| Literature DB >> 31231400 |
Ziduo Li1,2, Xinsheng Ju1,2, Pablo A Silveira1,2, Edward Abadir1,2, Wei-Hsun Hsu1,2, Derek N J Hart1,2, Georgina J Clark1,2.
Abstract
CD83 is a member of the immunoglobulin (Ig) superfamily and is expressed in membrane bound or soluble forms. Membrane CD83 (mCD83) can be detected on a variety of activated immune cells, although it is most highly and stably expressed by mature dendritic cells (DC). mCD83 regulates maturation, activation and homeostasis. Soluble CD83 (sCD83), which is elevated in the serum of patients with autoimmune disease and some hematological malignancies is reported to have an immune suppressive function. While CD83 is emerging as a promising immune modulator with therapeutic potential, some important aspects such as its ligand/s, intracellular signaling pathways and modulators of its expression are unclear. In this review we discuss the recent biological findings and the potential clinical value of CD83 based therapeutics in various conditions including autoimmune disease, graft-vs.-host disease, transplantation and hematological malignancies.Entities:
Keywords: CD83; antigen presenting cells; immune suppression; therapeutic antibody; transplantation
Year: 2019 PMID: 31231400 PMCID: PMC6568190 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.01312
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Therapeutic applications of CD83.
| Anti-CD83 antibody | Diagnostic mature DC marker | CD83 upregulation when DC are activated ( |
| Therapeutic target for GVHD | Depletion of mature CD83+ DC ( | |
| Therapeutic target for GCA | Depletion of mature CD83+ DC in GCA arteries ( | |
| Anti-CD83 antibody/antibody drug conjugates | Biomarker and therapeutic HL target | Depletion of CD83+ malignant cells; neutralizing peripheral sCD83 ( |
| Serum sCD83 | Biomarker in HL, chronic lymphocytic leukemia, and mantle cell lymphoma | Serum sCD83 shed from CD83+ malignant cells ( |
| rsCD83 | ||
| Skin transplant | Inhibition of recipient T-cell proliferation and IL-2, IFN-γ production ( | |
| Kidney transplant | Tolerogenic DC generation; induction of IDO ( | |
| Reduced number of infiltrating T-cells and monocytes and lower levels of inflammatory cytokines in graft ( | ||
| Corneal transplant | Regulatory T-cell induction mediated by IDO and TGF-β ( | |
| Cardiac transplant | Attenuating DC maturation and function, such as down modulating MHC-II expression and reducing the DC allogeneic stimulatory capacity ( | |
| MS (EAE) | Reduced T-cell proliferation and production of IFN-γ ( | |
| Inflammatory Bowel Disease | Induced tolerogenic IDO+ DC ( | |
| Autoimmune Uveitis (EAU) | NK cells reduced and the expression of CD11b and CD83 in NK cells decreased ( | |
| Induced tolerogenic IDO+ DC by decreased expression of co-stimulatory molecules and hampered DC calcium response ( | ||
| Systemic Lupus Erythematosus | Reduction of splenic and peripheral IgG-secreting cells and peripheral T-cells ( | |
| Rheumatoid arthritis | Reduced arthritis by increasing Treg numbers in an IDO and TGF-β dependent manner ( | |
Figure 1The immunosuppressive effect of anti-CD83 antibodies and rsCD83 in allogeneic transplantation and inflammation. (A) Activated (Act) DC stimulate T-cells to initiate a damaging alloimmune/inflammatory response caused by allogeneic transplantation or autoimmunity. (B) Conventional treatment with non-specific immune suppressive agents (e.g., cyclosporin) controls inflammation, GVHD and graft rejection at the expense of protective infectious and tumor memory T-cell responses. (C) Anti-CD83 mAb deplete activated DC but not tolerogenic DC (Tol-DC) at the initiation of the immune response, preventing T-cell activation leading to graft rejection/inflammation but promoting T-cell tolerance. It also preserves memory (mem) T-cells capable of protective anti-viral and graft-vs.-tumor (GVT) activities. (D) rsCD83 induces IL-10, IDO, PGE-2, and TGF-β from monocytes and DC through homotypic and heterotypic ligand binding, promoting Treg generation, inhibiting DC activation and reducing CD83 surface expression on DC, leading to reduced T-cell activation, graft acceptance and tolerance. The effect of rsCD83 on memory T-cell responses has not been investigated.