scholarly journals PARP2 deficiency affects invariant-NKT-cell maturation and protects mice from concanavalin A-induced liver injury

2017 ◽  
Vol 313 (5) ◽  
pp. G399-G409 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aveline Filliol ◽  
Claire Piquet-Pellorce ◽  
Sarah Dion ◽  
Valentine Genet ◽  
Catherine Lucas-Clerc ◽  
...  

Excessive or persistent inflammation and hepatocyte death are the key triggers of liver diseases. The poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) proteins induce cell death and inflammation. Chemical inhibition of PARP activity protects against liver injury during concanavalin A (ConA)-induced hepatitis. In this mice model, ConA activates immune cells, which promote inflammation and induce hepatocyte death, mediated by the activated invariant natural killer T (iNKT) lymphocyte population. We analyzed immune cell populations in the liver and several lymphoid organs, such as the spleen, thymus, and bone marrow in Parp2-deficient mice to better define the role of PARP proteins in liver immunity and inflammation at steady state and during ConA-induced hepatitis. We show that 1) the genetic inactivation of Parp2, but not Parp1, protected mice from ConA hepatitis without deregulating cytokine expression and leucocyte recruitment; 2) cellularity was lower in the thymus, but not in spleen, liver, or bone marrow of Parp2−/− mice; 3) spleen and liver iNKT lymphocytes, as well as thymic T and NKT lymphocytes were reduced in Parp2 knockout mice. In conclusion, our results suggest that the defect of T-lymphocyte maturation in Parp2 knockout mice leads to a systemic reduction of iNKT cells, reducing hepatocyte death during ConA-mediated liver damage, thus protecting the mice from hepatitis. NEW & NOTEWORTHY The genetic inactivation of Parp2, but not Parp1, protects mice from concanavalin A hepatitis. Immune cell populations are lower in the thymus, but not in the spleen, liver, or bone marrow of Parp2-deficient mice compared with wild-type mice. Spleen and liver invariant natural killer T (NKT) lymphocytes, as well as thymic T and NKT lymphocytes, are reduced in Parp2-deficient mice.

2013 ◽  
Vol 57 (9) ◽  
pp. 1671-1679 ◽  
Author(s):  
Masashi Inafuku ◽  
Koji Nagao ◽  
Ayako Inafuku ◽  
Teruyoshi Yanagita ◽  
Naoyuki Taira ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 116 (1) ◽  
pp. 211-216 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bochra Zidi ◽  
Christelle Vincent-Fabert ◽  
Laurent Pouyet ◽  
Marion Seillier ◽  
Amelle Vandevelde ◽  
...  

Bone marrow (BM) produces all blood and immune cells deriving from hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). The decrease of immune cell production during aging is one of the features of immunosenescence. The impact of redox dysregulation in BM aging is still poorly understood. Here we use TP53INP1-deficient (KO) mice endowed with chronic oxidative stress to assess the influence of aging-associated redox alterations in BM homeostasis. We show that TP53INP1 deletion has no impact on aging-related accumulation of HSCs. In contrast, the aging-related contraction of the lymphoid compartment is mitigated in TP53INP1 KO mice. B cells that accumulate in old KO BM are differentiating cells that can mature into functional B cells. Importantly, this phenotype results from B cell-intrinsic events associated with defective redox control. Finally, we show that oxidative stress in aged TP53INP1-deficient mice maintains STAT5 expression and activation in early B cells, driving high Pax5 expression, which provides a molecular mechanism for maintenance of B cell development upon aging.


2016 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Takeru Amiya ◽  
Nobuhiro Nakamoto ◽  
Po-sung Chu ◽  
Toshiaki Teratani ◽  
Hideaki Nakajima ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 136 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 9-9
Author(s):  
Michael Abadier ◽  
Jose Estevam ◽  
Deborah Berg ◽  
Eric Robert Fedyk

Background Mezagitamab is a fully human immunoglobulin (Ig) G1 monoclonal antibody with high affinity to CD38 that depletes tumor cells expressing CD38 by antibody- and complement-dependent cytotoxicity. CD38 is a cell surface molecule that is highly expressed on myeloma cells, plasma cells, plasmablasts, and natural killer (NK) cells, and is induced on activated T cells and other suppressor cells including regulatory T (Tregs) and B (Bregs) cells. Data suggest that immune landscape changes in cancer patients and this may correlate with disease stage and clinical outcome. Monitoring specific immune cell subsets could predict treatment responses since certain cell populations either enhance or attenuate the anti-tumor immune response. Method To monitor the immune landscape changes in RRMM patients we developed a mass cytometry panel that measures 39-biomarkers to identify multiple immune cell subsets, including T cells (naïve, memory, effector, regulatory), B cells (naïve, memory, precursors, plasmablasts, regulatory), NK cells, NKT cells, gamma delta T cells, monocytes (classical, non-classical and intermediate), dendritic cells (mDC; myeloid and pDC; plasmacytoid) and basophils. After a robust analytical method validation, we tested cryopreserved peripheral blood and bone marrow mononuclear cells from 19 RRMM patients who received ≥ 3 prior lines of therapy. Patients were administered 300 or 600 mg SC mezagitamab on a QWx8, Q2Wx8 and then Q4Wx until disease progression schedule (NCT03439280). We compared the percent change in immune cell subsets at baseline versus week 4 and week 16. Results CD38 is expressed at different levels on immune cells and sensitivity to depletion by mezagitamab generally correlates positively with the density of expression. CD38 is expressed at high densities on plasmablasts, Bregs, NK-cells, pDC and basophils at baseline and this was associated with reductions in peripheral blood and bone marrow (plasmablasts, 95%, Bregs, 90%, NK-cells, 50%, pDC, 55% and basophils, 40%) at week 4 post treatment. In contrast, no changes occurred in the level of total T-cells and B-cells, which is consistent with low expression of CD38 on most cells of these large populations. Among the insensitive cell types, remaining NK-cells acquired an activated, proliferative and effector phenotype. We observed 60-150% increase in activation (CD69, HLA-DR), 110-200% increase in proliferation (Ki-67), and 40-375% increase in effector (IFN-γ) markers in peripheral blood and bone marrow. Importantly, NK-cells which did not express detectable CD38, also exhibited a similar phenotype possibly by a mechanism independent of CD38. Consistent with these data, the remaining CD4 and CD8 T-cell populations exhibited an activated effector phenotype as observed by 40-200% increase in activation, 60-200% increase in proliferation and 40-90% increase in effector markers in peripheral blood. A potential explanation for this acquisition of activated effector phenotypes could be a reduction in suppressive regulatory lymphocytes. Next, we measured levels of Tregs and Bregs, and observed that Bregs which are CD24hiCD38hi were reduced to 60-90% in peripheral blood and bone marrow. In contrast, total Tregs were reduced by only 5-25% because CD38 expression in Tregs appears as a spectrum where only ~10-20% are CD38+, and thus CD38+ Tregs were reduced more significantly (45-75%), reflecting the selectively of mezagitamab to cells expressing high levels of CD38. CD38+ Tregs are induced in RRMM patients, thus we looked at the phenotype of CD38-, CD38mid, and CD38high -expressing Tregs. We observed higher level of markers that correlate with highly suppressive Tregs such as Granzyme B, Ki-67, CTLA-4 and PD-1 in CD38high Tregs. Accordingly, the total Treg population exhibited a less active phenotype after exposure to mezagitamab, which selectively depleted the highly suppressive CD38+ Tregs. Conclusions Chronic treatment with mezagitamab is immunomodulatory in patients with RRMM, which is associated with reductions in tumor burden, subpopulations of B and T regulatory cells, and characterized by conventional NK and T cells exhibiting an activated, proliferative and effector phenotype. The immune landscape changes observed is consistent with the immunologic concept of converting the tumor microenvironment from cold-to-hot and highlights a key mechanistic effect of mezagitamab. Disclosures Berg: Takeda Pharmaceuticals Inc: Current Employment.


2020 ◽  
Vol 22 (Supplement_2) ◽  
pp. ii105-ii106
Author(s):  
Michael Strong ◽  
Aqila Ahmed ◽  
Anda-Alexandra Calinescu ◽  
Xiaofeng Zhou ◽  
Tyler Robinson ◽  
...  

Abstract Roughly 400,000 people have bone metastases in the U.S. with the vast majority of these occurring in the spine. The etiology of bone metastasis still remains to be fully elucidated. This study explored the differences in immune landscape between long bone and spine that may contribute to higher rates of bone metastasis to the spine. Spines and femurs from male C57BL6/J mice (N=10) were processed for flow cytometry and immunophenotyping using Mass Cytometry by Time-Of-Flight (CyTOF). The cells were analyzed with CyTOF using a 33-surface protein marker mouse antibody panel. Spines (N=3) and femurs (N=2) from patients were analyzed with CyTOF using the Maxpar Complete Human T cell Immuno-Oncology Panel Set. There are global differences in the immune cell composition between the long bone and spine microenvironment. Flow cytometry revealed slight increases in the CD45+ and Cd11b+ cell populations in the bone marrow of murine spines compared to murine long bone, which are markers for myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs). Using CyTOF, significant differences in the immune cell landscape between long bone and spine were observed. In the murine long bone, an increase in monocytes/macrophages, myeloid progenitors, granulocytic MDSCs, granulocytes, and mast cells was observed compared to the spine. In the murine spine an elevation of CD8a+ DC cells, classical monocytes, MDSCs, pDCs, memory T helper cells, and NK T cells was seen. Evaluation of human long bone and spine revealed similar trends with a predominance of myeloid progenitor cells and monocytes in the human vertebra compared to the human long bone marrow. Significant differences in the immune microenvironment exist between the spine and long bone marrow in both murine and human samples. This is the first report of significant differences in immune cell populations between different skeletal locations. However, the functional significance of these differences has yet to be determined.


2022 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zihao Fan ◽  
Yuxian Li ◽  
Sisi Chen ◽  
Ling Xu ◽  
Yuan Tian ◽  
...  

Background and Aims: Acute liver failure (ALF) is a type of liver injury that is caused by multiple factors and leads to severe liver dysfunction; however, current treatments for ALF are insufficient. Magnesium isoglycyrrhizinate (MgIG), a novel glycyrrhizin extracted from the traditional Chinese medicine licorice, has a significant protective effect against concanavalin A (ConA)-induced liver injury, but its underlying therapeutic mechanism is unclear. Hence, this study aims to explore the potential therapeutic mechanism of MgIG against ConA-induced immune liver injury.Methods: ConA (20 mg/kg, i. v.) was administered for 12 h to construct an immune liver injury model, and the treatment group was given MgIG (30 mg/kg, i. p.) injection 1 h in advance. Lethality, liver injury, cytokine levels, and hepatocyte death were evaluated. The level of autophagy was evaluated by electron microscopy, RT-PCR and western blotting, and hepatocyte death was assessed in vitro by flow cytometry.Results: MgIG significantly increased the survival rate of mice and ameliorated severe liver injury mediated by ConA. The decrease in the number of autophagosomes, downregulation of LC3b expression and upregulation of p62 expression indicated that MgIG significantly inhibited ConA-induced autophagy in the liver. Reactivation of autophagy by rapamycin (RAPA) reversed the protective effect of MgIG against ConA-induced liver injury. Compared with MgIG treatment, activation of autophagy by RAPA also promoted the expression of liver inflammation markers (IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α, CXCL-1, CXCL-2, CXCL-10, etc.) and hepatocyte death. In vitro experiments also showed that MgIG reduced ConA-induced hepatocyte death but did not decrease hepatocyte apoptosis by inhibiting autophagy.Conclusion: MgIG significantly ameliorated ConA-induced immune liver injury in mice by inhibiting autophagy. This study provides theoretical support for the ability of MgIG to protect against liver injury in clinical practice.


Blood ◽  
1996 ◽  
Vol 87 (10) ◽  
pp. 4261-4275 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Ayala ◽  
CD Herdon ◽  
DL Lehman ◽  
CA Ayala ◽  
IH Chaudry

Apoptosis (Ao), is a process by which cells undergo a form of nonnecrotic cellular suicide. Although for most cells this is a constitutive process, it can be induced in immature and differentiating immune cell populations by stress mediators associated with inflammation. This inducible form of A(o) is referred to as programmed cell death. However, it is not clear whether hematopoietic cell populations such as the thymus and bone marrow are induced to undergo A(o) during polymicrobial sepsis. To assess this, thymocytes, bone marrow cells, or splenocytes (as a source of comparative nonhematopoietic cells) were harvested from C3H/HeN mice at 1, 4, or 24 hours after cecal ligation and puncture (CLP; to induce polymicrobial sepsis) or sham-CLP (Sham). The results showed that mixed bone marrow cells ex vivo, although not to the same extent as thymus, showed a marked increase in the percentage of cells in A(o), increased endonuclease activity, and a significant decrease in cell yield at 24 hours but not at 4 hours after CLP. Similar changes were not evident in splenocytes. Phenotypic, as well as morphologic assessment, indicated that most of the increase in apoptotic cells in the thymus was associated with the immature T cells (CD4+CD8+) and CD8-CD4- cells. In contrast, the increase in bone marrow cell A(o) was associated with only the B220+ cells, with no significant contribution from myeloid cells. Treatment of CLP mice in vivo with either RU-38486 or PEG-(rsTNF- R1)2 was unable to reverse the increased A(o) in the bone marrow of these animals. Taken together, these findings indicate that A(o) as a process induced by polymicrobial sepsis is not limited to the thymus, but can also be detected in the bone marrow. However, unlike thymic A(o), bone marrow is not affected directly/indirectly by glucocorticoids or tumor necrosis factor released during sepsis.


2012 ◽  
Vol 209 (6) ◽  
pp. 1153-1165 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew M. Meredith ◽  
Kang Liu ◽  
Guillaume Darrasse-Jeze ◽  
Alice O. Kamphorst ◽  
Heidi A. Schreiber ◽  
...  

Classical dendritic cells (cDCs), monocytes, and plasmacytoid DCs (pDCs) arise from a common bone marrow precursor (macrophage and DC progenitors [MDPs]) and express many of the same surface markers, including CD11c. We describe a previously uncharacterized zinc finger transcription factor, zDC (Zbtb46, Btbd4), which is specifically expressed by cDCs and committed cDC precursors but not by monocytes, pDCs, or other immune cell populations. We inserted diphtheria toxin (DT) receptor (DTR) cDNA into the 3′ UTR of the zDC locus to serve as an indicator of zDC expression and as a means to specifically deplete cDCs. Mice bearing this knockin express DTR in cDCs but not other immune cell populations, and DT injection into zDC-DTR bone marrow chimeras results in cDC depletion. In contrast to previously characterized CD11c-DTR mice, non-cDCs, including pDCs, monocytes, macrophages, and NK cells, were spared after DT injection in zDC-DTR mice. We compared immune responses to Toxoplasma gondii and MO4 melanoma in DT-treated zDC- and CD11c-DTR mice and found that immunity was only partially impaired in zDC-DTR mice. Our results indicate that CD11c-expressing non-cDCs make significant contributions to initiating immunity to parasites and tumors.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antoine M Snijders ◽  
Mi Zhou ◽  
Todd P Whitehead ◽  
Briana Fitch ◽  
Priyatama Pandey ◽  
...  

Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is the most common cancer in children. Thirdhand smoke (THS) is the residual tobacco contamination that remains after the smoke clears. We investigated the effects of THS exposure in utero and during early life in a transgenic Cdkn2a knockout mouse model that is vulnerable to the development of leukemia/lymphoma. Female mice, and their offspring, were exposed from the first day of pregnancy to weaning. Plasma cytokines, body weight and hematologic parameters were measured in the offspring. To investigate THS exposure effects on the development of leukemia/lymphoma, bone marrow was collected from control and THS-exposed mice and transplanted into bone-marrow-ablated recipient mice, which were followed for tumor development for one year. We found that in utero and early life THS exposure caused significant changes in plasma cytokine concentrations and in immune cell populations; changes appeared more pronounced in male mice. Spleen and bone marrow B-cell populations were significantly lower in THS-exposed mice. We furthermore observed that THS exposure increased the leukemia/lymphoma-free survival in bone marrow transplantation recipient mice, potentially caused by THS-induced B cell toxicity. A trend towards increased solid tumors in irradiated mice reconstituted with THS exposed bone marrow stimulates the hypothesis that the immunosuppressive effects of in utero and early-life THS exposure might contribute to carcinogenesis by lowering the host defense to other toxic exposures. Our study adds to expanding evidence that THS exposure alters the immune system and that in utero and early life developmental periods represent vulnerable windows of susceptibility for these effects.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document