A Common Progenitor for Macrophages, Osteoclasts and Dendritic Cells Newly Discovered in Human Bone Marrow and Cord Blood Yields Dendritic Cells with T-Cell Priming Ability

Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 645-645
Author(s):  
Yanling Xiao ◽  
Joanna Aleksandra Grabowska ◽  
Riccardo Mezzadra ◽  
Maarten J. van Tol ◽  
Arjan C Lankester ◽  
...  

Abstract Dendritic cells (DC) have potent antigen-presentation and T-cell priming ability and therefore hold great promise in cancer immunotherapy. However, DC vaccination has not yet delivered a reliable clinical response rate, despite great efforts. Since primary DCs are rare (up 0.2-1.5% of circulating leukocytes), therapeutic DCs are generally derived from peripheral blood monocytes by culture with GM-CSF (moDC). Vaccines composed of moDC loaded with tumor antigens can induce potent and long-lasting tumour-specific immune responses in patients, but such positive results are infrequent and unpredictable. To improve success rate, research has focused on moDC culture regimens, antigen loading and activation strategies and methods of DC injection. Nevertheless, to date clinical trials using moDC have not yielded statistically significant treatment benefits over conventional strategies. Current attention has therefore shifted to the rare primary DCs that circulate in the blood under homeostatic conditions. Knowing the identity of the precursors of these DCs may facilitate the ex-vivo or in-vivo generation of DCs via the homeostatic pathway, potentially yielding DCs with optimal T cell priming ability. We (Xiao et al. Stem Cell Rep. 2015) and others (Lee et al. J. Exp. Med. 2015) have recently identified a population with DC progenitor potential in human bone marrow and cord blood, respectively. This population can be isolated on basis of a CD34+ c-KIT+ FLT3+ IL3Rαhigh phenotype and is furthermore Lin- CD10- CD11b- CD45RA+ CD38+. We have shown that this population is highly enriched for or identical to a common progenitor (P) of macrophages (M), osteoclasts (O) and DCs (D) and termed it MODP. We also identified the progenitor directly upstream from the MODP that still has granulocyte (G) differentiation potential and termed it GMODP. We hypothesized that DCs generated from GMODP or MODP under homeostatic conditions would have superb T-cell priming capacity. To examine this, the progenitors were sorted by flow cytometry from human bone marrow or cord blood and cultured with Flt3 ligand, M-CSF and IL-3 to generate DCs. We also tested the effect of a mensenchymal stem cell (MSC) feeder layer. Within 2-3 weeks of culture, 1000 DC progenitors generated approximately 150,000-250,000 DCs. Co-culture with MSC increased DC output significantly, at least 2 fold. The progenitor-derived DCs could be discerned into CD141+ conventional (c)DC, CD1c+ cDC and CD303+ plasmacytoid (p)DC. To study T-cell priming capacity of progenitor-derived DCs, we set up an in vitro DC-T co-culture assay. CD141+ cDC, CD1c+ cDC and CD303+ pDC were generated from GMODP or MODP of HLA-A2+ donors, flow cytometrically purified, activated with lipopolysaccharide and loaded with MART-126-35 peptide that represents a melanoma-derived tumor antigen. Primary T cells from peripheral blood of unrelated donors were retrovirally transduced to express a T cell antigen receptor (TCR) ab specific for the HLA-A2/MART-126-35 peptide complex. The ability of the DCs to prime a T-cell response was read out by antigen-specific CD8+ T cell proliferation. All DC subsets were able to induce MART-1 specific T cell proliferation, with the CD1c+ cDCs being most potent and the CD303+ pDC being least potent. In conclusion: We have established a culture method to derive DCs with T-cell priming ability from a newly identified DC progenitor. These results are of value for improvement of DC-based immunotherapy. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

2008 ◽  
Vol 251 (2) ◽  
pp. 131-136 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rajesh Ramasamy ◽  
Chih Kong Tong ◽  
Heng Fong Seow ◽  
Sharmili Vidyadaran ◽  
Francesco Dazzi

2014 ◽  
Vol 323 (1) ◽  
pp. 56-65 ◽  
Author(s):  
Suna Wang ◽  
Yifu Zhou ◽  
Oleg Andreyev ◽  
Robert F. Hoyt ◽  
Avneesh Singh ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 3224-3224
Author(s):  
Mauro Di Ianni ◽  
Raffaella Giancola ◽  
Stefano Baldoni ◽  
Francesca Ulbar ◽  
Beatrice Del Papa ◽  
...  

In high-risk acute leukemia patients undergoing HLA haploidentical T cell-depleted tranplantation, we demonstrated that adoptive immunotherapy with donor T regulatory cells (Tregs; 2x106/kg) co-infused with conventional T cells (Tcon; 1x106/kg ) provided significant protection from acute graft-versus-host disease (aGvHD) and was associated with an almost complete control of leukemia relapse (graft versus leukemia effect, GvL) (Di Ianni et al., Blood 2011; Martelli et al., Blood 2014; Ruggeri et al., ASH 2018). In the present study we investigated whether Tregs interact with bone marrow (BM) and peripheral blood (PB) dendritic cells (DCs) and whether such interaction is responsible for GvHD protection and GvL effect. Twenty six patients (median age 54 ; 20 AML; 4 ALL; 2 MDS) transplanted between July 2016 and April 2019 were evaluated up to one year after the transplant. BM and PB DCs (using CD123 for plasmocitoid DC-pDC; CD11c for myeloid DC-mDC; CD80/CD86 for costimulatory molecules) and T cells (CD3/CD4/CD8; CD4/CD25/CD127; CD28/PD-1/TIM3) were analysed by flow-cytometry. DCs were also sorted and analysed by RT-PCR for a panel of genes involved in activation (IL-6; TNF-a; IL-12; CCR7; NOTCH ligands) vs tolerigenic (TGF-beta; PD-1/PDL1; IDO; IL-10; ICOS) pathways. To study the effects of DCs on T cell proliferation, pre-activated (with GM-CSF at 50 ng/ml, IL-4 at 800 U/ml and TNF-a at 50 ng/ml for 18 hrs) BM and PB CD1c+ DCs were co-cultured for 96 hrs with autologous CFSE labelled BM and PB CD3+ cells at a DC:CD3 ratio of 1:10. mDC numbers were significantly higher in BM than PB during the first 6 months after transplant. BM-derived mDCs expressed higher levels of the co-stimulatory receptor CD86. No differences emerged in pDCs. RT-PCR showed an activation signature in BM-DCs (significantly higher IL-6 level) and a tolerigenic signature in PB-DCs (significantly higher TGF-beta and PDL-1 levels). BM-derived CD8+ T cells displayed a higher expression of the co-stimulatory receptor CD28 than PB-derived CD8+ T cells (30.3±18.8 vs 9.2±4.9; p<0.05 ). In contrast, the expression of the immune checkpoint inhibitor PD-1 was significantly higher in both PB-derived CD4 (69%±29 vs 24±11) and CD8 (65±25 vs 4±3; p<0.05) T cells than BM-derived T lymphocytes. T cells from both BM and PB did not express the T cell exhaustion marker TIM-3. CD3/CFSE+-DCs co-cultures showed a T cell proliferation rate that was significantly higher in BM than in PB (25±7.2 vs 6.7±8.7; p<0.05). These data show that haploidentical transplantation with Treg/Tcon immunotherapy promotes the reconstitution of DCs with an activating signature in the BM and a tolerigenic signature in the PB. Human peripheral blood Tregs that are used for adoptive immunotherapy are largely CD45RO+ and express low level of CxCR4 bone marrow homing receptor. When infused in immunodeficient mice they migrate to the periphery (spleen, gut, liver) but are unable to home to the bone marrow (Ruggeri et al., ASH 2018). In conclusion, Tregs/DC interaction induce tolerance in the periphery (and may protect from GvHD). In the BM, in the absence of Tregs, DCs activate alloreactive Tcon and may favour killing of the leukemic targets. Therefore, Tregs/DC interactions may contribute to the separation between GvL effect and GvHD in the Treg based haploidentical transplantation. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 4726-4726
Author(s):  
Matthias Eyrich ◽  
Johannes Rachor ◽  
Marissa Blume ◽  
Isabelle Becker ◽  
Anne Stumpf ◽  
...  

Vaccination with cytokine-matured dendritic cells (DCs), loaded with autologous tumor lysate, represents a promising strategy in cancer immunotherapy, however, in clinical trials vaccination with this kind of DCs has shown only limited efficacy so far. In animal experiments, CD40-licensing of DCs conveys resistance to tumor-induced immunosuppression including immunomodulation of regulatory T cells (Tregs). DCs were generated by differentiation of monocytes for 7 days with GM-CSF/IL-4 followed by 48h maturation with TFNα/IL-1ß ± CD40L. Then, DC were analyzed with respect to phenotype, cytokine production, and T-cell stimulatory capacity. CD40-licensed DCs showed higher expression of CD86 (MFI 3074±630 vs. 2433±359 with vs. without CD40L, respectively, p<.05) and a trend towards higher CD80, CD83 expression. Coculture of DCs with Tregs during maturation led to a reduction of costimulatory molecules, presumably by transendocytosis of Tregs. This phenomenon could be partially abrogated by CD40-licensing. TNFα/IL1ß-matured DCs produced significant amounts of IL-6, IL-8, TNFα, and IL-1ß. CD40-licensing did further increase cytokine production, however, no IL-12 could be detected. In contrast to murine DCs, a second round of LPS-stimulation after TNFα/IL1ß could not trigger IL-12 production. Control DCs matured with LPS/IFNγ showed up to 16% IL-12+ DCs. Using Melan-A as a model tumor antigen, priming capacity of CD40-licensed DCs to induce Melan-A specific CD8+ CTLs was slightly but not significantly improved compared to nonlicensed DCs, as demonstrated by somewhat higher frequencies of Melan-A multimer+ and TNFα+IFNγ+ CTLs after 11 days of culture with CD40-licensed DCs and rechallenge, respectively. Again, T-cell priming was best with control DCs matured with LPS/IFNγ. In contrast to T-cell priming, CD40-licensed DCs did not show any improved capacity to stimulate CD4+ T-helper cell proliferation. Furthermore, in a classcial MLR-suppression assay Tregs inhibited CD4+ T-helper proliferation by approx. 40%, this suppression was not alleviated by CD40-licensing of DCs. Interestingly, Treg proliferation in combined MLR-assays was increased in all experimental settings. Treg-suppression of CD4+ T-helper proliferation as well as the increased Treg-proliferation in the combined MLR-assays could not be prevented by the lysosomal inhibitor Bafilomycin A. This suggests, that other mechanisms than transendocytosis of costimulatory molcules by Tregs mediate these effects. In summary, these data show that CD40-licensing is a feasible tool to improve maturity of cytokine-treated DCs. However, CD40-licensing cannot induce IL-12 production in human DCs without TLR-stimulation and was not able to confer resistance against Treg-mediated T-cell proliferation inhibition. Thus, in order to strengthen DCs for cancer immunotherapy, CD40-licensing should be further investigated in combination with TLR-triggering DC-maturation cocktails. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Immunology ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 109 (2) ◽  
pp. 197-208 ◽  
Author(s):  
Timothy J. Powell ◽  
Chris D. Jenkins ◽  
Ryuichi Hattori ◽  
G. Gordon MacPherson

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