| Literature DB >> 32944054 |
Sara Magri1, Elena Masetto2, Samantha Solito1,3, Samuela Francescato4, Elisa Belluzzi1, Assunta Pozzuoli1, Antonio Berizzi1,5, Pietro Ruggieri1,5, Susanna Mandruzzato1,2.
Abstract
Myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) are a heterogeneous population of immunosuppressive cells developing from myeloid progenitors, which are enriched in pathological conditions such as cancer, and are known to inhibit the functions of effector T cells. During aging, several changes occur both at the adaptive and innate immune system level, in a process defined as immunoscenescence. In particular, the low-grade inflammation state observed in the elderly appears to affect hematopoiesis. We previously demonstrated that the combination of GM-CSF and G-CSF drives the in vitro generation of bone marrow-derived MDSCs (BM-MDSCs) from precursors present in human bone marrow aspirates of healthy donors, and that these cells are endowed with a strong immune suppressive ability, resembling that of cancer-associated MDSCs. In the present work we investigated BM-MDSCs induction and functional ability in a cohort of pediatric versus elderly donors. To this aim, we analyzed the differences in maturation stages and ability to suppress T cell proliferation. We found that the ex vivo distribution of myeloid progenitors is similar between pediatric and elderly individuals, whereas after cytokine treatment a significant reduction in the more immature compartment is observed in the elderly. Despite the decreased frequency, BM-MDSCs maintain their suppressive capacity in aged donors. Taken together, these results indicate that in vitro induction of MDSCs from the BM is reduced with aging and opens new hypotheses on the role of age-related processes in myelopoiesis.Entities:
Keywords: Aging; Immunosuppression; MDSCs
Year: 2020 PMID: 32944054 PMCID: PMC7488050 DOI: 10.1186/s12979-020-00199-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Immun Ageing ISSN: 1742-4933 Impact factor: 6.400
Characteristics of healthy volunteers
| Variable | Pediatric (20) | Elderly (24) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6 | 79 | < 0.0001 | |
| [7–4] | [82–76] | ||
| 0.952 | |||
| | 6 (30) | 7 (29.2) | |
| | 14 (70) | 17 (70.8) |
Fig. 1Human MDSCs are induced from BM precursors of pediatric and elderly donors by growth factors. a Representative flow cytometry with CD11b and CD16 on BM cells before (left panels) and after (right panels) 4 days of cell culture with growth factors G-CSF and GM-CSF. Upper panels, pediatric BM cells; bottom panels, BM from elderly donors. b Percentage of the different myeloid differentiating subsets among BM cells (n = 4 independent experiments) or BM cultures (n = 20 independent experiments) for pediatric patients (upper panel), and percentage of the different myeloid differentiating subsets among BM cells (n = 14) or BM cultures (n = 18) for elderly patients (bottom panel). c Percentage of the different myeloid differentiating subsets after four days of cell culture with growth factors between pediatric and elderly donors. Mann-Whitney U test was performed according to data distribution
Fig. 2Suppression of PBMCs proliferation by myeloid subsets sorted from BM or BM-MDSCs. CellTrace-labelled PBMCs activated with anti-CD3 and anti-CD28 were cultured in the presence of 1:1 ratio of the myeloid populations, unsorted (UNS), mature (CD11b+) or immature (CD11b−, BM-MDSCs). Immunosuppression of these populations was evaluated on activated T cells, (gated as CellTrace+/CD3+) normalized on the control without myeloid cells. (n = 20 independent experiments for pediatric patients, n = 20 for elderly patients) a Suppression was calculated by CellTrace profile assessed as the reduction of the proliferating CD3+ cells (those contained within generation two onward) in the co-culture condition as compared to T cells cultured alone, expressed as percentage. b Suppression was assessed by T cell number calculated by analyzing the absolute number of proliferating CD3+ cells by TruCount™ tubes. In both cases proliferation data were normalized assuming as 100% the proliferation rate of CD3+ cells cultured without myeloid cells