Ex Vivo Nicotine Stimulation Augments the Efficacy of Human Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cell-Derived Dendritic Cell Vaccination via Activating Akt-S6 Pathway

Joint Authors

Wang, Yan Yan
Yang, Yi Wen
You, Xiang
Deng, Xiao Qian
Hu, Chun Fang
Zhu, Cong
Wang, Jun Yao
Gu, Jiao Jiao
Wang, Yi Nan
Li, Qing
Gao, Feng Guang

Source

Analytical Cellular Pathology

Issue

Vol. 2015, Issue 2015 (31 Dec. 2015), pp.1-13, 13 p.

Publisher

Hindawi Publishing Corporation

Publication Date

2015-08-13

Country of Publication

Egypt

No. of Pages

13

Main Subjects

Diseases
Medicine

Abstract EN

Our previous studies showed that α7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAchR) agonist nicotine has stimulatory effects on murine bone marrow-derived semimature DCs, but the effect of nicotine on peripheral blood mononuclear cell- (PBMC-) derived human semimature dendritic cells (hu-imDCs) is still to be clarified.

In the present study, hu-imDCs (cultured 4 days) were conferred with ex vivo lower dose nicotine stimulation and the effect of nicotine on surface molecules expression, the ability of cross-presentation, DCs-mediated PBMC priming, and activated signaling pathways were determined.

We could demonstrate that the treatment with nicotine resulted in increased surface molecules expression, enhanced hu-imDCs-mediated PBMC proliferation, upregulated release of IL-12 in the supernatant of cocultured DCs-PBMC, and augmented phosphorylation of Akt and ribosomal protein S6.

Nicotine associated with traces of LPS efficiently enhanced endosomal translocation of internalized ovalbumin (OVA) and increased TAP-OVA colocalization.

Importantly, the upregulation of nicotine-increased surface molecules upregulation was significantly abrogated by the inhibition of Akt kinase.

These findings demonstrate that ex vivo nicotine stimulation augments hu-imDCs surface molecules expression via Akt-S6 pathway, combined with increased Ag-presentation result in augmented efficacy of DCs-mediated PBMC proliferation and Th1 polarization.

American Psychological Association (APA)

Wang, Yan Yan& Yang, Yi Wen& You, Xiang& Deng, Xiao Qian& Hu, Chun Fang& Zhu, Cong…[et al.]. 2015. Ex Vivo Nicotine Stimulation Augments the Efficacy of Human Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cell-Derived Dendritic Cell Vaccination via Activating Akt-S6 Pathway. Analytical Cellular Pathology،Vol. 2015, no. 2015, pp.1-13.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1052366

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Wang, Yan Yan…[et al.]. Ex Vivo Nicotine Stimulation Augments the Efficacy of Human Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cell-Derived Dendritic Cell Vaccination via Activating Akt-S6 Pathway. Analytical Cellular Pathology No. 2015 (2015), pp.1-13.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1052366

American Medical Association (AMA)

Wang, Yan Yan& Yang, Yi Wen& You, Xiang& Deng, Xiao Qian& Hu, Chun Fang& Zhu, Cong…[et al.]. Ex Vivo Nicotine Stimulation Augments the Efficacy of Human Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cell-Derived Dendritic Cell Vaccination via Activating Akt-S6 Pathway. Analytical Cellular Pathology. 2015. Vol. 2015, no. 2015, pp.1-13.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1052366

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references

Record ID

BIM-1052366