Español (spanish formal Internacional)English (United Kingdom)






Upcoming Events

Follow us


Subscribe you to our News RSS RSS Follow CNB_CSIC on Twitter








Banner
Banner
Diferentiation and functional specialization of dendritic cells during inflammatory, infectious and allergic processes

Carlos Ardavín

Carlos Ardavíncontact

DIFERENTIATION AND FUNCTIONAL SPECIALIZATION OF DENDRITIC CELLS DURING INFLAMMATORY, INFECTIOUS AND ALLERGIC PROCESSES

  Postdoctoral scientists:
  María López-Bravo
  Pilar Domínguez
  Carlos del Fresno
  Patricia Leiriao
  Didier Soulat
PhD Students:
Elena Liarte
María Minguito
Technicians:
Leticia González
Ruth Gómez Caro


More information at our website: Carlos Ardavín Laboratory



RESEARCH SUMMARY

Carlos Ardavín's groupOur research aims at exploring the functional specialization of dendritic cells derived from monocytes during inflammatory responses caused by infection by bacteria (Listeria monocytogenes), yeasts (Candida albicans) and parasites (Leishmania major) or by allergic reactions induced by plant- (Ole e 1), funghi -(Asp f 1) or acaridae- (Der p 1/2) derived allergens, using mouse experimental models.

In particular our current research interests are focused on the following topics:

• Analysis of the effector functions of mouse monocytes in innate and adaptive immunity

• Analysis of the differential migratory properties of mouse monocyte-derived dendritic cells and macrophages

• Regulation of mouse monocyte differentiation into dendritic cells and macrophages during in vivo immune response to Leishmania major

• Functional specialization of mouse dendritic cells for the induction of Th2 responses against pathogens and allergens

• Gene expression profile of mouse monocytes and monocyte-derived dendritic cells exposed to allergens and Th2-polarizing mediators

• Effect of statin treatment on proinflamatory cytokine production and nitric oxide metabolism by monocyte-derived DCs activated by ligands of TLR receptors or infected by Listeria monocytogenes

• Analysis of the splenic innate immune response to in vivo Listeria monocytogenes infection on statin-treated mice

• Role of type-I interferon in Th17 immune responses against Candida albicans in mice.


Dendritic cellsThe methodology designed for addressing these objectives relies on the following experimental approaches:

• Development of in vitro and in vivo infection models in different mouse strains, including mice deficient in cytokines (GM-CSF), cytokine/chemokine receptors (IFNAR, CCR2, CCR7), molecules involved in dendritic cell activation (MyD88, NOD 1/2, IRF-3, PPAR-gamma) and mice transgenic for TCRs specific for ovalbumin-derived peptides expressed on MHC I (OT-I) or MHC II (OT-II, DO.11)

• Cell biology techniques designed for the purification or isolation of defined cell populations from mouse bone marrow, skin, lymph nodes and spleen, involving magnetic bead and FACS cell separation methods

• Analysis of monocytes, dendritic cells and macrophages from Leishmania- or Listeria- infected mice on cell suspensions or tissue sections, by electron microscopy or confocal microscopy after immunofluorescent staining

In vitro differentiation of dendritic cells and macrophages on GM-CSF, IL-3, M-CSF or Flt3L-driven cultures from monocytes or bone marrow precursors

• Analysis of gene expression profiles at the protein level by flow cytometry, ELISA and electrophoresis

• Analysis of gene expression at the mRNA level by real-time quantitative PCR, whole mouse genome microarray analyses and chromatin immunoprecipitation.



Selected Publications

  • Thymic dendritic cells and T cells develop in parallel from a common precursor population. Ardavín C, Wu L, Li CH, Shortman K. Nature 362: 761 (1993).
  •  Characterization of a common precursor population for dendritic cells. Martínez del Hoyo G, Martín P, Hernández Vargas H, Fernández Arias C, Ruiz S, Ardavín C. Nature 415:1043-1047 (2002).
  • Origin, precursors and differentiation of mouse dendritic cells. Ardavín C. Nature Reviews Immunology 3:582-591 (2003).
  • Dendritic cell differentiation at inflammatory foci during Leishmania infection: de novo-formed monocyte-derived dendritic cells are responsible for the induction of protective Th1 responses. León B, López-Bravo M, Ardavín C. Immunity 26:519-531 (2007).
  • In vivo induction of immune responses against pathogens by non-mucosal conventional DCs. López-Bravo M, Ardavín C. Immunity 29:343-351 (2008)