| Literature DB >> 29379495 |
Dan Liang1, Lin Tian2, Ran You1, Matthew M Halpert1, Vanaja Konduri1, Yunyu C Baig1, Silke Paust1,3,4,5,6, Doyeun Kim7, Sunghoon Kim7, Fuli Jia2,6,8, Shixia Huang2,6,8, Xiang Zhang2,6,9, Farrah Kheradmand1,10, David B Corry1,11, Brian E Gilbert5, Jonathan M Levitt1,6,12, William K Decker1,6,13.
Abstract
Dendritic cells (DCs) must integrate a broad array of environmental cues to exact control over downstream immune responses including TH polarization. The multienzyme aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase complex component AIMp1/p43 responds to cellular stress and exerts pro-inflammatory functions; however, a role for DC-expressed AIMp1 in TH polarization has not previously been shown. Here, we demonstrate that the absence of AIMp1 in bone marrow-derived DC (BMDC) significantly impairs cytokine and costimulatory molecule expression, p38 MAPK signaling, and TH1 polarization of cocultured T-cells while significantly dysregulating immune-related gene expression. These deficits resulted in significantly compromised BMDC vaccine-mediated protection against melanoma. AIMp1 within the host was also critical for innate and adaptive antiviral immunity against influenza virus infection in vivo. Cancer patients with AIMp1 expression levels in the highest tertiles exhibited a 70% survival advantage at 15-year postdiagnosis as determined by bioinformatics analysis of nearly 9,000 primary human tumor samples in The Cancer Genome Atlas database. These data establish the importance of AIMp1 for the effective governance of antitumor and antiviral immune responses.Entities:
Keywords: AIMp1; IL-12; TH1 immunity; antitumor immunity; antiviral immunity; dendritic cell; p38 MAPK signaling
Year: 2018 PMID: 29379495 PMCID: PMC5775236 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.01801
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1AIMp1 is critical for bone marrow-derived dendritic cell (BMDC) vaccine-mediated control of tumor growth. (A) Wild-type (WT) or AIMp1 KO animals were challenged with 50,000 B16-F10 melanoma tumor cells s.c. on day 0 and tumor sizes were measured by caliper (n = 5). (B) WT or AIMp1 KO animals were challenged with 200,000 B16-OVA melanoma tumor cells s.c. on day 0. On day 5, mice were vaccinated in the footpad with 200,000 WT or AIMp1 KO BMDC loaded with SIINFEKL peptide and OVA protein. On days 15 and 24, mice were boosted in the footpad with an additional 200,000 BMDC. (C) Tumor sizes were measured by caliper (n = 5–6, representative of two independent experiments). (D) Kaplan–Meier survival analysis of animals in (C). *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001 as determined by log rank (Mantel-Cox) test. (E) Tumor tissues from animals treated as in (C) were harvested on day 19 for lymphocyte isolation and intracellular flow cytometry analysis (n = 17, pooled from three independent experiments). Single cell lymphocytes were gated on CD45+ and further analyzed for IFN-γ+ populations in different populations. Data are displayed as mean ± SEM for (C,E). *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001 as determined by paired two-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) (C) and regular two-way ANOVA (E) with Bonferroni post hoc test for multiple comparisons.
Figure 2AIMp1 deficiency in dendritic cells impairs TH1 polarization in vitro. (A) Wild-type (WT) or AIMp1 KO bone marrow-derived dendritic cell (BMDC) were matured for 48 h with cytokine cocktail, then cocultured with naive WT CD3+T-cells at a 1:10 ratio. IFN-γ from 3-day coculture supernatants was measured by ELISA (n = 7, biological repeats). (B) WT or AIMp1 KO BMDC were loaded with ovalbumin (OVA) antigen and matured for 48 h with cytokine cocktail, then cocultured with OT-II T-cells at a 1:20 ratio. IFN-γ from 3-day coculture supernatants was measured by ELISA (n = 8, biological repeats). (C) WT T-cells were harvested and lysed for Western blotting analysis of pSTAT1(Y701)/STAT1, pSTAT4(Y693), T-bet, and β-actin after 6 h of coculture with BMDC as in (A) (Representative of three independent experiments). (D) WT or AIMp1 KO BMDC were treated with LPS, and levels of proinflammatory cytokines IL-12p70, IL-6, and IL-1β were measured by ELISA (n = 7, technical repeats, pooled from two independent experiments). (E) WT or AIMp1 KO BMDC were treated with maturation cocktail or LPS and levels of CD86, CD40, and MHC II (I-Ab) were measured by flow cytometry (normalized and pooled from multiple independent experiments). (F) Conditioned supernatant from WT or AIMp1 KO BMDC loaded with SIINFEKL + OVA antigen and matured for 48 h were mixed 1:1 with fresh media and no additional cytokines and used to treat fresh BMDC; Levels of il12a, il12b, and il6 transcripts were measured by RT-PCR after 2 days (n = 3, biological repeats). Data are displayed as mean ± SEM. *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001 as determined by two-way analysis of variance with Bonferroni post hoc test for multiple comparisons for (B, D–F); two-tailed Student’s t-test for (A).
Figure 3Bone marrow-derived dendritic cell (BMDC)-AIMp1 deficiency impairs MyD88 downstream p38 MAPK signaling. (A) Reverse phase protein array analysis of MAPK signaling pathway molecules in wild-type (WT) or AIMp1 KO BMDCs treated with LPS for 30 min; colored scale bar indicates normalized log2 expression levels of each protein over the WT untreated group (n = 3, biological repeats). (B,C) WT or AIMp1 KO BMDC were treated with LPS for 0, 10, or 30 min. Cells were harvested for Western blotting analysis of pIKKα/β and MAPK signaling pathway molecules (representative of three independent experiments). (D) Relative densitometry quantification of p-MKK3/6, p-p38, and p-MAPKAPK2 from multiple experiments (pooled from three independent experiments). (E,F) WT or AIMp1 KO BMDC were treated with LPS for 24 h in the presence of DMSO vehicle or 0.1 µM p38 MAPK inhibitor SB202190. Levels of IL-12p70 in the supernatant were measured by ELISA (E) (n = 3, technical repeats) and il12a/il12b transcripts were measured by RT-PCR (F) (n = 3–6, pooled from three independent experiments). (G,H) WT or AIMp1 KO BMDC were treated with maturation cytokine cocktail for 48 h in the presence of various concentrations (shown) of p38 inhibitors SB202190 and SB203580 (G) (n = 8, pooled from three independent experiments) and PP2A inhibitors Okadaic acid and Endothall (H) (n = 4, technical repeats, representative of two independent experiments); cells were then washed and cocultured with WT T-cells at a 1:10 ratio for 3 days; levels of IFN-γ in supernatants were measured by ELISA. Data are displayed as mean ± SEM. *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001 as determined by two-way analysis of variance with Bonferroni post hoc test for multiple comparisons.
Figure 4Bone marrow-derived dendritic cell (BMDC)-AIMp1 influences transcriptional regulation of immune responses. Wild-type (WT) or AIMp1 KO BMDC were treated with maturation cytokine cocktail for 48 h. UL: unloaded; S + O: loaded with SIINKFEL and OVA (n = 3, biological repeats). (A) Pie charts of 820 upregulated (left, “up in WT S + O group”) and 1,103 downregulated (right, “down in WT S + O group”) genes in WT S + O group over WT UL group among 26,336 total coding genes as determined by mouse transcriptional array of WT BMDC. Charts and hierarchical heatmaps indicate the 261 upregulated genes (left) and 228 downregulated genes (right), the differential regulation of which was either abolished or significantly impaired by the absence of dendritic cell AIMp1. (B) List of Gene Ontology (GO) biological processes analyzed by WEBGESTALT of all differentially regulated genes (“abolished” and “impaired”) plotted in (A).
Top 50 genes differentially regulated by AIMp1 in response to antigen loading.
| Gene symbol | Gene name | Regulation by AIMp1 | Fold change (WT vs. AIMp1KO S + O) | Analysis of variance | Function |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Interferon-induced protein with tetratricopeptide repeats 1 | Up | 20.55 | 0.000103 | Innate antiviral response; IFN-induced | |
| Chemokine (C–X–C motif) ligand 1 | Up | 11.46 | 0.000003 | Neutrophil ohemotaxis | |
| Cholesterol 25-hydroxylase | Down | 10.33 | 0.000139 | Lipid metabolic process | |
| Radical S-adenosyl methionine domain containing 2 | Up | 9.75 | 0.000303 | Innate antiviral response; IFN-induced | |
| Interleukin 1 family, member 6 | Up | 9.56 | 0.000035 | Induction of dendritic cell maturation and inflammation | |
| Carbonic anhydrase 4 | Down | 7.4 | 4.40E−07 | Metabolic process | |
| Myxovirus (Influenza Virus) Resistance 2 | Up | 7.24 | 0.000292 | Innate antiviral response | |
| 2-5 oligoadenylate synthetase-like 1 | Up | 7.09 | 0.000802 | Innate antiviral response | |
| Interferon regulatory factor 7 | Up | 7.05 | 0.000106 | Innate antiviral response; IFN-induced | |
| Secreted phosphoprotein 1 | Down | 6.8 | 0.00006 | Negative regulation of apoptotic process | |
| Prostaglandin-endoperoxide synthase 2 | Up | 6.08 | 0.00001 | Production of inflammatory prostaglandins | |
| Matrix metallopeptidase 19 | Down | 5.99 | 0.000331 | Collagen catabolic process | |
| Histidine decarboxylase | Up | 5.96 | 0.000094 | Histamine metabolic process | |
| Macrophage galactose N-acetyl-galactosamine specific lectin 2 | Down | 5.36 | 0.000101 | Glycosylated antigens uptake | |
| Lysozyme 1 | Down | 5.22 | 0.000034 | Defense response to bacterium | |
| Predicted gene 15056 | Up | 5.15 | 0.000272 | Predicted defensin beta 52 | |
| Interferon activated gene 204 | Up | 5.02 | 0.000054 | Type I IFN response; intrinsic apoptotic signaling pathway | |
| Prostaglandin E synthase | Up | 4.97 | 0.000111 | Prostaglandin biosynthetic process | |
| Myeloid cell nuclear differentiation antigen | Up | 4.58 | 0.000032 | Granulocyte–monocyte lineage cell | |
| Expressed sequence AI607873 | Up | 4.57 | 0.000066 | Novel interferon-activable protein | |
| Interferon activated gene 202B | Up | 4.54 | 0.000114 | Regulation of transcription | |
| XIAP-associated factor 1 | Up | 4.53 | 0.000216 | Apoptotic process | |
| 2-5 oligoadenylate synthetase-like 2 | Up | 4.48 | 0.000337 | Innate antiviral response; IFN-induced | |
| Protease, serine 34 | Down | 4.43 | 0.000624 | Proteolysis | |
| Tripartite motif-containing 30C | Up | 4.39 | 0.000119 | Regulation of transcription | |
| DEAD (Asp-Glu-Ala-Asp) box polypeptide 60 | Up | 4.26 | 0.000024 | Innate antiviral response | |
| Membrane-spanning 4-domains, subfamily A, member 3 | Down | 4.1 | 0.000071 | Regulation of cell cycle | |
| Chemokine (C–C motif) ligand 7 | Up | 4.09 | 0.003074 | Monocyte chemotaxis | |
| Phospholipase A1 member A | Down | 3.99 | 0.000011 | Lipid metabolic process | |
| Pyrin and HIN domain family, member 1 | Up | 3.93 | 0.000229 | Tumor suppressor | |
| Thromboxane A synthase 1, platelet | Down | 3.88 | 0.000093 | Prostaglandin biosynthetic process | |
| Hepcidin antimicrobial peptide | Up | 3.86 | 0.000221 | Defense response to bacterium | |
| cDNA sequence BC094916 | Up | 3.78 | 0.000656 | Regulation of transcription | |
| Serine (or cysteine) peptidase inhibitor, clade B, member 2 | Up | 3.75 | 0.000379 | Negative regulation of apoptotic process | |
| AXL receptor tyrosine kinase | Down | 3.72 | 0.000185 | Inhibition of Toll-like receptor (TLR) signaling | |
| Early growth response 2 | Down | 3.72 | 0.001619 | Regulation of transcription | |
| Ectonucleotide pyrophosphatase/phosphodiesterase 2 | Down | 3.65 | 0.000082 | Lipid metabolic process | |
| Tripartite motif-containing 30D | Up | 3.63 | 0.000141 | Protein binding | |
| 2-5 oligoadenylate synthetase 2 | Up | 3.59 | 0.000214 | Innate antiviral response; IFN-induced | |
| Hepcidin antimicrobial peptide 2 | Up | 3.58 | 0.000127 | Defense response to bacterium | |
| Caspase 4, apoptosis-related cysteine peptidase | Up | 3.55 | 0.000034 | Apoptotic process | |
| C-type lectin domain family 10, member A | Down | 3.54 | 0.000062 | Cell adhesion; immune regulation | |
| Orosomucoid 1 | Up | 3.5 | 0.00191 | Protein transport; acute-phase immune response | |
| Family with sequence similarity 115, member C | Down | 3.45 | 0.00171 | Cation channel TRPM8 regulation; hematopoietic progenitor cell differentiation | |
| Ubiquitin specific peptidase 18 | Up | 3.44 | 0.000714 | Proteolysis of antiviral molecule ISG15 | |
| Sushi domain containing 2 | Up | 3.42 | 0.002498 | Potential tumor suppressor | |
| Gardner-Rasheed feline sarcoma viral (Fgr) oncogene homolog | Down | 3.42 | 0.000233 | Integrin-mediated signaling pathway | |
| 2-5 oligoadenylate synthetase 3 | Up | 3.41 | 0.000626 | Innate antiviral response; IFN-induced | |
| c-mer proto-oncogene tyrosine kinase | Down | 3.38 | 0.000764 | Cell–cell signaling; inhibition of TLR signaling | |
| C-type lectin domain family 4, member b2 | Down | 3.35 | 0.000514 | Antigen processing and presentation |
Figure 5AIMp1-deficient mice exhibit defective antiviral immunity. (A) Kaplan–Meier survival analysis of wild-type (WT) or AIMp1 KO animals challenged with aerosolized A/HongKong/8/68 (H3N2) (A/HK/68) mouse lung adapted strain of influenza A virus. *p < 0.05 was determined by log rank (Mantel-Cox) test between WT and AIMp1 KO mice infected with corresponding dose (n = 5–8). (B) Bronchoalveolar lavage fluid analysis of mice infected with an estimated 6.25 TCID50 per mouse of A/HK/68 on postinfection days 7 and 15 (n = 3–8). (C–E) Intracellular flow cytometry analysis of lung lymphocytes from mice infected with an estimated 6.25 TCID50 of A/HK/68 as in (B) on postinfection days 7 and 15 (n = 8–17, pooled data from two independent experiments). (C) IFN-γ+CD4+ and CD8+ as a percent of total CD4+ and CD8+. (D) Total numbers of CD4+ and CD8+ cells. (E) Total numbers of IFN-γ+ CD4+ and CD8+ cells. (F,G) Serum from mice infected as in (B) were analyzed for anti-HA specific antibody isotypes IgG1, IgG2a, IgG2b, IgG3, IgM, and IgA on postinfection day 8 (F) and day 15 (G) (n = 3–7, representative of two independent experiments). (H–M) Cells in BALF from mice infected as in (G) were analyzed for select antiviral and interferon-responsive gene expression. (H) ifit1, (I) mx2, (J) oasl1, (K) irf7, (L) ifna1, (M) ifng. [(H–M): n = 3–12, pooled data from two independent experiments]. Data are displayed as mean ± SEM. *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001 as determined by two-way ANOVA in (B–G) and one-way ANOVA in (H–M) with Bonferroni post hoc test for multiple comparisons.
Figure 6AIMp1 expression in primary human tumors is correlated with TH1 immunity and enhanced survival. (A,C) Box–Whisker plots showing the relative frequency of activated/resting dendritic cells in the different groups of basal-like breast cancer (n = 265, GSE76275) (A) and ovarian cancer (n = 419, TCGA) (C) classified by the AIMP1 expression. The TH1 signature was indicated by the color side bar. Each point represents one tumor sample. The relative percentages of dendritic cells were predicted using CIBERSORT. (B,D) Correlation of different T-cell subsets with AIMP1 expression. The different T-cell subsets signatures were predefined and described in methods. For the Box–Whisker plots, the upper and lower hinges correspond to the first and third quartiles, and the upper and lower whiskers are highest and lowest values that are within 1.5 × IQR (interquartile range) of the hinge. P values were calculated using two-tailed analysis of variance (ANOVA) (A,C) and Student’s t-test on the Pearson correlation coefficient (B,D). (E,F) Kaplan–Meier plots of the probability of overall survival across TCGA pan-cancer data set (n = 8,901) divided into tertiles based on the expression of AIMP1 and IFN-γ, respectively. The numbers of non-surviving and total patients in each group are indicated in the parentheses. The p-value was calculated by cox regression and log rank test.