Publication:
Reprogramming dendritic cells through the immunological synapse: A two-way street.

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Identifiers

Publication date

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publishers

Wiley
Metrics
Google Scholar
Export

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

Dendritic cells (DCs) bridge innate and adaptive immunity. Their main function is to present antigens to prime T cells and initiate and shape adaptive responses. Antigen presentation takes place through intimate contacts between the two cells, termed immune synapses (IS). During the formation of IS, information travels towards the T-cell side to induce and tune its activation; but it also travels in reverse via engagement of membrane receptors and within extracellular vesicles transferred to the DC. Such reverse information transfer and its consequences on DC fate have been largely neglected. Here, we review the events and effects of IS-mediated antigen presentation on DCs. In addition, we discuss novel technological advancements that enable monitoring DCs interactions with T lymphocytes, the main effects of DCs undergoing productive IS (postsynaptic DCs, or psDCs), and how reverse information transfer could be harnessed to modulate immune responses for therapeutic intervention.

Description

Keywords

DeCS Terms

Bibliographic citation

Eur J Immunol. 2023 Nov;53(11):e2350393.

Publisher version

Related dataset

Related publication

Document type