| Literature DB >> 27131971 |
Christian Kleist1,2, Elisabeth Mohr3,4, Sadanand Gaikwad5,6, Laura Dittmar3,7, Stefanie Kuerten8,9, Michael Platten5,10, Walter Mier11, Michael Schmitt12, Gerhard Opelz3, Peter Terness13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Dendritic cells (DCs) rendered suppressive by treatment with mitomycin C and loaded with the autoantigen myelin basic protein demonstrated earlier their ability to prevent experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), the animal model for multiple sclerosis (MS). This provides an approach for prophylactic vaccination against autoimmune diseases. For clinical application such DCs are difficult to generate and autoantigens hold the risk of exacerbating the disease.Entities:
Keywords: Autoimmunity; Cell therapy; Copaxone®; Immune tolerance; Mitomycin C; Regulatory T cells; Relapsing-remitting MS
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27131971 PMCID: PMC4852098 DOI: 10.1186/s12967-016-0860-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Fig. 1MICCop reduce relapses of ongoing disease in remitting-relapsing EAE. A relapsing-remitting EAE was induced in female SJL/J mice at day 0 with injection of proteolipid peptide PLP139–151 in complete Freund’s adjuvant. Clinical signs were evaluated daily. For cellular treatment, SPCs were isolated from EAE animals, cultured in vitro o/n with or without 10 µg/mL glatiramer acetate (GA, Copaxone®, Cop). On the day of cell therapy, splenocytes were either treated with 50 µg/mL MMC or UV/C-irradiated with 25 mJ/cm2. During first remission, animals of treatment groups received 2 × 107 cells on each of three consecutive days (days 21–23): a MMC-treated SPCs (MICs; n = 7, dark grey diamonds), Cop-loaded and MMC-treated SPCs (MICCop; n = 7, black triangles) or PBS (control; n = 6, white squares); b Cop-loaded and UV/C-irradiated SPCs (UVC-SPCCop; n = 15, grey circles) or PBS (control; n = 15, white squares). Each panel shows the time course of the mean EAE score for the respective treatment group
Incidence and duration of paralytic relapses in EAE mice after cell treatment
| Treatment group | Incidence of relapsea, b | Relapse rate (%) | Duration of relapsec | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median | Mean ± SD | CI (95 %) | |||
| Control (PBS) | 31 (44) | 70.5 | 20.0 | 17.0 ± 9.6 | 13.6–20.4 |
| MICCop | 5 (30) | 16.7 | 4.0 | 6.6 ± 5,0 | 2.2–11.0 |
| MIC | 4 (7) | 57.1 | 6.5 | 9.50 ± 8.4 | 1.3–17.7 |
| SPCCop | 8 (15) | 53.3 | 13.5 | 14.5 ± 6,6 | 9.9–19.1 |
| UVC-SPCCop | 15 (15) | 100 | 24.0 | 19.6 ± 7.7 | 15.7–23.5 |
Treatment groups were compared using Fisher’s exact test (incidence of relapse) and One-tail Mann–Whitney U test (duration of relapse): * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001
CI confidence interval; EAE experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis; MIC mitomycin C-induced cells; MIC Copaxone®-loaded mitomycin C-induced cells; PBS phosphate-buffered saline; SD standard deviation; SPC Copaxone®-loaded splenocytes; UVC-SPC Copaxone®-loaded ultraviolett C-irradiated splenocytes
aIncidence of relapse: number of mice with relapse (total number of animals) in treatment group
b Incidence of relapse MICCop vs. control, *** p < 0.0001; MIC vs. control, p = 0.66; SPCCop vs. control, * p = 0.026; UVC-SPCCop vs. control, * p = 0.034; MICCop vs. MIC,* p = 0.045; MICCop vs. SPCCop, *** p < 0.0001; MICCop vs. UVC-SPCCop, * p = 0.016; MIC vs. SPCCop, p = 1.00; MIC vs. UVC-SPCCop, * p = 0.022; SPCCop vs. UVC-SPCCop, ** p = 0.006
c Duration of relapse MICCop vs. control, * p = 0.017; MIC vs. control, p = 0.063; SPCCop vs. control, p = 0.266; UVC-SPCCop vs. control, p = 0.755; MICCop vs. MIC, p = 0.476; MICCop vs. SPCCop, * p = 0.024; MICCop vs. UVC-SPCCop, ** p = 0.005; MIC vs. SPCCop, p = 0.107; MIC vs. UVC-SPCCop, * p = 0.026; UVC-SPCCop vs. SPCCop, p = 0.945
Fig. 2MICCop therapy suppresses the PLP-specific T-cell response. SJL/J mice were induced to exhibit clinical signs of EAE. In their first phase of remission, on days 21–23 post disease induction, mice were treated with MICCop (white triangles) or PBS (control, black squares). LNCs (a) and SPCs (b) of MICCop-treated (n = 8) and control (n = 9) EAE mice were harvested on day 49 after disease induction. Cells of each treatment group were restimulated in vitro with PLP139–151 for 48 h at the indicated concentrations (abscissa). Proliferation was determined by [3H]-thymidine incorporation and is displayed as x-fold increase in relation to unstimulated cells (ordinate). The mean ± standard error of the mean (SEM) of a sixtuplicate setup was calculated. One representative of three independent experiments is shown. Unpaired Student’s t test was performed for comparison of the treatment groups (*p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001)
Fig. 3Cytokine expression of peripheral lymphocytes from MICCop-treated EAE mice after in vitro-restimulation with PLP and Copaxone®. Splenocytes (SPCs; left column) and lymph node cells (LNCs; right column) were isolated from PBS- (control, black, n = 9) and MICCop-treated (MICCop, grey, n = 8) EAE mice and restimulated in vitro with 20 µg/mL PLP139-151 or Copaxone® (Cop). After 72 and 96 h, supernatants were collected and concentrations of TGF-β (a and b) and IL-10 (c and d) were determined by ELISA. Unstimulated cells represent basic cytokine expression. The mean ± standard error of the mean (SEM) was calculated for values measured in duplicate. Treatment groups were compared using unpaired Student’s t test (***p < 0.001; **p < 0.01; *p < 0.05; ns, not significant)
Fig. 4MICCop therapy does not suppress the immune response to foreign antigens. a MICCop- (n = 8) or PBS-treated (n = 8) EAE mice were immunized with ovalbumin (OVA) on day 55 and 74 after disease induction. Additional controls comprised healthy animals with OVA (naïve + OVA, n = 4) and w/o OVA immunization (naïve w/o OVA, n = 2). Animals were sacrificed on days 107 and 111. Serum was obtained and peripheral mononuclear cells from lymph nodes (LNCs) were isolated. b Anti-OVA antibodies were detected by ELISA in sera of single animals diluted 2500 to 312,000-fold. The graph shows mean values ± standard deviation (SD). For comparison of the different groups with the naïve w/o OVA control the unpaired Student’s t test was used (***p < 0.001). c and d OVA- and PLP-specific T-cell proliferation of LNCs harvested from single animals was assessed by in vitro restimulation with OVA protein (c) and PLP139–151 (d). Proliferation was determined after 48, 72 and 96 h by [3H]-thymidine incorporation and is indicated as x-fold increase in relation to unstimulated cells (ordinate). Shown is the mean ± standard error of the mean (SEM) of every group. The differences of T-cell responses towards OVA among the groups naïve + OVA, EAE + OVA and EAE + MICcop + OVA were statistically not significant ( c) whereas the proliferative response of MICCop-treated mice upon PLP stimulation was still suppressed after OVA immunization ( d; EAE + MICCOP + OVA vs. EAE + OVA after 48 h: p < 0.01; 72 h: p < 0.05; 96 h: p < 0.01). As control, LNC proliferation against OVA of naïve mice immunized with OVA was significantly stronger than that of naïve mice without OVA treatment (96 h: p < 0.01). Two-way-ANOVA test with Bonferroni correction was used
Fig. 5Tracking of injected MICCop cells in mice. SPCs from naïve SJL/J mice were loaded with Copaxone® (Cop) o/n and then treated with 50 µg/mL MMC (MICCop). 2 × 107 MICCop were labeled with 20 MBq 111Indium (In)-oxine and injected into the tail vein of the recipient mouse. Twenty-four hours later the animals were euthanized, thoroughly perfused with Ringer’s solution and single organs were harvested and weighed. The activity of tissue samples as well as of an aliquot of the administered labeled cell suspension was determined for each animal in a γ-counter and calculated as % of total injected dose (ID) per gram tissue. Shown is the in vivo distribution of activity in the indicated organs of four mice depicted as mean ± SD (LN lymph node)
Fig. 6Treatment of EAE mice with MICCop increases CD4+CD25+FoxP3+ cell infiltration of peripheral lymphoid organs and the central nervous system. The infiltration with CD4+CD25+FoxP3+ regulatory T cells (Tregs) of peripheral lymphoid organs (a and b) and the central nervous system (c and d) of cell-treated and control EAE mice was determined with FACS analysis in SPCs and immunohistochemistry in spinal cord sections, respectively. a For FACS analysis SPCs of animals treated with PBS (control), MICCop and UVC-SPCCop were isolated 4 weeks after cell therapy and stained with fluorescence-labeled antibodies and the corresponding isotype controls. One representative FACS-plot is shown for each group representing the expression of CD25 and FoxP3 in CD4+ cells. b Tregs within SPCs of each treatment group were quantified and are depicted as percentage of CD4+CD25+FoxP3+ T cells within the CD4+ T-cell population (mean value ± SEM; n = 8 per group). Data were statistically compared with the unpaired Student’s t test (*p < 0.05). c Immunohistochemistry of the lumbar spinal cord for evaluation of infiltrating Tregs was performed on snap-frozen tissue of PBS- and MICCop-treated animals. After incubation of tissue sections with anti-FoxP3-antibody, Tregs were visualized with biotin-conjugated rabbit anti-rat IgG and Neutravidin-Dylight549. Cellular nuclei were counterstained with Hoechst 33,342 (blue). Digital fluorescence images were obtained at ×40 magnification and the number of infiltrated Tregs (pink) was determined. Scale bars depict 50 µm. d Statistical analysis of evaluated sections based on values from single animals (n = 8 for each group) was performed using Mann–Whitney U test (*p < 0.05). Mean values of FoxP3+ cells per mm2 ± SEM are presented
Fig. 7Characterization of regulatory CD4+CD25+FoxP3+ T cells of MICCop-treated EAE mice. CD4+CD25+ regulatory T lymphocytes (Tregs) of MICCop-treated SJL/J mice were separated from LNCs and SPCs (= PBMCs) 2–3 weeks after cellular treatment via a microbead-based MACS protocol. For each animal Tregs from LNCs and SPCs were pooled. a PBMCs of PBS- (control, n = 12) or b MICCop-treated (n = 12) EAE animals were stimulated with phytohemagglutinin (PHA) and co-incubated with Tregs derived from single animals treated with MICCop (black bars) at a ratio of 5:1 (n = 12). Proliferation was determined by [3H]-thymidine incorporation. Positive control was PHA-induced T-cell proliferation of PBMCs only (100 %). Graphs show the mean relative proliferation rate (%) ± SEM in relation to the positive control. For statistical analysis One-way-ANOVA with Bonferroni correction was used (***p < 0.001; n = 12). c Tregs derived from SPCs and LNCs from two animals were pooled (in total n = 6), seeded (4 × 105/200 µL/well) and stimulated with plate-bound anti-CD3 monoclonal antibody for 48 h. IL-10 secretion was analyzed by ELISA. Stimulated conventional CD4+ T cells from the same animals served as control. Data are mean ± SEM (Student´s t test; **p < 0.01)