scholarly journals Tethering Innate Surface Receptors on Dendritic Cells: A New Avenue for Immune Tolerance Induction?

2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (15) ◽  
pp. 5259
Author(s):  
Lucille Lamendour ◽  
Nora Deluce-Kakwata-Nkor ◽  
Caroline Mouline ◽  
Valérie Gouilleux-Gruart ◽  
Florence Velge-Roussel

Dendritic cells (DCs) play a key role in immunity and are highly potent at presenting antigens and orienting the immune response. Depending on the environmental signals, DCs could turn the immune response toward immunity or immune tolerance. Several subsets of DCs have been described, with each expressing various surface receptors and all participating in DC-associated immune functions according to their specific skills. DC subsets could also contribute to the vicious circle of inflammation in immune diseases and establishment of immune tolerance in cancer. They appear to be appropriate targets in the control of inflammatory diseases or regulation of autoimmune responses. For all these reasons, in situ DC targeting with therapeutic antibodies seems to be a suitable way of modulating the entire immune system. At present, the field of antibody-based therapies has mainly been developed in oncology, but it is undergoing remarkable expansion thanks to a wide variety of antibody formats and their related functions. Moreover, current knowledge of DC biology may open new avenues for targeting and modulating the different DC subsets. Based on an update of pathogen recognition receptor expression profiles in human DC subsets, this review evaluates the possibility of inducing tolerant DCs using antibody-based therapeutic agents.

2016 ◽  
Vol 117 (2) ◽  
pp. 66-83 ◽  
Author(s):  
Priya S. Kishnani ◽  
Patricia I. Dickson ◽  
Laurie Muldowney ◽  
Jessica J. Lee ◽  
Amy Rosenberg ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joey Schyns ◽  
Fabrice Bureau ◽  
Thomas Marichal

For a long time, investigations about the lung myeloid compartment have been mainly limited to the macrophages located within the airways, that is, the well-known alveolar macrophages specialized in recycling of surfactant molecules and removal of debris. However, a growing number of reports have highlighted the complexity of the lung myeloid compartment, which also encompass different subsets of dendritic cells, tissue monocytes, and nonalveolar macrophages, called interstitial macrophages (IM). Recent evidence supports that, in mice, IM perform important immune functions, including the maintenance of lung homeostasis and prevention of immune-mediated allergic airway inflammation. In this article, we describe lung IM from a historical perspective and we review current knowledge on their characteristics, ontogeny, and functions, mostly in rodents. Finally, we emphasize some important future challenges for the field.


2016 ◽  
Vol 2016 ◽  
pp. 1-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Juliana Maria Motta ◽  
Vivian Mary Rumjanek

Dendritic cells are antigen-presenting cells capable of either activating the immune response or inducing and maintaining immune tolerance. They do this by integrating stimuli from the environment and changing their functional status as a result of plasticity. The modifications suffered by these cells have consequences in the way the organism may respond. In the present work two opposing situations known to affect dendritic cells are analyzed: tumor growth, leading to a microenvironment that favors the induction of a tolerogenic profile, and organ transplantation, which leads to a proinflammatory profile. Lessons learned from these situations may help to understand the mechanisms of modulation resulting not only from the above circumstances, but also from other pathologies.


2009 ◽  
Vol 68 (3) ◽  
pp. 300-304 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Tournadre ◽  
P Miossec

This review focuses on the contribution of the local production of chemokines and cytokines and of dendritic cells (DC) to the pathogenesis of inflammatory myopathies. DC are the most efficient professional antigen-presenting cells (APC), which are critical for the development of innate and adaptive immune responses. Chemokines are important mediators of the immune response as they regulate leucocyte recruitment to tissue and play a key role in inflammatory diseases by acting on T-cell and DC migration. Recent advances indicate that the muscle cell itself could participate in the inflammatory process. Furthermore, the T-helper (Th) type 1 and Th17 proinflammatory cytokines, present in myositis samples, are associated with the migration, differentiation and maturation of inflammatory cells and allow a network of interactions between all the components of the immune response. An understanding of such interactions is essential because it can lead to therapeutic applications.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
Author(s):  
Latifa Koussih ◽  
Samira Atoui ◽  
Omar Tliba ◽  
Abdelilah S. Gounni

Pentraxins are soluble pattern recognition receptors that play a major role in regulating innate immune responses. Through their interaction with complement components, Fcγ receptors, and different microbial moieties, Pentraxins cause an amplification of the inflammatory response. Pentraxin-3 is of particular interest since it was identified as a biomarker for several immune-pathological diseases. In allergic asthma, pentraxin-3 is produced by immune and structural cells and is up-regulated by pro-asthmatic cytokines such as TNFα and IL-1β. Strikingly, some recent experimental evidence demonstrated a protective role of pentraxin-3 in chronic airway inflammatory diseases such as allergic asthma. Indeed, reduced pentraxin-3 levels have been associated with neutrophilic inflammation, Th17 immune response, insensitivity to standard therapeutics and a severe form of the disease. In this review, we will summarize the current knowledge of the role of pentraxin-3 in innate immune response and discuss the protective role of pentraxin-3 in allergic asthma.


Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 2137-2137
Author(s):  
Ai-Hong Allan Zhang ◽  
Jonathan Skupsky ◽  
David W. Scott

Abstract Abstract 2137 Poster Board II-114 B-cell depletion using anti-human CD20 monoclonal antibodies has been reported to be effective in autoimmunity and in temporarily eliminating inhibitory antibodies in hemophilia A patients. In the current study, we examined the effect of anti-murine CD20 (αCD20) depletion on the immune response to factor VIII (FVIII) and its influence on an immune tolerance induction (ITI) protocol. Previous studies have shown that IgG subclasses of anti-murine CD20 monoclonal antibody (αCD20) have differential effects on B-cell depletion in the mouse. Thus, IgG1 αCD20 selectively depletes follicular B cells, while sparing marginal zone (MZ) B cells. Combined with evidence that MZ B cells may be tolerogenic antigen-presenting cells, we tested the hypothesis that follicular B-cell depletion using αCD20 IgG1 might favor tolerance induction to human FVIII. Hemophilic (FVIII knockout) mice were primed with physiological doses of recombinant human FVIII by weekly IV injection, followed by αCD20 IgG1 or control IgG1 treatment. Ten days after the αCD20 treatment, the mice were treated with daily high dose (2μg) FVIII IV injections to model ITI in hemophilia A patients. After 4 weekly injections, 70% of the mice developed titers of anti-FVIII IgG as high as 1:12,800. Unlike whole B-cell depletion, subsequent follicular B-cell depletion did not significantly decrease the anti-FVIII IgG titer, compared with mice receiving control IgG1. Repeated high dose FVIII injections to mimic ITI significantly increased the anti-FVIII IgG titer in both groups. However, in the mice that received αCD20 IgG1 treatment, the increase of anti-FVIII IgG levels were significantly lower than that in control IgG1 treated mice. In conclusion, we found that follicular B-cell depletion by αCD20 IgG1 antibody in hemophilia A mice did not switch the immune response to tolerance, but it diminished the immunogenicity of human FVIII in vivo in hemophilic mice. (Supported by NIH R01 HL061883) Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 2209-2209
Author(s):  
Debalina Sarkar ◽  
Gongxian Liao ◽  
Cox Terhorst ◽  
Roland W Herzog

Abstract Abstract 2209 In vivo induction and expansion of Treg is a powerful tool to limit unwanted immune responses and promote tolerance. For example, we have been successful inducing tolerance to factors VIII and FIX in hemophilic mice when the coagulation factor antigen was administered with the mTOR inhibitor rapamycin (J Thromb Haemost 7:1523 and 9:1524, Front Microbiol 2:244). Rapamycin, a macrocyclic triene antibiotic, is an immunosuppressant used to avoid transplant rejection. It suppresses the mTOR1 (and upon prolonged exposure also mTOR2) signaling pathway. Importantly, while mTOR blockage results in deletion of Teff, Treg can be induced and expanded because they are able to utilize alternative (STAT) signaling pathways. Others have shown that existing Treg can be expanded in vivo upon administration of Fms-like tyrosine kinase ligand-3 (Flt3L), a cytokine that drives generation of dendritic cells (DC) from hematopoietic progenitor cells and DC proliferation. This link between DC homeostasis and Treg is evident from the low Treg numbers found in Flt3L-deficient mice and from prevention of graft vs host disease upon treatment with Flt3L. This raises the question of whether a combined approach of rapamycin administration and Flt3L-induced DC generation would result in an optimal immune tolerance protocol. Interestingly, it has been reported that rapamycin blocks Flt3L-induced differentiation of progenitor cells into DC, indicating that Flt3L signaling in DC occurs through the mTOR pathway. However, we find in mice transgenic for an ovalbumin-specific CD4+ T cell receptor (but deficient in recombinase activating gene, rag-2) that ova peptide antigen administration results in substantially enhanced deletion of Teff and in induction of CD4+CD25+FoxP3+CD62L+GITR+ Treg when combined with these two drugs. This was accomplished by repeated administration (twice per week) of a cocktail of the 3 components. Antigen plus either drug causes Teff deletion, while rapamycin is required for Treg induction (which is further enhanced by Flt3L). Antigen, rapamycin, and Flt3L all impact changes in the numbers and frequencies of DC subsets in the spleen during the regimen. The combination all 3 components most potently directs a substantial (3–5 fold, P<0.001) increase in CD11cloPDCA+ plasmacytoid DC numbers (but not of conventional CD11chiPDCA− DCs). While pDCs are known to provide innate anti-viral responses, they also play an important role in immune tolerance. Consequently, when pDC were partially depleted with anti-PDCA, Treg induction was significantly impaired. Furthermore, the protocol caused an increase in the frequency of Indoleamine-pyrrole 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO)-expressing pDCs (which is known to activate resting Treg for suppressor activity). Finally, FLt3L-induced expansion of Treg (but not of DCs) is less effective in GITR-L −/− mice. Combined, these data demonstrate that i) Flt3L and rapamycin can be used synergistically for induction of T cell tolerance, ii) pDCs can be expanded within a rapamycin regimen, iii) and Fl3tL-induced pDC expansion facilitates Treg induction, which is partially dependent on GITR-L (a co-stimulatory molecule primarily expressed by pDCs that promotes cross talk to Treg by engagement of the GITR receptor). In order to establish relevance of this protocol for treatment of disease, we intravenously injected a F.VIII protein/rapamycin/Flt3L cocktail into hemophilia A mice (C57BL6/129 F8e16 −/−) twice per week for 1 month. Subsequently, mice received 1 month of factor replacement therapy (1 IU human FVIII, IV, once per week). Control mice without prior immune modulatory regiment or that received non-specific immune suppression (rapamycin and Flt3L only) formed high-titer inhibitors against FVIII (70–80 BU), which was significantly suppressed to ∼10 BU (P<0.001, n=5 per group). Importantly, inhibitor titers were only mildly reduced (to ∼40 BU) when Flt3L was omitted from the tolerogenic cocktail, thereby confirming the synergistic effect of flt3L and rapamycin in tolerance induction. This approach combines expansion of regulatory antigen presenting and T cells and should be of broad relevance for cell and organ transplantation as well as for treatment of inherited protein deficiencies and of autoimmune diseases. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2014 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. 223-229
Author(s):  
Bojana Simovic Markovic ◽  
Ljubica Vucicevic ◽  
Sanja Bojic ◽  
Vladislav Volarevic

ABSTRACT Autophagy is a catabolic mechanism in the cell that involves the degradation of unnecessary or dysfunctional cellular components by the lysosomal machinery. Recent studies have indicated that autophagy is a source of autoantigens, thus highlighting its potential role in the pathogenesis of autoimmunity. There are at least three different forms of autophagy: macroautophagy, microautophagy and chaperone-mediated autophagy (CMA). The physiological role of autophagy is to maintain cellular homeostasis by removing long-lived, damaged proteins and dysfunctional organelles and by providing energy. Aberrant autophagy may contribute to chronic inflammatory diseases and autoimmune diseases. An understanding of the complex relationships between autophagy and autophagy-related genes in each autoimmune disease creates the possibility of developing more specific and effective therapeutic strategies. Given the importance of autophagy in immune functions, this review article summarises current knowledge about the role of autophagy in the pathogenesis of autoimmune diseases.


2011 ◽  
Vol 2011 ◽  
pp. 1-14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nunzia Sanarico ◽  
Alessia Colone ◽  
Manuela Grassi ◽  
Viviana Speranza ◽  
Daniela Giovannini ◽  
...  

In order to analyze dendritic cells (DCs) activation following infection with different mycobacterial strains, we studied the expression profiles of 165 genes of human monocyte-derived DCs infected with H37Rv, a virulentMycobacterium tuberculosis(MTB) laboratory strain, CMT97, a clinical MTB isolate,Mycobacterium bovisbacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG), Aventis Pasteur, and BCG Japan, both employed as vaccine against tuberculosis. The analysis of the gene expression reveals that, despite a set of genes similarly modulated, DCs response resulted strain dependent. In particular, H37Rv significantly upregulated EBI3 expression compared with BCG Japan, while it was the only strain that failed to release a significant IL-10 amount. Of note, BCG Japan showed a marked increase in CCR7 and TNF-αexpression regarding both MTB strains and it resulted the only strain failing in exponential intracellular growth. Our results suggest that DCs display the ability to elicit a tailored strain-specific immune response.


Cells ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 201
Author(s):  
Cheng Xiang Foo ◽  
Stacey Bartlett ◽  
Katharina Ronacher

Oxidized cholesterols, the so-called oxysterols, are widely known to regulate cholesterol homeostasis. However, more recently oxysterols have emerged as important lipid mediators in the response to both bacterial and viral infections. This review summarizes our current knowledge of selected oxysterols and their receptors in the control of intracellular bacterial growth as well as viral entry into the host cell and viral replication. Lastly, we briefly discuss the potential of oxysterols and their receptors as drug targets for infectious and inflammatory diseases.


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