Literature DB >> 31533918

Danger-associated extracellular ATP counters MDSC therapeutic efficacy in acute GVHD.

Brent H Koehn1, Asim Saha1, Cameron McDonald-Hyman1, Michael Loschi1, Govindarajan Thangavelu1, Lie Ma1, Michael Zaiken1, Josh Dysthe1, Walker Krepps1, Jamie Panthera1, Keli Hippen1, Stephen C Jameson2,3, Jeffrey S Miller4, Matthew A Cooper5, Christopher J Farady6, Takao Iwawaki7, Jenny P-Y Ting8,9,10,11, Jonathan S Serody8,9,10,11, William J Murphy12,13, Geoffrey R Hill14,15, Peter J Murray16,17, Vincenzo Bronte18, David H Munn19, Robert Zeiser20,21, Bruce R Blazar1,2.   

Abstract

Myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) can subdue inflammation. In mice with acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD), donor MDSC infusion enhances survival that is only partial and transient because of MDSC inflammasome activation early posttransfer, resulting in differentiation and loss of suppressor function. Here we demonstrate that conditioning regimen-induced adenosine triphosphate (ATP) release is a primary driver of MDSC dysfunction through ATP receptor (P2x7R) engagement and NLR pyrin family domain 3 (NLRP3) inflammasome activation. P2x7R or NLRP3 knockout (KO) donor MDSCs provided significantly higher survival than wild-type (WT) MDSCs. Although in vivo pharmacologic targeting of NLRP3 or P2x7R promoted recipient survival, indicating in vivo biologic effects, no synergistic survival advantage was seen when combined with MDSCs. Because activated inflammasomes release mature interleukin-1β (IL-1β), we expected that IL-1β KO donor MDSCs would be superior in subverting GVHD, but such MDSCs proved inferior relative to WT. IL-1β release and IL-1 receptor expression was required for optimal MDSC function, and exogenous IL-1β added to suppression assays that included MDSCs increased suppressor potency. These data indicate that prolonged systemic NLRP3 inflammasome inhibition and decreased IL-1β could diminish survival in GVHD. However, loss of inflammasome activation and IL-1β release restricted to MDSCs rather than systemic inhibition allowed non-MDSC IL-1β signaling, improving survival. Extracellular ATP catalysis with peritransplant apyrase administered into the peritoneum, the ATP release site, synergized with WT MDSCs, as did regulatory T-cell infusion, which we showed reduced but did not eliminate MDSC inflammasome activation, as assessed with a novel inflammasome reporter strain. These findings will inform future clinical using MDSCs to decrease alloresponses in inflammatory environments.
© 2019 by The American Society of Hematology.

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Year:  2019        PMID: 31533918      PMCID: PMC6871306          DOI: 10.1182/blood.2019001950

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Blood        ISSN: 0006-4971            Impact factor:   25.476


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