In order to establish long-lasting infections in their mammalian host, filarial nematodes have developed sophisticated strategies to dampen their host's immune response. Proteins that are actively secreted by the parasites have been shown to induce the expansion of regulatory T cells and to directly interfere with effector T cell function. Here, we analyze the suppressive capacity of Onchocercavolvulus-derived excreted/secreted proteins. Addition of two recombinant O. volvulus proteins, abundant larval transcript-2 (OvALT-2) and novel larval transcript-1 (OvNLT-1) to cell cultures of T cell receptor transgenic CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells suppressed antigen-specific stimulation in vitro. Ovalbumin-specific CD4(+) DO11.10 and OT-II T cells that had been stimulated with their cognate antigen in the presence of OvALT-2 or OvNLT-1 displayed reduced DNA synthesis quantified by (3)H-thymidine incorporation and reduced cell division quantified by CFSE dilution. Furthermore, the IL-2 and IFN-γ response of ovalbumin-specific CD8(+) OT-I T cells was suppressed by OvALT-2 and OvNLT-1. In contrast, another recombinant O. volvulus protein, microfilariae surface-associated antigen (Ov103), did not modulate T cell activation, thus serving as internal control for non-ESP-mediated artifacts. Suppressive capacity of the identified ESP was associated with induction of apoptosis in T cells demonstrated by increased exposure of phosphatidylserine on the plasma membrane. Of note, the digestion of recombinant proteins with proteinase K did not abolish the suppression of antigen-specific proliferation although the suppressive capacity of the identified excreted/secreted products was not mediated by low molecular weight contaminants in the undigested preparations. In summary, we identified two suppressive excreted/secreted products from O. volvulus, which interfere with the function of antigen-specific T cells in vitro.
In order to establish long-lasting infections in their mammalian host, filarial nematodes have developed sophisticated strategies to dampen their host's immune response. Proteins that are actively secreted by the parasites have been shown to induce the expansion of regulatory T cells and to directly interfere with effector T cell function. Here, we analyze the suppressive capacity of Onchocercavolvulus-derived excreted/secreted proteins. Addition of two recombinant O. volvulus proteins, abundant larval transcript-2 (OvALT-2) and novel larval transcript-1 (OvNLT-1) to cell cultures of T cell receptor transgenicCD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells suppressed antigen-specific stimulation in vitro. Ovalbumin-specific CD4(+) DO11.10 and OT-II T cells that had been stimulated with their cognate antigen in the presence of OvALT-2 or OvNLT-1 displayed reduced DNA synthesis quantified by (3)H-thymidine incorporation and reduced cell division quantified by CFSE dilution. Furthermore, the IL-2 and IFN-γ response of ovalbumin-specific CD8(+) OT-I T cells was suppressed by OvALT-2 and OvNLT-1. In contrast, another recombinant O. volvulus protein, microfilariae surface-associated antigen (Ov103), did not modulate T cell activation, thus serving as internal control for non-ESP-mediated artifacts. Suppressive capacity of the identified ESP was associated with induction of apoptosis in T cells demonstrated by increased exposure of phosphatidylserine on the plasma membrane. Of note, the digestion of recombinant proteins with proteinase K did not abolish the suppression of antigen-specific proliferation although the suppressive capacity of the identified excreted/secreted products was not mediated by low molecular weight contaminants in the undigested preparations. In summary, we identified two suppressive excreted/secreted products from O. volvulus, which interfere with the function of antigen-specific T cells in vitro.
It is estimated that worldwide more than 1.5 billion people are at risk of being
infected with filarial nematodes.
, and
are the causative agents of
chronic diseases such as lymphatic filariasis and river blindness [1] and cause a major public health problem.
These long-lived parasites have evolved sophisticated strategies to evade the immune
response of their host and to survive in the host for more than a decade [2].The life cycle of filarial worms in humans and in different animal models is
comparable, starting in an arthropod as intermediate host. First stage larvae so
called microfilariae (MF) are taken up during a blood meal from a mosquito, blackfly
or blood-sucking mite. Within the vector the MF undergo two molts und develop into
infective third stage larvae (L3). L3 are transmitted during a second blood meal to
their final host. Here, L3 migrate depending on the species to different sides of
the body.
adults reside in nodules in
the subcutaneous tissue while
and adults dwell
in lymphatic vessels. Different developmental stages have adapted to different
niches in the body but utilize similar strategies to promote their survival in their
living environment. Chronic helminth infections induce a regulatory network, which
is composed of regulatory T cells, alternatively activated macrophages, and
anti-inflammatory cytokines [3]. These
suppressive cell types might compromise the immune response to the parasite and to
unrelated antigens such as vaccines [4].
Impaired proliferation of peripheral T cells to filarial-specific antigens, a
phenomenon called lymphocyte hypoproliferation, was already shown in filarial
infected humans [5]. Beyond that, pre-existing
filarial infection interferes with cellular and humoral immune response to
vaccinations such as tetanus toxoid vaccination [6-8].Using the murine model of humanfilarial infection,
,
we have shown recently that concurrent nematode infection suppressed the response to
model antigen immunizations and to an experimental vaccination against
infection in mice [9,10]. Thereby,
infection interfered with
both, vaccine-induced activation of CD4+ T helper cells and cytotoxic
CD8+ T cells in vivo. In general, this
helminth-induced immunosuppression depends most likely on the living parasite as
drug treatment restored the T cell response [11]. Interaction of helminths with the immune system of their host seems
to be mediated by soluble molecules, namely excretory/secretory products (ESP),
which are released by live parasites. ESP are biologically active proteins that are
either actively exported through secretory pathways or simply leak from the parasite
surface [12]. To dissect the composition of
ESP, supernatants were collected from in vitro cultured worms and
subsequently analyzed by mass spectrometry. Interestingly, a great similarity
concerning the protein sequences have been shown for different filarial species such
as and
[13]. Larval stage-specific expression of
different proteins was shown for
without analyzing the function of these proteins in detail [14,15].The aim of our study was to analyze selected proteins secreted by
in order to identify proteins with immunomodulatory capacity. In this context, ESP
derived from the parasitic nematode
have
been shown to induce Foxp3+ regulatory T cells in vitro
and in vivo [16] and
recombinant cystatin derived from Acantocheilonema vitae suppressed
effector T cell function in vitro [17] and in vivo [18,19]. Recombinant
proteins were generated and tested in an in vitro proliferation
assay employing T cell receptor (TCR) transgenic T cells. We identified two ESP from
that suppressed proliferation of ovalbumin-specific T cells.
OvALT-2 and OvNLT-1 diminished proliferation and
cytokine secretion of model antigen-specific T cells in vitro while
another recombinant ESP, Ov103, displayed no suppressive capacity.
We ruled out contaminating endotoxin or toxic low molecular contaminants as
suppressive elements in the recombinant ESP preparations. Furthermore, suppressed
proliferation was associated with increased induction of cell death but was
resistant to proteinase K treatment. Taken together, we identified two new
-derived proteins that suppress
the function of model antigen-specific T cells in vitro.
Materials and Methods
Mice
Animal experimentation was conducted at the animal facility of the Bernhard Nocht
Institute for Tropical Medicine in agreement with the German animal protection
law under the supervision of a veterinarian. The experimental protocols have
been reviewed and accepted by the responsible federal health Authorities of the
State of Hamburg, Germany, the "Behörde für Gesundheit und Verbraucherschutz"
permission number 98/11. Mice were sacrificed by cervical dislocation under
CO2narcosis. BALB/c mice were purchased from Charles River.
OT-II, OT-I and DO11.10 mice were bred in the animal facility of the Bernhard
Nocht Institute. Female and male mice were 8-12 weeks of age.
Reagents and antibodies
Anti-CD4-allophycocyanin (clone RM4-5) and Annexin V PE Apoptosis Detection Kit
were purchased from eBioscience; CFSE was obtained from Invitrogen (Carlsbad,
CA, USA). OVA323-339 was obtained from JPT Peptide Technologies GmbH
(Berlin, Germany) and OVA257-264 was purchased from MWG Biotech
(Ebersberg, Germany).
Preparation of cDNA from adult
Onchocercomas were derived from studies conducted in Liberia and Ghana [20,21]. Whole worm RNA was prepared from
using TRIzol reagent
(Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA, USA) according to the supplier’s protocol. First
strand cDNA synthesis was then performed using 2 µg of RNA as template and oligo
(dT)18 primers, following the manufacturer’s protocol (Thermo
Scientific). Coding sequences were then amplified by PCR using
Phusion® High-Fidelity DNA Polymerase (New England Biolabs)
following the manufacturer’s instructions.
Cloning, expression and purification of
Primers used for PCR are listed in Table S1. Following amplification, the PCR
products and the expression vector pJC40 [22] were digested using appropriate FastDigest® restriction enzymes
(Thermo Scientific) and ligated using T4 DNA ligase (Invitrogen). 5 µl of each
ligation were transformed into XL10-gold ultra competent cells according to the
supplier’s protocol (Stratagene). Positive clones were identified by test
digestion and sequencing. After transformation of the respective expression
plasmids into Rossetta gami DE3 cells
(OvNLT-1) or BL21DE3
Star cells (OvALT-2, Ov103,
Ov7) (Stratagene), expression of the tagged proteins was
initiated by the addition of iso-propyl-beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG)
(0.05 mM IPTG for OvNLT-1, 0.5 mM IPTG for
OvALT-2 and 1 mM IPTG for Ov7) once the
cultures had reached A600 = 0.5 (OvALT-2,
Ov7) or A600 = 0.2(OvNLT-1). Cells were left to
grow for additional 3 h (Ov7) or overnight
(OvNLT-1, OvALT-2) at 37°C.
Expression of Ov103 was carried out by autoinduction [23]. Cells were harvested by centrifugation
and the resulting bacterial pellets were resuspended in lysis buffer (50 mM
Tris, 500 mM NaCl, 10% glycerol, 0.1% (v/v) Triton X-100, 10 mM imidazole, 1 mM
phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride pH 8.0) for purification of Ov103
and Ov7. For purification of OvNLT-1 and
OvALT-2 dithiothreitol (5 mM) was added to the lysis
buffer. Pellets were sonicated using a digital sonifier set to 30 watts and 30%
amplitude (Branson). The resulting lysate was centrifuged at 10,000 x g for 30
minutes and the supernatant was purified by affinity column chromatography with
profinityTM IMACNi2+-nitrilotriacetic acid resin
(Bio-Rad Laboratories, Germany). Columns were washed with 25 column volumes of
washing buffer (lysis buffer containing 20 mM imidazole and 5 mM DTT). The
recombinant proteins were eluted with lysis buffer containing 300 mM imidazole
(OvNLT-1, OvALT-2, Ov7)
or 250 mM imidazole (Ov103) and dialysed in 20 mM Tris buffer,
pH 7.5, containing 150 mM NaCl, 0.2 mM DTT, prepared with LPS free water (Aqua
B. Braun, Melsungen AG, Germany). The purity of the dialysed proteins was
controlled by resolution on 12.5% SDS PAGE and Coomassie blue staining. Proteins
were concentrated using Millipore 10,000 MWCO (Amicon Ultra) (6000–8000 MWCO for
OvALT-2) and the concentration was determined by the method
of Bradford [24]. 60 µg/mL of polymyxin B
was added to all stages of purification and the purified proteins and
contamination with LPS was quantified using LAL Chromogenic Kit (
Amebocyte Lysate; QCL-1000, Lonza, Walkersville, MD, USA). For proteinase K
digestion, 0.05 µg proteinase K per µg recombinant protein were added at the
beginning and again after 30 min incubation at 56°C. The digestion was stopped
after 60 min by incubation at 75°C for 20 min and 95°C for 20 min. To generate a
3 kDa filtrate the recombinant proteins were centrifuged at 4000 x g using
Amicon Ultra-4 Centrifugal Filter Units (3 kDa). The resulting filtrate was
checked for remaining protein via SDS-PAGE and Coomassie blue-staining.
In vitro stimulation of lymphocytes and analysis of OVA-specific T
cell proliferation
Splenocytes (2 x 105 / well) were cultivated in 96 well round bottom
plates for 72 h at 37°C and 5% CO2 in RPMI 1640 medium supplemented
with 10% fetal calf serum, L-glutamine (2 mg/mL), HEPES (20 mM) and gentamycin
(50 µg/mL). For stimulation, cells were either incubated with medium alone or
with to 10 ng/mL OVA323-339 or OVA257-264 peptide alone or
in the presence of ESP (2.5–10 µg/mL), digested ESP or 3 kDa filtrate in
triplicates. Apoptosis was measured 6 h after in vitro
stimulation of spleen cells in the presence of ESP and the cognate antigen.
Concentration of IL-2 and IFN-γ in the supernatant of in
vitro stimulated OT-I spleen cells was quantified after 72 h
culture employing DuoSet ELISA development system kits (R&D Systems,
Wiesbaden, Germany) according to the manufacturer´s instructions. Proliferation
after 72 h culture of DO11.10 or OT-II spleen cells was either measured by
uptake of 3H-thymidine for additional 18 h culture or as
carboxyfluorescein diacetate succinimidylester (CFSE) dilution as described
before [9]. As CFSE dilution is not as
sensitive as 3H-thymidine incorporation we increased the
concentration of OVA323-339 peptide 5-fold in order to measure CFSE
dilution in vitro (data not shown). For CFSE labeling 5 x
107 spleen cells were resuspended in 10 mL sterile PBS. After
addition of 200 µL 50 µM (for in vitro proliferation) or 500 µM
(for in vivo proliferation) CFSE cells were incubated for 10
min at 37°C. Labeling reaction was stopped by addition of 40 mL 3% FCS in PBS
and cells were washed thrice. For in vitro proliferation
CFSE-labeled cells were incubated as described in the previous section. For
in vivo proliferation CFSE labeled transgenic OT-II spleen
cells (1 x 107) were injected intravenously into C57BL/6 mice as
recipients. The day following transfer mice received 50 µg OVA332-339
i.p. in PBS. Half of the mice received an additional injection of 20 µg
Ov7 i.p. at the day of the adoptive transfer and one day
later. Mice were sacrificed 48 h later, spleen cells isolated and stained with
anti-CD4 antibody. Number of proliferation cycles was calculated by CFSE
dilution.
Flow cytometry
Surface staining of spleen cells was performed using anti-CD4 allophycocyanin
antibody as described previously [25].
Cell death was analyzed by 7-AAD incorporation and Annexin V phycoerythrin
staining according to the manufacturer´s instructions. Samples were analyzed on
a FACS Calibur flow cytometer (Becton Dickinson, Mountain View, CA, USA).
Statistical analysis
Statistical analysis was performed with GraphPad Prism Software (San Diego, USA)
using 2-way ANOVA with Bonferroni post-test or students t test. A p-value of
< 0.05 was considered to be statistically significant.
Results
Suppression of antigen-specific T cell activation by
To analyze the immunomodulatory capacity of
-derived ESP we generated
a set of different recombinant proteins in and
purified the proteins via their N-terminal histidine tag. In order to control
purity of the protein suspensions SDS-PAGE was performed (Figure 1A).
Figure 1
Nematode-derived ESP suppress OVA-specific T cell function.
A) Coomassie blue-staining of recombinant proteins after purification and
separation by SDS-PAGE. B) Spleen cells from TCR transgenic DO11.10 (B,
C), OT-II (D) or OT-I (E, F) mice were stimulated with 10 ng/mL
OVA323-339 (B-D) or OVA257-264 (E, F) peptide
in the presence of ESP or LPS in increasing concentrations as indicated
on the x-axis. OVA-specific proliferation of DO11.10 (B, C) and OT-II
(D) T cells was measured after 72 h as 3H-thymidine
incorporation. IL-2 (E) and IFN-γ (F) secretion by OT-I T cells was
analyzed by ELISA. Error bars show SD of triplicates. Data shown are
representative for five (B, C) or two (D, E, F) independent experiments.
Asterisks indicate significant differences in the mean of
Ov103 or LPS to Ov7 or
OvALT-2 or OvNLT-1 (*** p <
0.001).
Nematode-derived ESP suppress OVA-specific T cell function.
A) Coomassie blue-staining of recombinant proteins after purification and
separation by SDS-PAGE. B) Spleen cells from TCRtransgenic DO11.10 (B,
C), OT-II (D) or OT-I (E, F) mice were stimulated with 10 ng/mL
OVA323-339 (B-D) or OVA257-264 (E, F) peptide
in the presence of ESP or LPS in increasing concentrations as indicated
on the x-axis. OVA-specific proliferation of DO11.10 (B, C) and OT-II
(D) T cells was measured after 72 h as 3H-thymidine
incorporation. IL-2 (E) and IFN-γ (F) secretion by OT-I T cells was
analyzed by ELISA. Error bars show SD of triplicates. Data shown are
representative for five (B, C) or two (D, E, F) independent experiments.
Asterisks indicate significant differences in the mean of
Ov103 or LPS to Ov7 or
OvALT-2 or OvNLT-1 (*** p <
0.001).Suppressive capacity of the recombinant
-derived ESP was analyzed
in an in vitro proliferation assay using TCRtransgenic mice.
In DO11.10 mice all T cells are specific for the OVA323-339 peptide
associated with major histocompatibilty complex II (MHC-II) I-Ad
[26]. To verify an impact of
OvESP on antigen-specific T cell activation DO11.10 spleen
cells were stimulated with OVA323-339 in the presence of increasing
concentrations of ESP. Proliferation was quantified as DNA synthesis, i.e.
3H-incorporation and was suppressed by co-incubation with the
previously described Ov7 [17] (Figure 1B).
In addition OvALT-2 and OvNLT-1 suppressed
proliferation while Ov103 did not modulate OVA-specific
proliferation of DO11.10 T cells (Figure 1C). To demonstrate suppression of T cells carrying a
different transgenicTCR, we analyzed antigen-specific proliferation of
splenocytes derived from OT-II mice. These mice were generated on the C57BL/6
background and are transgenic for a MHC class II (I-Ab) restricted
OVA323–339-specific TCR [26]. Regardless of the genetic background of the T cells,
OvALT-2 and OvNLT-1 but not
Ov103 suppressed DNA synthesis of OVA-stimulated spleen
cells in a dose-dependent manner (Figure 1D).As Ov proteins were expressed in , ESP
preparations might be contaminated with low amounts of bacterial
pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMP) such as lipopolysaccharide (LPS).
Although suppressive and non-suppressive proteins were prepared in parallel we
formally wanted to rule out side effects due to endotoxin contamination.
Endotoxin activity as measured by
amebocyte lysate assay was
maximally 2.4 EU per µg protein and was comparable in suppressive and
non-suppressive protein preparations. We added LPS in increasing concentrations
to spleen cell cultures derived from DO11.10 mice and measured OVA-specific T
cell proliferation. LPS in the range of 0.1 ng/mL to 100 ng/mL corresponding to
1 EU/mL to 1000 EU/mL did not suppress proliferation of T cells while increasing
concentrations of Ov7 abolished T cell proliferation in
vitro (Figure
1B).In addition to the interference of nematode-derived proteins with proliferation
of TCRtransgenicCD4+ T cells we analyzed the impact on cytokine
production by cytotoxic CD8+ T cells. For this purpose, T cells from
TCRtransgenic OT-I mice that are specific for OVA257-264-peptide in
association with MHC class I (H-2Kb) were used [27]. Antigen-specific activation of OT-I spleen cells was
measured as IL-2 and IFN-γ cytokine secretion. Addition of both,
OvALT-2 and OvNLT-1, decreased secretion
of IL-2 and IFN-γ compared to addition of Ov103 as negative
control protein (Figure
1E,F). Taken together, we identified OvALT-2 and
OvNLT-1 as ESP that suppress proliferation and cytokine
secretion by OVA-specific CD4+ T cells and CD8+ T cells
derived from TCRtransgenic mice.To directly measure proliferation in addition to DNA synthesis, we labeled OT-II
cells with the fluorescent dye CFSE that is diluted upon cell division. After
stimulation in the presence of the tested ESP, we gated on CD4+ OT-II
T cells and visualized dividing cells by their decreasing CFSE content (Figure
2AB). Thereby we calculated the proportion of dividing cells upon
antigen-specific stimulation in the presence of Ov7,
OvALT-2 and Ov103 as negative control
protein (Figure 2C).
OvALT-2 and Ov7 suppressed the
antigen-driven division of OVA-specific OT-II T cells whereas
Ov103 again did not affect T cell function.
Figure 2
OvALT-2 suppresses OVA-specific OT-II T cell
proliferation in
vitro.
Spleen cells were isolated from OT-II mice and labeled with CFSE. Cells
were stimulated with 50 ng/mL OVA323-339 peptide in the
presence of nematode-derived proteins Ov103,
OvALT-2 or Ov7 in increasing
concentrations as indicated on the x-axis. After 72 h cells were stained
with anti-CD4 mAb and proliferation of CD4+CFSE+ T
cells was analyzed by flow cytometry as percentage of dividing T cells
(marker M1). Shown is a representative dot blot of OT-II spleen cells
after incubation with 7.5 µg/mL Ov103 (A) or
OvALT-2 (B) in the presence of OVA-peptide. C)
Graph shows percentage of dividing T cells in the presence of indicated
concentration of ESP. Data are presented as the mean of combined results
derived from two independent experiments, error bars show SEM. Asterisks
indicate significant differences in the mean of Ov103
to Ov7 or OvALT-2, respectively (** p
< 0.01; *** p < 0.001).
OvALT-2 suppresses OVA-specific OT-II T cell
proliferation in
vitro.
Spleen cells were isolated from OT-II mice and labeled with CFSE. Cells
were stimulated with 50 ng/mL OVA323-339 peptide in the
presence of nematode-derived proteins Ov103,
OvALT-2 or Ov7 in increasing
concentrations as indicated on the x-axis. After 72 h cells were stained
with anti-CD4 mAb and proliferation of CD4+CFSE+ T
cells was analyzed by flow cytometry as percentage of dividing T cells
(marker M1). Shown is a representative dot blot of OT-II spleen cells
after incubation with 7.5 µg/mL Ov103 (A) or
OvALT-2 (B) in the presence of OVA-peptide. C)
Graph shows percentage of dividing T cells in the presence of indicated
concentration of ESP. Data are presented as the mean of combined results
derived from two independent experiments, error bars show SEM. Asterisks
indicate significant differences in the mean of Ov103
to Ov7 or OvALT-2, respectively (** p
< 0.01; *** p < 0.001).
Limited impact of Ov7 on the clonal expansion of TCR transgenic T
cells in vivo
We have shown before that concurrent infection of mice with the filarial nematode
reduced
proliferation of OVA-specific OT-II T cells in vivo [9]. Having identified filarae-derived ESP
that suppressed OVA-specific T cell proliferation in vitro, we
next wanted to address if these ESP would also suppress T cell proliferation
in vivo i.e. mimic the suppressive effect of the ongoing
filarial infection. Therefore we adoptively transferred OT-II T cells to
syngenic C57BL/6 mice that were treated with 20 µg Ov7 or PBS
at the day of the adoptive transfer and one day later. OT-II T cells were
stimulated in vivo by injection of the cognate antigen
OVA323-339 one day after adoptive transfer and frequencies of
OT-II T cells in the spleen were calculated two days later (Figure 3A). Ov7 treatment
did not reduce the overall proportion of OT-II T cells in the spleen compared to
untreated mice (Figure 3B, p
= 0,73). Ov7 treatment slightly interfered with the number of
cell divisions undergone by OT-II T cells in vivo (Figure 3C). By trend, a
reduced number of OT-II T cells divided three times or more in mice that had
been treated with Ov7 compared to untreated mice (p= 0,13). As
we did not record statistically significant changes in in vivo
T cell proliferation by treatment with the well-defined immunosuppressive ESP
Ov7 that we employed as a positive control, we did not
repeat these experiments with the undefined new ESP.
Figure 3
No impact of Ov7 on proliferation of OT-II T cells
in vivo.
CFSE-labeled OT-II spleen cells were adoptively transferred i.v. into
C57BL/6 mice. 20 µg Ov7 was injected i.p. at the day of
the transfer and one day later. Mice were sacrificed 2 d after
in vivo activation with 50 µg OVA323-339
peptide and proliferation was analyzed. A) Representative dot blot
showing the gating strategy. We gated on CD4+CFSE+
cells to calculate the frequency of OT-II T cells in the spleen (B) and
analyzed the number of cell divisions OT-II T cells have undergone (C).
Shown is the frequency of OT-II T cells that did not divide
(M0) or divided once (M1), twice
(M2), or three times and more (M3) after
stimulation in the presence of PBS (white bars) or Ov7
(red bars). Shown are combined results from two independent experiments
with six mice per group, error bars show SEM. Analysis with students t
test revealed no significant statistical difference of the mean (p =
0,73 (B) and p = 0,13 (C, three and more division cycles). This result
was reproduced in two other independent experiment using five control
and seven Ov7-treated mice.
No impact of Ov7 on proliferation of OT-II T cells
in vivo.
CFSE-labeled OT-II spleen cells were adoptively transferred i.v. into
C57BL/6 mice. 20 µg Ov7 was injected i.p. at the day of
the transfer and one day later. Mice were sacrificed 2 d after
in vivo activation with 50 µg OVA323-339
peptide and proliferation was analyzed. A) Representative dot blot
showing the gating strategy. We gated on CD4+CFSE+
cells to calculate the frequency of OT-II T cells in the spleen (B) and
analyzed the number of cell divisions OT-II T cells have undergone (C).
Shown is the frequency of OT-II T cells that did not divide
(M0) or divided once (M1), twice
(M2), or three times and more (M3) after
stimulation in the presence of PBS (white bars) or Ov7
(red bars). Shown are combined results from two independent experiments
with six mice per group, error bars show SEM. Analysis with students t
test revealed no significant statistical difference of the mean (p =
0,73 (B) and p = 0,13 (C, three and more division cycles). This result
was reproduced in two other independent experiment using five control
and seven Ov7-treated mice.
OvALT-2- and OvNLT-1-mediated inhibition of OVA-specific
proliferation is resistant to proteinase K digestion
Working with proteins that have been expressed in bacteria heat-inactivation is a
common control to dissect endotoxin-mediated from protein-mediated effects. To
our surprise, heat-inactivation did not abolish the suppressive capacity of the
investigated ESP (data not shown and Figure 4C). This may either suggest that
suppression was not caused by the ESP but by other constituents in the
recombinant protein preparation, or suppressive ESP may function in a
heat-stable manner. In order to rule out that decreased proliferation was
mediated by low molecular weight -derived
contaminants we separated ESP using a 3 kDa Amicon filter. Ov7
and OvNLT-1 protein preparations (>3 kDa) reproducibly
suppressed proliferation of OVA-specific T cells while Ov103
and the low molecular filtrate of all proteins did not alter proliferation
(Figure 4A). Thus, we
could exclude that toxic low molecular bacterial contaminants in the preparation
caused the observed interference with antigen-specific proliferation.
Figure 4
Suppression of OVA-specific T cell proliferation by proteinase K
digested O. vovlvulus ESPs.
A) ESPs were separated using a 3 kDa Amicon filter into the protein and
the "flow through" containing molecules smaller than 3 kDa. Spleen cells
derived from DO11.10 mice were labeled with CFSE and stimulated with 10
ng/mL OVA323-339 peptide in the presence of ESP or "flow
through". Proliferation was analyzed after 72 h by flow cytometry and is
depicted as frequency of dividing CD4+ T cells. B) SDS-PAGE
and Coomassie blue staining of recombinant nematode-derived proteins
that were either native or digested with proteinase K. C) Thymidine
incorporation of DO11.10 cells after incubation with native or
proteinase K digested nematode-derived proteins. Shown are results from
one experiment representative for two independent repeats. Error bars
show SEM of triplicates and asterisks indicate significant differences
of the mean (*** p < 0.001).
Suppression of OVA-specific T cell proliferation by proteinase K
digested O. vovlvulus ESPs.
A) ESPs were separated using a 3 kDa Amicon filter into the protein and
the "flow through" containing molecules smaller than 3 kDa. Spleen cells
derived from DO11.10 mice were labeled with CFSE and stimulated with 10
ng/mL OVA323-339 peptide in the presence of ESP or "flow
through". Proliferation was analyzed after 72 h by flow cytometry and is
depicted as frequency of dividing CD4+ T cells. B) SDS-PAGE
and Coomassie blue staining of recombinant nematode-derived proteins
that were either native or digested with proteinase K. C) Thymidine
incorporation of DO11.10 cells after incubation with native or
proteinase K digested nematode-derived proteins. Shown are results from
one experiment representative for two independent repeats. Error bars
show SEM of triplicates and asterisks indicate significant differences
of the mean (*** p < 0.001).To test if the suppression of OVA-specific proliferation by nematode-derived
proteins OvALT-2 and OvNLT-1 was dependent on
the intact protein, we treated proteins with proteinase K. Proteinase K activity
in the samples was terminated by heat-inactivation after digestion. Complete
digestion of the proteins was confirmed by Coomassie-staining after SDS PAGE
(Figure 4B).
Unexpectedly, the digested preparations of OvALT-2 and
OvNLT-1 still suppressed the OVA-specific proliferation of
DO11.10 T cells to the same extent as the corresponding amount of undigested
protein (Figure 4C). This T
cell suppression by degraded OvALT-2 and
OvNLT-1 proteins was not due to cytotoxic products or residual
proteinase activity in the reaction as proteinase K treated
Ov103 did not suppress DO11.10 T cell proliferation. Therefore,
suppression was mediated by heat-stable small fragments of
OvNLT-1 and OvALT that were not degraded by
proteinase K digestion.
OvALT-2 and OvNLT-1 induce apoptosis in spleen cells
In order to analyze the underlying mechanisms of suppression we measured
induction of apoptosis by nematode-derived proteins. To distinguish necrosis and
apoptosis, spleen cells were stained with 7-aminoactinomycin (7-AAD) and annexin
V. One early feature of apoptosis is indicated by the loss of plasma membrane
symmetry and exposure of phosphatidylserine at the outer membrane. Annexin V is
a phospholipid-binding protein, which binds to phosphatidylserine on the plasma
membrane of early apoptotic cells. Ongoing apoptosis is characterized by
complete loss of membrane integrity, allowing intercalation of vital dyes such
as 7-AAD in the DNA. By means of 7-AAD and annexin V we distinguished between
early apoptotic cells (annexin V+/7-AAD-) and late
apoptotic or necrotic cells (annexin V+/7-AAD+). The
frequency of apoptotic cells was determined after incubation with recombinant
proteins or a 3 kDa filtrate of the same protein preparations to rule out
effects induced by putative low molecular weight contaminants (Figure 5A–C). Neither 3 kDa
filtrate (flow through) nor the proteins itself altered the proportion of early
apoptotic cells in splenic cultures (Figure 5D). In contrast, cells incubated with
5-10 µg/mL OvALT-2 and OvNLT-1 showed a higher
proportion of late apoptotic cells after 6 h of incubation (Figure 5E). Thereby 10 µg/mL of
OvALT-2 and OvNLT-1 induced apoptosis in
almost 100% of the spleen cell culture suggesting that the pro-apoptotic
activity of ESPs was not cell type specific. Late apoptosis was not detectable
in spleen cells cultured in the presence of the 3 kDa filtrate ruling out that
toxic low molecular contaminants in OvALT-2 and
OvNLT-1 protein preparations induced apoptosis (Figure 5E).
Ov103 did not induce cell death thus showing specificity of
OvALT-2- and OvNLT-1-induced
suppression.
Figure 5
Nematode-derived proteins OvNLT-1 and
OvALT-2 induce apoptosis in spleen cells.
ESP were separated into protein and "flow through" using Amicon filter.
Spleen cells were isolated from BALB/c mice and incubated with
increasing concentration of Ov103,
OvALT-2 and OvNLT-1 or the
corresponding low molecular weight filtrate ("flow through"). After 6 h
of incubation cells were stained with 7-AAD and annexin V. Apoptotic
cells (annexin V+) were further identified by 7-AAD
expression as early apoptotic cells (7-AAD-) or late
apoptotic (7-AAD+). Representative dot blots are shown for
spleen cells after incubation with 5 µg/mL of nematode-derived
Ov103 (A) as control peptide,
OvALT-2 (B) or OvNLT-1 (C).
Statistical analysis of the frequencies of early (D) and late (E)
apoptotic cells. Results show one individual experiment and are
representative for two independent experiments.
Nematode-derived proteins OvNLT-1 and
OvALT-2 induce apoptosis in spleen cells.
ESP were separated into protein and "flow through" using Amicon filter.
Spleen cells were isolated from BALB/c mice and incubated with
increasing concentration of Ov103,
OvALT-2 and OvNLT-1 or the
corresponding low molecular weight filtrate ("flow through"). After 6 h
of incubation cells were stained with 7-AAD and annexin V. Apoptotic
cells (annexin V+) were further identified by 7-AAD
expression as early apoptotic cells (7-AAD-) or late
apoptotic (7-AAD+). Representative dot blots are shown for
spleen cells after incubation with 5 µg/mL of nematode-derived
Ov103 (A) as control peptide,
OvALT-2 (B) or OvNLT-1 (C).
Statistical analysis of the frequencies of early (D) and late (E)
apoptotic cells. Results show one individual experiment and are
representative for two independent experiments.Taken together, our results identified OvALT-2 and
OvNLT-1 as nematode-derived proteins that mediate
suppression of antigen-specific T cell activation. Suppressive capacity of the
proteins was associated with induction of cell death but was resistant to
proteinase K digestion.
Discussion
In our previous studies we demonstrated that concurrent infection with the pathogenic
nematodes
and
suppressed the efficiency of
vaccinations to bystander antigens in vivo [9,10,25]. Particularly infection of mice with
resulted in drastically
reduced antibody titer in response to vaccination with a thymus-dependent model
antigen. Suppression of B cell response in nematode-infectedmice was due to
suppression of T helper cell expansion [9].
Moreover, we demonstrated reduced circumsporozoite-specific CD8+
cytotoxic T cell responses upon immunization with a -specific
vaccine in
-infected mice compared
to non-infected mice [10]. These results are
in line with several studies describing the interference of ongoing nematode
infections with T cell activation [28].
Screening for nematode products with the potential to suppress T cell activation,
several candidates have been described [12,13]. Cystatins derived from
and for instance suppressed proliferation of
human peripheral blood lymphocytes in vitro [17] and ameliorated experimental asthma in
vivo [18,19].In the current study we explored the suppressive capacity of ESP derived from the
human pathogen
. In addition to the
well-described Ov7 we identified two ESP that suppressed T cell
function in vitro. OvALT-2 and
OvNLT-1 suppressed antigen-specific proliferation of two different
MHC-II restricted TCRtransgenic T cells, OT-II and DO11.10. Moreover,
OvALT-2 and OvNLT-1 suppressed
antigen-specific IL-2 and IFN-γ production in spleen cell cultures derived from
MHC-I-restricted OT-I mice thus indicating a downregulation of both CD4+
and CD8+ T cell function. Several in vitro studies using
ESP from different helminth species suggest that one evasion strategy represents the
induction of cell death in effector cells [29-32]. Recently, ESP from
have been shown to induce
apoptosis in eosinophils, a cell type with a central role in the expulsion of
helminths [29]. In line with these findings,
we demonstrated the induction of cell death in spleen cell cultures upon in
vitro exposure to OvALT-2 and OvNLT-1
but not with Ov103.Working with proteins that are expressed in , one major
concern is a possible contamination with bacterial substances. PAMPs such as LPS
might interfere with the activation of OVA-specific T cells. Addition of LPS
containing the 10-100 fold endotoxic activity present in our ESP preparations did
not modulate T cell proliferation indicating that suppressed proliferation was not
due to LPS contamination. To further dissect artificial, -derived
contaminant-mediated effects from protein-mediated suppression we included
Ov103. This negative control protein was expressed similarly to
the suppressive proteins OvALT-2 and OvNLT-1 and
did neither suppress proliferation nor induce cell death in T cells. To exclude
suppression mediated by low molecular -derived toxic
contaminants we used Amicon filtration to separate the protein from substances
smaller than 3 kDa. Again control protein Ov103 and 3 kDa filtrate
of the suppressive proteins OvALT-2 and OvNLT-1
did not change proliferation or induce cell death.Surprisingly, suppression of OVA-specific T cell proliferation was neither abolished
by heat inactivation nor by digestion of the proteins with proteinase K. We
controlled complete digestion of the proteins by SDS-PAGE thus ruling out that
remaining intact ESP induced observed suppression of proliferation. We excluded
interference of the digestion reaction itself with T cell activation, as the
digested control protein did not modulate OT-II proliferation. Our results strongly
suggest that small peptide fragments derived from OvALT-2 and
OvNLT-1 that remained intact after proteinase K digestion and
that were not affected by heat-induced disruption of the tertiary structure of the
protein would mediate suppression of T cell function. Along this lines suppression
of allergic airway inflammation by application of ESP from
during
sensitization was not abolished by heat treatment [33]. Moreover, ESP derived from
inhibited
ovalbumin-induced allergy after heat inactivation and proteinase K digestion [34]. As these studies used an undefined ESP
concentrate derived from in vitro nematode culture supernatants,
the most likely explanation for heat-stable and proteinase-insensitive biologic
activity was that immunosuppression was induced by lipids or carbohydrates instead
of proteins. Our results, gained with purified recombinant proteins suggest small
peptide fragments as additional mediator of proteinase-resistant bioactivity.However, we cannot formally rule out effects mediated by bacterial-derived toxic
proteins in our preparation. It is conceivable that suppressive
-derived non-protein agents might bind selectively
to recombinant OvALT-2 and OvNLT-1 but not to
Ov103. These contaminants would not be separated by 3 kDa
filtration and would be proteinase-resistant. Thus further structural analysis of
the recombinant proteins and especially identification of the putative suppressive
peptides generated by proteinase K digestion is needed in order to distinguish
bacterial- or protein-specific suppression.Since we observed a strong suppression of the proliferation of TCRtransgenic T cells
in vitro we asked whether this suppression mimics the
inhibitory capacity of nematodes in vivo. In a previous study we
showed strong suppression of OVA-specific T cell proliferation after adoptive
transfer of OT-II T cells in
-infected mice [9]. Suppression of OT-II T cell proliferation
was less pronounced in mice infected with the intestinal nematode
[25]. Different parameters such as site
and duration of infection most likely contribute to the magnitude of suppression
in vivo [35] and might
explain the differences in the suppressive capacity of
and
.
As ESP from
strongly suppressed
proliferation of OVA-specific T cell in vitro, we tested, whether
these proteins are sufficient to suppress proliferation of OT-II T cells in
vivo. After injection of 20 µg of onchocystatin, Ov7,
we could not significantly dampen the proliferation of OVA-specific T cells
in vivo after adoptive transfer into C57BL/6 mice. This may
reflect the limited effect of short-term administration of suppressive ESP in
comparison to the continuous secretion by the living parasite. As our positive
control protein did not cause significant suppression of proliferation in this
experimental setup, we did not attempt to test the suppressive capacity of the other
ESP in vivo. To this end, firstly more detailed studies are
required concerning the establishment of an ESP application route and regimen
sufficient to replace the suppressive capacity of concurrent nematode infection.Taken together, we identified two
-derived proteins,
OvALT-2 and OvNLT-1, that act as
immunomodulators in vitro and suppress OVA-specific T cell
function. Helminths or their secreted products have been shown to protect against
autoimmune diseases and allergies in various mouse models [36]. To identify the active compound is a prerequisite to
benefit from the therapeutic potential helminths have due to their immunomodulatory
capacity. The role of OvALT-2 and OvNLT-1 as
potential targets in treating autoimmune diseases need to be further addressed in
future studies.Oligonucleotides used for cloning of the recombinant proteins.(DOCX)Click here for additional data file.
Authors: A Schönemeyer; R Lucius; B Sonnenburg; N Brattig; R Sabat; K Schilling; J Bradley; S Hartmann Journal: J Immunol Date: 2001-09-15 Impact factor: 5.422
Authors: Rick M Maizels; Adam Balic; Natalia Gomez-Escobar; Meera Nair; Matt D Taylor; Judith E Allen Journal: Immunol Rev Date: 2004-10 Impact factor: 12.988
Authors: S Subramanian; W A Stolk; K D Ramaiah; A P Plaisier; K Krishnamoorthy; G J Van Oortmarssen; D Dominic Amalraj; J D F Habbema; P K Das Journal: Parasitology Date: 2004-05 Impact factor: 3.234