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Publication : Dendritic cell expression of OX40 ligand acts as a costimulatory, not polarizing, signal for optimal Th2 priming and memory induction in vivo.

First Author  Jenkins SJ Year  2007
Journal  J Immunol Volume  179
Issue  6 Pages  3515-23
PubMed ID  17785785 Mgi Jnum  J:152054
Mgi Id  MGI:4355816 Doi  10.4049/jimmunol.179.6.3515
Citation  Jenkins SJ, et al. (2007) Dendritic cell expression of OX40 ligand acts as a costimulatory, not polarizing, signal for optimal Th2 priming and memory induction in vivo. J Immunol 179(6):3515-23
abstractText  Costimulatory cross-talk can occur at multiple cellular levels to potentiate expansion and polarization of Th responses. Although OX40L ligand (OX40L) is thought to play a key role in Th2 development, the critical cellular source of this molecule has yet to be identified. In this study, we demonstrate that OX40L expression by the initiating dendritic cell (DC) is a fundamental requirement for optimal induction of primary and memory Th2 responses in vivo. Analysis of the kinetics of the residual Th2 response primed by OX40L-deficient DC suggested a failure to stimulate appropriate expansion and/or survival of T cells, rather than an inability to polarize per se. The dependence upon OX40L was predominantly due to the provision of signaling through OX40 rather than retrograde signaling to the DC. Mechanistically, impaired Th2 priming in the absence of OX40L was not due to exaggerated regulation because there was no evidence of increased expansion or function of regulatory cell populations, suppression through IL-10 production, or hyporesponsiveness to secondary challenge. These data define a critical role for DC-derived OX40L in the induction and development of Th2 responses in vivo.
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