| Literature DB >> 33316542 |
Zsófia Varga1, Evelin Rácz2, Anett Mázló1, Mónika Korodi3, Anikó Szabó2, Tamás Molnár1, Árpád Szöőr4, Zoltán Veréb5, Attila Bácsi2, Gábor Koncz6.
Abstract
Dendritic cells (DCs), as potent phagocytes engulf dead cells and present peptide fragments of tumor antigens or pathogens derived from infected cells to naïve CD8+ T-lymphocytes. Dendritic cells can also induce apoptosis in target cells, thus getting an opportunity to sample their microenvironment. Here, we present that the supernatants of LPS- or CL075-activated DCs induced cell death in different cell lines, but during the differentiation to mature DCs, they lost their cytotoxic potential. Dexamethasone-pre-treated tolerogenic DCs induced less intensive death indicating that the tissue microenvironment can downregulate DC-mediated killing. Exploring the signaling of DC-induced cell death, we observed that the supernatant of activated DCs induced TNF-dependent cell death, since TNF antagonist blocked the cytotoxic activity of DCs, contrary to inhibitors of Fas and TRAIL receptors. We identified that the DC-induced killing is at least partially a RIPK1-dependent process, as RIPK1 positive target cells were more susceptible to DC-induced cell death than their RIPK1 deficient counterparts. Moreover, both the elevated phosphorylation of RIPK1 and the increase in RIPK1-caspase-8 interaction in target cells suggest that RIPK1-mediated signals contribute to DC supernatant-induced cell death. We also proved that the cytotoxic activity of DC-derived supernatant induced apoptosis in the target cells and not necroptosis, as it was completely abrogated with the pan caspase inhibitor (Z-VAD), while the necroptosis inhibitor (Nec-1) had no effect. Our work revealed that the supernatant of activated DCs induces the apoptosis of target cells in a RIPK1-dependent manner. This phenomenon could be relevant for the initiation of cross-presentation and may broaden the plethora of cytotoxic mechanisms acting against tumor cells.Entities:
Keywords: Cytotoxicity; Dendritic cells; Immune tolerance; Immunogenic cell death; RIPK1
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33316542 DOI: 10.1016/j.imbio.2020.152032
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Immunobiology ISSN: 0171-2985 Impact factor: 3.144