| Literature DB >> 23369601 |
Camila Macedo1, Hēth Turquist, Diana Metes, Angus W Thomson.
Abstract
In efforts to minimize the chronic administration of immunosuppression (IS) drugs in transplantation and autoimmune disease, various cell-based tolerogenic therapies, including the use of regulatory or tolerogenic dendritic cells (tolDC) have been developed. These DC-based therapies aim to harness the inherent immunoregulatory potential of these professional antigen-presenting cells. In this short review, we describe both the demonstrated tolerogenic properties, and current limitations of rapamycin-conditioned DC (RAPA-DC). RAPA-DC are generated through inhibition of the integrative kinase mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) by the immunosuppressive macrolide rapamycin during propagation of monocyte-derived DC. Consistent with the characteristics of tolDC, murine RAPA-DC display resistance to phenotypic maturation induced by pro-inflammatory stimuli; exhibit the ability to migrate to secondary lymphoid tissue (important for 'cross-presentation' of antigen to T cells), and enrich for naturally-occurring CD4+ regulatory T cells. In rodent models, delivery of recipient-derived RAPA-DC pulsed with donor antigen prior to organ transplantation can prolong allogeneic heart-graft survival indefinitely, especially when combined with a short course of IS. These encouraging data support ongoing efforts to develop RAPA-DC for clinical testing. When compared to murine RAPA-DC however, human RAPA-DC have proven only partially resistant to maturation triggered by pro-inflammatory cytokines, and display heterogeneity in their impact on effector T-cell expansion and function. In total, the evidence suggests the need for more in-depth studies to better understand the mechanisms by which mTOR controls human DC function. These studies may facilitate the development of RAPA-DC therapy alone or together with agents that preserve/enhance their tolerogenic properties as clinical immunoregulatory vectors.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23369601 PMCID: PMC3560974 DOI: 10.1186/2047-1440-1-16
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transplant Res ISSN: 2047-1440
Mouse human immature RAPA-DC
| | | |
| MHC Class II | ↓ | - |
| CD86/ CD40 | ↓↓ | ↓ |
| B7-H1 | ↓ | ↓ |
| | | |
| CCR7 | - | ↑ |
| | | |
| enrichment/induction/expansion | ↑ | ↑ |
| | | |
| Endocytosis | ↓↓ | ND |
| MLR | ↓↓ | ↓ |
| IL-12p70 | ↓ | - |
| IL-10 | ↓ | - |
ND, not done; -, not changed.
Prolongation of allograft survival by RAPA-DC
| Mouse | Heart | Bone marrow (BM) recipient-derived | None | 10 |
| | | | FK506 | 10 |
| | | | RAPA | 23 |
| Rat | Limb | BM recipient-derived | ALS, CSA | 18 |
| Rat | Vascularized skin | BM recipient-derived | ALS, CSA | 7 |
| Mouse | Hematopoietic cells | Autologous BM-derived (unpulsed) | None | 24 |
| Mouse | Pancreatic islets | BM donor-derived | None | 25 |
ALS, anti-lymphocyte serum; CSA, cyclosporine A; IS, immunosuppression.
Generation of immature RAPA-DC
| Monocyte isolation | CD14 microbeads (AutoMACS® or CliniMACS®) | Elutriation or CD14 microbeads (CliniMACS®) |
| Culture conditions | 10% fetal calf serum | 10% human serum |
| (7 days) | AIM-V media | AIM-V media (c-GMP grade) |
| | 1000 U/mL rhIL-4 | 1000 U/mL rhIL-4 (c-GMP grade) |
| | 1000 U/mL GM-CSF | 1000 U/mL GM-CSF (c-GMP grade) |
| | 10 ng/mL Rapamycin | 10 ng/mL Rapamycin (c-GMP grade) |
| Cell culture plates | Cell culture plates or Aastrom Replicell system |