| Literature DB >> 30774630 |
Hongshuang Yu1, Yuanyuan Tian1, Ying Wang1, Shin Mineishi2, Yi Zhang1,3.
Abstract
Graft-vs.-host disease (GVHD) remains a significant cause of morbidity and mortality after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-HSCT). Significant progresses have been made in defining the dichotomous role of dendritic cells (DCs) in the development of GVHD. Host-derived DCs are important to elicit allogeneic T cell responses, whereas certain donor-types of DCs derived from newly engrafted hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells (HSPCs) can amply this graft-vs.-host reaction. In contrast, some DCs also play non-redundant roles in mediating immune tolerance. They induce apoptotic deletion of host-reactive donor T cells while promoting expansion and function of regulatory T cells (Treg). Unfortunately, this tolerogenic effect of DCs is impaired during GVHD. Severe GVHD in patients subject to allo-HSCT is associated with significantly decreased number of circulating peripheral blood DCs during engraftment. Existing studies reveal that GVHD causes delayed reconstitution of donor DCs from engrafted HSPCs, impairs the antigen presentation function of newly generated DCs and reduces the capacity of DCs to regulate Treg. The present review will discuss the importance of DCs in alloimmunity and the mechanism underlying DC reconstitution after allo-HSCT.Entities:
Keywords: alloreactive T cells; dendritic cells; disease; graft-vs.-host; immune tolerance; immunostimulation; transcription factors
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30774630 PMCID: PMC6367268 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.00093
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Effect of different DC subsets in GVHD.
| cDCs or pDCs | Induction | Host | Add-back of cDCs or pDCs | Balb/c → B6 AKR → C3H | GVHD↑ | Prime allo-T cell response | Koyama et al. ( |
| LCs | Induction | Host | Depletion of LCs | B6 → Balb/c | skin GVHD↓ | Increase donor T cell infiltrating in the skin | Merad et al. ( |
| LCs | No effect | Host | Depletion of LCs | B6 → Balb/c C3H → B6 | GVHD maintained | - | Li et al. ( |
| cDCs | Induction | Donor | Depletion of CD11c+ cDCs | B6 → Balb/c C3H → B6 B6 → B6D2F1 | GVHD↓ | Inhibit donor T cell proliferation | Markey et al. ( |
| CD103+ CD11b−DCs | Induction | Donor | Depletion of CD103+CD11b− cDCs | B6 → Balb/c | GVHD↑ | Induce expansion and differentiation of donor T cells within the mLNs | Koyama et al. ( |
| CD8α+ DCs | Tolerance | Host | Depletion of CD8+ cDCs | Balb/c → B6 | GVHD↑ | Reduce numbers of Tregs and TGF- β levels | Weber et al. ( |
| CD8α+ DCs | Tolerance | Host | Pre-treatment of the recipient with Flt3L | B6 → B6D2F1 | GVHD↓ | Suppress donor T cell responses to host antigens | Teshima et al. ( |
| CD8α+ DCs | Tolerance | Host | Pre-treatment of recipients with Flt3L | C3H → B6 B6 → B6D2F1 | GVHD↓ | Functionally delete of the alloreactive T-cell | Markey et al. ( |
| CD8α+ cDCs | No effect | Host | Depletion of CD8+ cDCs | C3H → B6 | GVHD maintained | - | Toubai et al. ( |
| CCR9+ pDCs | Tolerance | Host | Transfer of CCR9+ pDCs | Balb/c → B6 | GVHD↓ | Promote Treg expansion and function Suppress antigen-specific T responses | Hadeiba et al. ( |
| SAHA treated moDCs | Tolerance | Host | Transfer of moDC treated with SAHA | Balb/c → B6 | GVHD↓ | Promote Treg expansion and function | Reddy et al. ( |
| pre-pDCs | Tolerance | Donor | Depletion of pre-pDCs from BM grafts | B6 → Balb/c B6 → B6D2F1 | GVHD↑ | Inhibit T cell proliferation in a contact-dependent fashion | Banovic et al. ( |
| pre-pDCs | Tolerance | Donor | Transfer of BM pre-pDCs | B6 → B10 | GVHD↓ | Increase Tregs and decrease alloreactive effector T cells | Lu et al. ( |
Figure 1DC stimulation of allogeneic T cell responses. Preparative conditioning regimens before the allo-HSCT induce host tissue injuries, leading to the release of DAMPs and PAMPs. Consequently, DCs are activated by DAMPs and PAMPs through multiple receptors, capable to present antigens and prime the T cells. While DAMPs activate DCs mainly through TLRs (i.e., TLR 1-13), PAMPs activate DCs through RAGE, P2X7, etc., in addition to the TLRs. Both costimulatory molecules (e.g., CD28) and cytokines (e.g., IL-12, IL-23) synergize with the TCR signaling to promote proliferation and expansion of antigen-activated T cells. DCs also produce higher levels of Notch ligands (e.g., DLL1 and DLL4) to trigger Notch signaling in the T cell, instructing differentiation into distinct lineages of effector cells.
Figure 2DCs induce donor T cell tolerance via both T-cell intrinsic and extrinsic mechanisms. Tolerogenic DCs produce high levels of PD-L1 and CD80/CD86, which, respectively, bind PD-1 and CTLA4, leading to inhibition of antigen-activated T cells and generation of Treg. Treg further suppress the proliferation and survival of those antigen-activated T cells. In addition, tolerogenic DCs produce high levels of IDO, which can inhibit antigen-reactive T cells and promote Treg expansion and function.