| Literature DB >> 29541071 |
Emilia Vendelova1, Diyaaeldin Ashour1, Patrick Blank2, Florian Erhard1, Antoine-Emmanuel Saliba3, Ulrich Kalinke2, Manfred B Lutz1.
Abstract
Dendritic cells (DCs) are key directors of tolerogenic and immunogenic immune responses. During the steady state, DCs maintain T cell tolerance to self-antigens by multiple mechanisms including inducing anergy, deletion, and Treg activity. All of these mechanisms help to prevent autoimmune diseases or other hyperreactivities. Different DC subsets contribute to pathogen recognition by expression of different subsets of pattern recognition receptors, including Toll-like receptors or C-type lectins. In addition to the triggering of immune responses in infected hosts, most pathogens have evolved mechanisms for evasion of targeted responses. One such strategy is characterized by adopting the host's T cell tolerance mechanisms. Understanding these tolerogenic mechanisms is of utmost importance for therapeutic approaches to treat immune pathologies, tumors and infections. Transcriptional profiling has developed into a potent tool for DC subset identification. Here, we review and compile pathogen-induced tolerogenic transcriptional signatures from mRNA profiling data of currently available bacterial- or helminth-induced transcriptional signatures. We compare them with signatures of tolerogenic steady-state DC subtypes to identify common and divergent strategies of pathogen induced immune evasion. Candidate molecules are discussed in detail. Our analysis provides further insights into tolerogenic DC signatures and their exploitation by different pathogens.Entities:
Keywords: bacteria; helminths; immune evasion; mycobacteria; steady-state dendritic cells; tolerogenic dendritic cells; transcriptional profiling
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29541071 PMCID: PMC5835767 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2018.00333
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Major tolerogenic signatures upregulated on CCR7+ steady-state migratory dendritic cells (ssmDCs). Selected tolerogenic transcripts of IL12b, RelB, Socs2, Cd200, Cd274, and Ccl5 are upregulated in CCR7+ ssmDCs (CD103+ migDC, CD11b+ migDC, Langerhans cells) as compared to CCR7− resident DC subsets (CD8+ resDCs, CD4+ resDCs) or plasmacytoid DCs (pDCs). Data were obtained from the Immgen database (http://www.immgen.org/).
Tolerogenic genes upregulated more than log2-fold by DCs matured during steady state, inflammation, or by pathogens.
| Gene name | XCR1 + ssmDCs ( | ssmDCs ( | spont. mat. BM-DCs ( | ImmGen data base | LPS ( | LPS ( | TNF ( | LPS ( | CT ( | Mtb ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Steady-state migratory DCs/spontaneously matured BM-DCs.
LPS/TNF/CT-matured DCs.
Mycobacteria-matured DCs.
Helminth-matured DCs.
Tolerogenic transcripts induced specifically by TNF (human and mouse data from Figure 2) and for which anti-inflammatory or tolerogenic functions have been reported.
| Gene nameHuman/mouse, Protein name | Tolerogenic functions | References for tolerogenicity |
|---|---|---|
| Immune regulatory in placenta, in pDC for IDO production and by pathogens | ( | |
| Coinducer with TGF-β or IL-4 for induction of Foxp3+ Tregs | ( | |
| Expressed in self-antigen presenting, Treg inducing steady-state migratory DCs | ( | |
| Secreted soluble CD83 induces Tregs, prevents T cell activation, and is highly tolerogenic in autoimmunity and allogeneic transplantation models | ( |
Figure 2Common tolerance signatures of human monocyte-derived dendritic cells (MoDCs) or mouse bone marrow DCs (BM-DCs) stimulated with cholera toxin (CT), TNF, or lipopolysaccharide (LPS). (A) Among the top 14 genes upregulated under these conditions in DC of two different species, the 4 tolerogenic molecules IDO, SLAM, Inhibin A, and IL12b were found commonly upregulated (arrows). Expression signatures of strongly regulated genes in human and mouse DCs stimulated with CT, TNF, or LPS. Only genes with 1:1 ortholog mappings between human and mouse (obtained from MGI) were retained. z-scores were computed from the log2 fold changes for each experiment. Only genes having a z–score >4 or <−4 in at least two experiments are shown. Of note, for generation of human MoDCs additional IL-4 was added. Murine data are from Ref. (22, 23), human data obtained from GEO data bases (GSE106080). (B,C) Expression signatures of LPS stimulated human DCs [1 = (85); 2 = (88); 3 = (89); 4 = GSE106080] or mouse DCs [1 = (90); 2 = (22)]. Only genes with probe sets on each of the microarrays used were retained and z-scores were computed as in Panel (A). In Panel (B), genes with z-score > 2 in at least two human experiments and z-score < 0 in both mouse experiments are shown. Panel (C) depicts genes with z-score > 2 in both mouse experiments and <0 in at least two human experiments.
Common transcripts induced under all six conditions (TNF, CT, LPS, each human and mouse data from Figure 2) and for which anti-inflammatory or tolerogenic functions have been reported.
| Gene nameHuman/mouse, protein name | Functions | References for tolerogenicity |
|---|---|---|
| p40 homodimer antagonizes IL-12p70 | ( | |
| Metabolic inhibition of T cell proliferation by | ( | |
| Receptor for measles virus, inhibitor of DC function | ( | |
| Partially inhibits DC maturation. Synergizes with TGF-β for induction of Foxp3+ Tregs | ( |
Tolerogenic transcripts induced specifically by LPS (human and mouse data from Figure 2) and for which anti-inflammatory or tolerogenic functions have been reported.
| Gene nameHuman/mouse, protein name | Tolerogenic functions | References for tolerogenicity |
|---|---|---|
| Induces anti-inflammatory HO-1 production | ( | |
| Negative regulator of NF-κB | ( | |
| Immune cell inhibition | ( |
Tolerogenic transcripts induced specifically by CT (human and mouse data from Figure 2) and for which anti-inflammatory or tolerogenic functions have been reported.
| Gene nameHuman/mouse, protein name | Tolerogenic functions | References for tolerogenicity |
|---|---|---|
| Activator of latent TGF-β, regulator of DC cytokine production | ( | |
| Suppression of DC differentiation and function | ( |