| Literature DB >> 35371066 |
Sudipta Tripathi1, Paloma L Martin-Moreno1,2, George Kavalam1, Brittany L Schreiber1, Ana Maria Waaga-Gasser1, Anil Chandraker1.
Abstract
Regulatory T cells are an important component of an immune response shaping the overall behavior to potential antigens including alloantigens. Multiple mechanisms have been shown to contribute towards developing and sustaining a immunological regulatory response. One of the described contact dependent suppressive mechanisms regulatory cells have been shown to utilize is through the production of adenosine from extracellular ATP mediated by CD39 and CD73. In this study we demonstrate that the adenosinergic pathway plays a major role in the suppressive/regulatory effects antigen specific regulatory T cell enriched lines (ASTRLs) that have been of expanded ex vivo from stable kidney transplant patients. We have previously shown that these ASTRL cells are capable of suppressing alloimmune responses in vitro and significantly prolonging allograft survival in an animal model of kidney transplantation. For this study nineteen ASTRLs were expanded from 17 kidney transplant patients by repeated stimulation of recipient peripheral blood mononuclear cells with donor specific HLA-DR peptides. All 19 ASTRLs showed upregulation of numerous markers associated with regulatory cells and were able to inhibit donor antigen specific T cell proliferation in a dose dependent fashion. ASTRLs suppressed indirect and direct alloimmune responses compatible with our previous animal study findings. Upregulation of both CD39 and CD73 was observed post expansion and ASTRLs demonstrated extracellular hydrolysis of ATP, indicating functionality of the upregulated proteins. We also showed that inhibition of the adenosinergic pathway using inhibitors of CD39 resulted in abrogation of suppression and increased antigen specific T cell proliferation. This demonstrates that the main mechanism of action of the suppressive activity donor peptide driven ASTRLs generated from kidney transplant patients is the adenosinergic pathway. Furthermore this suggests the possibility that combining infusion of Tregs with other treatments, such as adenosine receptor agonists or increasing CD39 expression in the grafts may further enhance a regulatory response to the allograft and possibly achieve transplantation tolerance.Entities:
Keywords: adenosinergic pathway; allo-antigen specific Tregs; cell therapy; kidney transplantation; linked suppression
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35371066 PMCID: PMC8968184 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2022.849939
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Demographic data of the 17 patients from whom ASTRLs were expanded.
| n = 17 | |
|---|---|
| Age (years) | 51.6 ± (16) |
| Sex | |
| Female (%) | 47 |
| Male (%) | 53 |
| HLA mismatch (number) | 4.5 ± (1.3) |
| Serum creatinine (mg/dl) | 1.5 ± (0.4) |
| Proteinuria >0.5 g/24 h | 2 |
| Acute/chronic rejection (total number) | 4/1 |
| Type of donor | |
| Deceased (%) | 47 |
| Living (%) | 53 |
| Time (months) between date of Transplant and C1 | 17 ± (21.5) |
HLA, human lymphocyte antigen; C1, the first blood collection.
Values for age, HLA mismatch, serum creatinine, and time between date of Transplant and C1 are expressed as mean ± (s.d.).
Figure 1Graphical representation of ex vivo expansion of ASTRL. ASTRLs were expanded from autologous PBMC of stable kidney transplant patients through multiple stimulations in presence of donor antigen and low dose IL-2 using the indirect pathway of allorecognition. A typical expansion process takes about 30 to 35 days. At the end of the expansion cells were harvested and phenotypic and functional characterization of the ASTRLs are performed.
Figure 2(A) Phenotypic characterization of ASTRL. Flow cytometry plots show expression of CD25, CD127, and Foxp3 in CD4+ and CD8+ T cells of pre expansion PBMC and ASTRL. (B) Expression of various conventional T regulatory cell markers on CD4+ T cell subsets of pre-expansion PBMC and ASTR L. Histograms and contour plot overlays show PBMC in red and ASTRL in blue. (C) ASTRLs constitute a heterogenous cell population. Figures show a comparison of CD19+ B cell and CD11b+ myeoid cell populations in pre-expansion PBMC (top panel) and ASTRL (bottom panel) from five different subjects. (D) ASTRLs constitute a heterogenous cell population. NK cell population in ASTRLs (bottom panel) and pre expansion PBMC (top panel) are shown from five different subjects. (E) ASTRLs upregulate the surface expression of the molecules belonging to canonical (CD39 and CD73) and non-canonical (CD38 and CD203) adenosinergic pathways. Figures on the top panels show the expression of CD39 and CD73 on the CD3+ and CD3− cell populations of ASTRL in blue and pre-expansion PBMC in red. The bottom panel shows the expression of CD38 and CD203 in CD3+ and CD3− subsets of ASTRL in blue and pre-expansion PBMC in red. (F) Differentially expressed cytokines in the expansion media of ASTRLs. Post expansion, on days 30–35 ASTRLs were harvested and production of various cytokines in the spent expansion media were measured by Luminex.
Figure 3Functional Characterization of ASTRLS. ASTRLs suppress donor antigen specific proliferation of T effector cells. (A) ASTRLs expanded from various KTRs suppress donor antigen specific proliferation of T effector cells. (B) The suppressive effect of ASTRLs on donor antigen specific proliferation increasing ASTRL : Responder ratio. (C) Cytokine production in the culture supernatant of suppression assay by Luminex. (D) Suppressive ability of ASTRL in contact dependent and contact independent transwell assay. (E) Suppressive effect of ASTRL to responder cell proliferation in response to a direct allorecognition using donor cells as stimulators and an indirect allorecognition using autologous irradiated stimulators loaded with donor antigens.
Figure 4ASTRL hydrolyze extracellular ATP in a CD39 dependent manner. (A) ASTRLs Extracellular ATP (eATP) hydrolysis by ASTRL and in presence or absence of POM1, a CD39 inhibitor. (B) Malachite Green assay, that detects the presence of inorganic phosphate (green color) resulting from ATP hydrolysis, showing eATP hydrolysis by ASTRL and PBMC. (C) Effect of CD39 inhibition (presence of POM1) on suppressive effect of ASTRL on antigen specific proliferation of responder cells.
Figure 5ASTRLs exhibit antigen specific, individualized/patient specific and bystander suppressive function. (A) Suppressive effect of ASTRL on non-specific proliferation of responder cells using CD3/CD28 beads. (B) Suppressive effect of ASTRL on antigen specific proliferation of autologous and heterologous responders that share the same donor antigen. (C) Bystander suppressive effect of ASTRL on antigen specific proliferation of autologous responders to multiple donor antigens.