of these organelles.

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ILCs and T helper cells have been shown to exert bi-directional regulation in mice. However, how crosstalk between ILCs and CD4 T cells influences immune function in humans is unknown. Here we show that human intestinal ILCs co-localize with T cells in healthy and colorectal cancer tissue and display elevated HLA-DR expression in tumor and tumor-adjacent areas.

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Objectives: Vertical transmission of hepatitis C virus (HCV) is rare compared with other chronic viral infections, despite that newborns have an immature, and possibly more susceptible, immune system. It further remains unclear to what extent prenatal and perinatal exposure to HCV affects immune system development in neonates.

Design: To address this, we studied B cells, innate immune cells and soluble factors in a cohort of 62 children that were either unexposed, exposed uninfected or infected with HCV.

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Tummy Time for ILC2.

Immunity

April 2020

Center for Infectious Medicine, Department of Medicine, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden. Electronic address:

Little is known about host-microbiota interactions regulating anti-microbial immunity in the stomach. In this issue, Satoh-Takayama et al. describe an additional immune mechanism involving innate lymphoid cells type 2 (ILC2), which controls infection with Helicobacter pylori, a bacterium associated with inflammation and cancer.

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Mouse Models of Virus-Induced Type 1 Diabetes.

Methods Mol Biol

March 2021

The Center for Infectious Medicine (CIM), Department of Medicine Huddinge, Karolinska Institutet and Karolinska University Hospital Huddinge, Stockholm, Sweden.

Virus infections have been linked to the induction of autoimmunity and disease development in human type 1 diabetes. Experimental models have been instrumental in deciphering processes leading to break of immunological tolerance and type 1 diabetes development. Animal models have also been useful for proof-of-concept studies and for preclinical testing of new therapeutic interventions.

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Aim: A study was conducted to evaluate the ameliorative potential of homeopathic drugs in combination (Sulfur 30C, 30C, Graphites 30C, and Psorinum 30C) in 16 dogs affected with oral papillomatosis which was not undergone any previous treatment.

Materials And Methods: Dogs affected with oral papillomatosis, which have not undergone any initial treatment and fed with a regular diet. Dogs (total=16) were randomly divided into two groups, namely, homeopathic treatment group (n=8) and placebo control group (n=8).

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S100A12 is a calcium-binding protein of the S100 subfamily of myeloid-related proteins that acts as an alarmin to induce a pro-inflammatory innate immune response. It has been linked to several chronic inflammatory diseases, however its role in the common oral immunopathology periodontitis is largely unknown. Previous monoculture experiments indicate that S100A12 production decreases during monocyte differentiation stages, while the regulation within tissue is poorly defined.

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Meeting report: Eleventh International Conference on Hantaviruses.

Antiviral Res

April 2020

KU Leuven, Rega Institute for Medical Research, Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Transplantation, National Reference Center for Hantaviruses, Leuven, Belgium.

The 2019 11th International Conference on Hantaviruses (ICH 2019) was organized by the International Society for Hantaviruses (ISH), and held on September 1-4, 2019, at the Irish College, in Leuven, Belgium. These ICHs have been held every three years since 1989. ICH 2019 was attended by 158 participants from 33 countries.

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Understanding macrophage behavior is key to decipher (Mtb) pathogenesis. We studied the phenotype and ability of human monocyte-derived cells polarized with active vitamin D [1,25(OH)D] to control intracellular Mtb infection compared with polarization of conventional subsets, classical M1 or alternative M2. Human blood-derived monocytes were treated with active vitamin D or different cytokines to obtain 1,25(OH)D-polarized as well as M1- and M2-like cells or fully polarized M1 and M2 subsets.

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Direct-acting antivirals (DAAs) have dramatically improved the management of chronic hepatitis C (CHC). In this study, we investigated the effects of hepatitis C virus clearance on markers of systemic inflammation measured in plasma samples from CHC patients before, during and after DAA therapy. We identified a plasma soluble protein profile associated with CHC.

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Hantaviruses, zoonotic RNA viruses belonging to the order Bunyavirales, cause two severe acute diseases in humans, hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS) and hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS). Hantavirus-infected patients show strong cytotoxic lymphocyte responses and hyperinflammation; however, infected cells remain mostly intact. Hantaviruses were recently shown to inhibit apoptosis in infected cells.

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