Abstract
Human blood dendritic cells require UV-B radiation (290 to 320 nm) in excess of 1,000 J/m2 to inhibit their stimulation of primary T-cell responses to alloantigen by 60% to 70% or more. The effect is twofold to threefold greater in the allogeneic mixed leukocyte reaction (MLR) than in polyclonal mitogenesis using comparable numbers of dendritic cells and doses of UV-B radiation. UV-B radiation does not significantly alter dendritic cell viability at the doses administered. Dendritic cell expression of important costimulatory ligands, eg, B7/BB1 and ICAM-1/CD54, is reduced in proportion to the dose of UV-B light administered. UV-B irradiated dendritic cells nevertheless initiate stable contacts with primary alloreactive T lymphocytes that are sufficient to prime T-cell responsiveness to interleukin-2 (IL-2). Subsequent proliferation is severely abrogated without supplemental lymphokine, while T-cell alloreactivity is preserved in a secondary response, irrespective of primary exposure to UV-B irradiated dendritic cells. © 1993 by The American Society of Hematology.
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CITATION STYLE
Young, J. W., Baggers, J., & Soergel, S. A. (1993). High-dose UV-B radiation alters human dendritic cell costimulatory activity but does not allow dendritic cells to tolerize T lymphocytes to alloantigen in vitro. Blood, 81(11), 2987–2997. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.v81.11.2987.2987
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