scholarly journals CD11b facilitates the development of peripheral tolerance by suppressing Th17 differentiation

2007 ◽  
Vol 204 (7) ◽  
pp. 1519-1524 ◽  
Author(s):  
Driss Ehirchiou ◽  
Ying Xiong ◽  
Guangwu Xu ◽  
Wanjun Chen ◽  
Yufang Shi ◽  
...  

Antigen-induced immune suppression, like T cell activation, requires antigen-presenting cells (APCs); however, the role of APCs in mediating these opposing effects is not well understood, especially in vivo. We report that genetic inactivation of CD11b, which is a CD18 subfamily of integrin receptors that is highly expressed on APCs, abolishes orally induced peripheral immune tolerance (oral tolerance) without compromising APC maturation or antigen-specific immune activation. The defective oral tolerance in CD11b−/− mice can be restored by adoptive transfer of wild-type APCs. CD11b deficiency leads to enhanced interleukin (IL) 6 production by APCs, which subsequently promotes preferential differentiation of naive T cells to T helper 17 (Th17) cells, which are a T cell lineage characterized by their production of IL-17. Consequently, antigen feeding and immunization of CD11b−/− mice results in significant production of IL-17 within the draining lymph nodes that interferes with the establishment of oral tolerance. Together, we conclude that CD11b facilitates oral tolerance by suppressing Th17 immune differentiation.

1996 ◽  
Vol 184 (3) ◽  
pp. 811-819 ◽  
Author(s):  
L Biancone ◽  
M A Bowen ◽  
A Lim ◽  
A Aruffo ◽  
G Andres ◽  
...  

CD5 is a 67-kD glycoprotein that is expressed on most T lymphocytes and on a subset of mature B cells. Although its physiologic function is unknown, several lines of evidence suggest that CD5 may play a role in the regulation of T cell activation and in T cell-antigen presenting cell interactions. Using a CD5-immunoglobulin fusion protein (CD5Rg, for receptorglobulin) we have uncovered a new CD5 ligand (CD5L) expressed on the surface of activated splenocytes. Stimulation of murine splenocytes with anti-CD3 and anti-CD28 antibodies induce transient expression of CD5L on B lymphocytes that lasts for approximately 72 h. Binding of CD5Rg to activated splenocytes is trypsin resistant and independent of divalent cations. However, it is pronase sensitive and dependent on N-linked glycosylation of CD5, since treatment of CD5Rg with PNGaseF on N-glycanase completely abrogates its ability to bind activated splenocytes. It addition to splenocytes, CD5L is expressed on activated murine T cell clones. Immunoprecipitation, antibody, and recombinant protein blocking studies indicate that CD5L is distinct from CD72, which has been proposed to be a CD5 ligand. To determine whether CD5-CD5L interaction might play a role in vivo, we tested the effect of CD5Rg in a murine model of antibody-mediated membranous glomerulonephritis. Injection of CD5Rg was found to abrogate development of the disease. Taken together, our results help identify a novel ligand of CD5 and propose a role for CD5 in the regulation of immune responses.


1998 ◽  
Vol 187 (10) ◽  
pp. 1611-1621 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah E. Townsend ◽  
Christopher C. Goodnow

Antigen-specific B cells are implicated as antigen-presenting cells in memory and tolerance responses because they capture antigens efficiently and localize to T cell zones after antigen capture. It has not been possible, however, to visualize the effect of specific B cells on specific CD4+ helper T cells under physiological conditions. We demonstrate here that rare T cells are activated in vivo by minute quantities of antigen captured by antigen-specific B cells. Antigen-activated B cells are helped under these conditions, whereas antigen-tolerant B cells are killed. The T cells proliferate and then disappear regardless of whether the B cells are activated or tolerant. We show genetically that T cell activation, proliferation, and disappearance can be mediated either by transfer of antigen from antigen-specific B cells to endogenous antigen-presenting cells or by direct B–T cell interactions. These results identify a novel antigen presentation route, and demonstrate that B cell presentation of antigen has profound effects on T cell fate that could not be predicted from in vitro studies.


2003 ◽  
Vol 198 (5) ◽  
pp. 715-724 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marc Bajénoff ◽  
Samuel Granjeaud ◽  
Sylvie Guerder

The development of an immune response critically relies on the encounter of rare antigen (Ag)-specific T cells with dendritic cells (DCs) presenting the relevant Ag. How two rare cells find each other in the midst of irrelevant other cells in lymph nodes (LNs) is unknown. Here we show that initial T cell activation clusters are generated near high endothelial venules (HEVs) in the outer paracortex of draining LNs by retention of Ag-specific T cells as they exit from HEVs. We further show that tissue-derived DCs preferentially home in the vicinity of HEVs, thus defining the site of cluster generation. At this location DCs efficiently scan all incoming T cells and selectively retain those specific for the major histocompatibility complex–peptide complexes the DCs present. Such strategic positioning of DCs on the entry route of T cells into the paracortex may foster T cell–DC encounter and thus optimize initial T cell activation in vivo.


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 3217-3217
Author(s):  
Miles Hamilton Linde ◽  
Christopher G Dove ◽  
Sarah F Gurev ◽  
Paul Phan ◽  
Feifei Zhao ◽  
...  

Precursor B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) is an aggressive hematopoietic neoplasm characterized by recurrent genetic lesions resulting in B-cell maturation arrest and malignant transformation. Even with the addition of targeted therapies to conventional treatment regimens, prognosis for adults with high risk disease remains poor, particularly for those patients with relapsed or refractory disease. Despite an arrest in B cell maturation, we previously showed that human B-ALL blasts retain the capacity for reprogramming to the myeloid lineage (McClellan et al, PNAS 2015). While the concept of forced differentiation was proposed several decades ago, no differentiation therapies have been effective in the treatment of B-ALL. Thus, we sought to investigate the therapeutic implications of myeloid lineage reprogramming of B-ALL cells. We speculated that myeloid-reprogramming of B-ALL cells into antigen presenting cells (APCs) could induce tumor-specific T cell responses through effective presentation of aberrant tumor-associated self-peptides. To test this hypothesis, we generated murine models of B-ALL capable of reprogramming to the myeloid lineage through the inducible expression of two transcription factors, CEBPα and PU.1. Ectopic expression of these factors efficiently reprogrammed B-ALL cells into myeloid-lineage APCs, expressing myeloid markers (CD11b, CD14, CD115, and Ly6C). Reprogramming ablated the tumorigenicity of these cells as they acquired APC characteristics, including phagocytic activity and expression of antigen presentation and co-stimulation molecules: MHC-I (3.13-fold, p=0.0018), MHC-II (8.6-fold, p<0.0001), CD80 (62.1-fold, p<0.0001), CD86 (107.6-fold, p<0.0001), and CD40 (92-fold, p<0.0001). Using chicken ovalbumin as a model antigen and DO11.10 transgenic CD4+ T cells, we demonstrated that reprogrammed B-ALL cells, but not parental blasts, can process and present both endogenous and exogenous peptides for antigen-specific T cell activation. To explore the therapeutic potential of B-ALL reprogramming, we engrafted immunodeficient (NSG) and immunocompetent syngeneic (BALB/c) mice with our B-ALL model and induced myeloid reprogramming in vivo. While B-ALL reprogramming in immunodeficient mice led to a three day extension in median survival (p=0.0016, n= 5 per group), all of the mice succumbed to their disease. Strikingly, B-ALL reprogramming in immunocompetent mice led to complete tumor regression and survival of the entire cohort 100 days post treatment (p<0.0001, n=10 per group), suggesting that reprogramming induced immune-mediated tumor eradication. Importantly, these animals were not susceptible to subsequent B-ALL re-challenge, demonstrating successful generation of durable, systemic, and protective immunity. In order to investigate the mechanism underlying tumor eradication, we depleted BALB/c mice of CD4+ or CD8+ T cells. Depletion of either T cell population abrogated the therapeutic benefit of B-ALL reprogramming, indicating that reprogrammed B-ALL cells stimulate T cell activation in vivo. Further analysis of the CD8 T cell repertoire by TCRVb chain usage revealed significant 10.3-fold (p=0.0109, n=5 per group) expansion of a single TCRVb chain family in response to B-ALL reprogramming, consistent with an oligoclonal T cell response. Following reprogramming, a 4.01-fold increase in the frequency of infiltrating T cells is observed in the bone marrow (p=0.0028), including both activated (CD25+/CD69+) (1.62-fold, p=0.018) and effector memory (CD44+CD62L-) (1.99-fold, p=0.0097) T cells. Finally, using a dual tumor model, we demonstrated that myeloid reprogramming-dependent T cell activation eradicates malignant cells systemically, as demonstrated by regression of contralateral tumors lacking reprogramming. Together, our data suggests that (1) B-ALL cells reprogrammed to the myeloid lineage can operate as potent APCs capable of presenting both endogenous and exogenous tumor-associated antigens, (2) in vivo B-ALL reprogramming elicits robust immune activation, dependent on both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, and (3) B-ALL reprogramming-induced immune activation is potent, durable, tumor-eradicating, and systemic. Thus, reprogramming of B-ALL cells into APCs represents a novel immunotherapeutic strategy with potential clinical benefit for the management of B-ALL disease progression. Disclosures Majeti: Forty Seven Inc.: Consultancy, Equity Ownership, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Patents & Royalties; BioMarin: Consultancy.


2001 ◽  
Vol 194 (6) ◽  
pp. 769-780 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Hawiger ◽  
Kayo Inaba ◽  
Yair Dorsett ◽  
Ming Guo ◽  
Karsten Mahnke ◽  
...  

Dendritic cells (DCs) have the capacity to initiate immune responses, but it has been postulated that they may also be involved in inducing peripheral tolerance. To examine the function of DCs in the steady state we devised an antigen delivery system targeting these specialized antigen presenting cells in vivo using a monoclonal antibody to a DC-restricted endocytic receptor, DEC-205. Our experiments show that this route of antigen delivery to DCs is several orders of magnitude more efficient than free peptide in complete Freund's adjuvant (CFA) in inducing T cell activation and cell division. However, T cells activated by antigen delivered to DCs are not polarized to produce T helper type 1 cytokine interferon γ and the activation response is not sustained. Within 7 d the number of antigen-specific T cells is severely reduced, and the residual T cells become unresponsive to systemic challenge with antigen in CFA. Coinjection of the DC-targeted antigen and anti-CD40 agonistic antibody changes the outcome from tolerance to prolonged T cell activation and immunity. We conclude that in the absence of additional stimuli DCs induce transient antigen-specific T cell activation followed by T cell deletion and unresponsiveness.


2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (50) ◽  
pp. eabd1631
Author(s):  
Weijing Yang ◽  
Hongzhang Deng ◽  
Shoujun Zhu ◽  
Joseph Lau ◽  
Rui Tian ◽  
...  

Artificial antigen-presenting cells (aAPCs) can stimulate CD8+ T cell activation. While nanosized aAPCs (naAPCs) have a better safety profile than microsized (maAPCs), they generally induce a weaker T cell response. Treatment with aAPCs alone is insufficient due to the lack of autologous antigen-specific CD8+ T cells. Here, we devised a nanovaccine for antigen-specific CD8+ T cell preactivation in vivo, followed by reactivation of CD8+ T cells via size-transformable naAPCs. naAPCs can be converted to maAPCs in tumor tissue when encountering preactivated CD8+ T cells with high surface redox potential. In vivo study revealed that naAPC’s combination with nanovaccine had an impressive antitumor efficacy. The methodology can also be applied to chemotherapy and photodynamic therapy. Our findings provide a generalizable approach for using size-transformable naAPCs in vivo for immunotherapy in combination with nanotechnologies that can activate CD8+ T cells.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (9) ◽  
pp. 4430
Author(s):  
Ji-Hee Nam ◽  
Jun-Ho Lee ◽  
So-Yeon Choi ◽  
Nam-Chul Jung ◽  
Jie-Young Song ◽  
...  

Dendritic cells (DCs) are the most potent professional antigen-presenting cells (APCs) and inducers of T cell-mediated immunity. Although DCs play a central role in promoting adaptive immune responses against growing tumors, they also establish and maintain peripheral tolerance. DC activity depends on the method of induction and/or the presence of immunosuppressive agents. Tolerogenic dendritic cells (tDCs) induce immune tolerance by activating CD4+CD25+Foxp3+ regulatory T (Treg) cells and/or by producing cytokines that inhibit T cell activation. These findings suggest that tDCs may be an effective treatment for autoimmune diseases, inflammatory diseases, and infertility.


Pharmaceutics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (12) ◽  
pp. 1138
Author(s):  
Maarten K. Nijen Twilhaar ◽  
Lucas Czentner ◽  
Joanna Grabowska ◽  
Alsya J. Affandi ◽  
Chun Yin Jerry Lau ◽  
...  

Despite promising progress in cancer vaccination, therapeutic effectiveness is often insufficient. Cancer vaccine effectiveness could be enhanced by targeting vaccine antigens to antigen-presenting cells, thereby increasing T-cell activation. CD169-expressing splenic macrophages efficiently capture particulate antigens from the blood and transfer these antigens to dendritic cells for the activation of CD8+ T cells. In this study, we incorporated a physiological ligand for CD169, the ganglioside GM3, into liposomes to enhance liposome uptake by CD169+ macrophages. We assessed how variation in the amount of GM3, surface-attached PEG and liposomal size affected the binding to, and uptake by, CD169+ macrophages in vitro and in vivo. As a proof of concept, we prepared GM3-targeted liposomes containing a long synthetic ovalbumin peptide and tested the capacity of these liposomes to induce CD8+ and CD4+ T-cell responses compared to control liposomes or soluble peptide. The data indicate that the delivery of liposomes to splenic CD169+ macrophages can be optimized by the selection of liposomal constituents and liposomal size. Moreover, optimized GM3-mediated liposomal targeting to CD169+ macrophages induces potent immune responses and therefore presents as an interesting delivery strategy for cancer vaccination.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edward W. Roberts ◽  
Megan K. Ruhland ◽  
En Cai ◽  
Adriana M. Mujal ◽  
Kyle Marchuk ◽  
...  

AbstractIn order to drive productive tumor-infiltrating lymphocyte (TIL) function, myeloid populations must direct antigens to the lymph node, including to resident antigen-presenting cells (APCs) that have never touched the tumor. It has long been supposed that APCs trade antigens with one another, but the dominant cell biology underlying that remains unknown. We used in vitro and in vivo assays together with lattice light sheet and multiphoton imaging to show that myeloid cells carry tumor antigen-laden vesicles that they ‘trade’ with one another as they reach distant sites. This accounts for the majority of antigen displayed to T cells and provides tumors with a mechanism to access APCs that differentially direct T cell activation away from memory phenotypes. This work defines efficient cell biology that drives the first steps of TIL generation and represents a new frontier for engineering tumoral immunity.


1998 ◽  
Vol 188 (2) ◽  
pp. 287-296 ◽  
Author(s):  
Angela M. Thornton ◽  
Ethan M. Shevach

Peripheral tolerance may be maintained by a population of regulatory/suppressor T cells that prevent the activation of autoreactive T cells recognizing tissue-specific antigens. We have previously shown that CD4+CD25+ T cells represent a unique population of suppressor T cells that can prevent both the initiation of organ-specific autoimmune disease after day 3 thymectomy and the effector function of cloned autoantigen-specific CD4+ T cells. To analyze the mechanism of action of these cells, we established an in vitro model system that mimics the function of these cells in vivo. Purified CD4+CD25+ cells failed to proliferate after stimulation with interleukin (IL)-2 alone or stimulation through the T cell receptor (TCR). When cocultured with CD4+CD25− cells, the CD4+CD25+ cells markedly suppressed proliferation by specifically inhibiting the production of IL-2. The inhibition was not cytokine mediated, was dependent on cell contact between the regulatory cells and the responders, and required activation of the suppressors via the TCR. Inhibition could be overcome by the addition to the cultures of IL-2 or anti-CD28, suggesting that the CD4+CD25+ cells may function by blocking the delivery of a costimulatory signal. Induction of CD25 expression on CD25− T cells in vitro or in vivo did not result in the generation of suppressor activity. Collectively, these data support the concept that the CD4+CD25+ T cells in normal mice may represent a distinct lineage of “professional” suppressor cells.


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