scholarly journals Dimethyl fumarate–induced lymphopenia in MS due to differential T-cell subset apoptosis

2017 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. e340 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mahtab Ghadiri ◽  
Ayman Rezk ◽  
Rui Li ◽  
Ashley Evans ◽  
Felix Luessi ◽  
...  

Objective:To examine the mechanism underlying the preferential CD8+ vs CD4+ T-cell lymphopenia induced by dimethyl fumarate (DMF) treatment of MS.Methods:Total lymphocyte counts and comprehensive T-cell subset analyses were performed in high-quality samples obtained from patients with MS prior to and serially following DMF treatment initiation. Random coefficient mixed-effects analysis was used to model the trajectory of T-cell subset losses in vivo. Survival and apoptosis of distinct T-cell subsets were assessed following in vitro exposure to DMF.Results:Best-fit modeling indicated that the DMF-induced preferential reductions in CD8+ vs CD4+ T-cell counts nonetheless followed similar depletion kinetics, suggesting a similar rather than distinct mechanism involved in losses of both the CD8+ and CD4+ T cells. In vitro, DMF exposure resulted in dose-dependent reductions in T-cell survival, which were found to reflect apoptotic cell death. This DMF-induced apoptosis was greater for CD8+ vs CD4+, as well as for memory vs naive, and conventional vs regulatory T-cell subsets, a pattern which mirrored preferential T-cell subset losses that we observed during in vivo treatment of patients.Conclusions:Differential apoptosis mediated by DMF may underlie the preferential lymphopenia of distinct T-cell subsets, including CD8+ and memory T-cell subsets, seen in treated patients with MS. This differential susceptibility of distinct T-cell subsets to DMF-induced apoptosis may contribute to both the safety and efficacy profiles of DMF in patients with MS.

Neurology ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 92 (15) ◽  
pp. e1724-e1738 ◽  
Author(s):  
Devangi Mehta ◽  
Catherine Miller ◽  
Douglas L. Arnold ◽  
Eris Bame ◽  
Amit Bar-Or ◽  
...  

ObjectiveTo assess functional changes in lymphocyte repertoire and subsequent clinical implications during delayed-release dimethyl fumarate (DMF) treatment in patients with multiple sclerosis.MethodsUsing peripheral blood from several clinical trials of DMF, immune cell subsets were quantified using flow cytometry. For some patients, lymphocyte counts were assessed after DMF discontinuation. Incidence of adverse events, including serious and opportunistic infections, was assessed.ResultsIn DMF-treated patients, absolute lymphocyte counts (ALCs) demonstrated a pattern of decline followed by stabilization, which also was reflected in the global reduction in numbers of circulating functional lymphocyte subsets. The relative frequencies of circulating memory T- and B-cell populations declined and naive cells increased. No increased incidence of serious infection or malignancy was observed for patients treated with DMF, even when stratified by ALC or T-cell subset frequencies. For patients who discontinued DMF due to lymphopenia, ALCs increased after DMF discontinuation; recovery time varied by ALC level at discontinuation. T-cell subsets closely correlated with ALCs in both longitudinal and cross-sectional analyses.ConclusionsDMF shifted the immunophenotype of circulating lymphocyte subsets. ALCs were closely correlated with CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell counts, indicating that lymphocyte subset monitoring is not required for safety vigilance. No increased risk of serious infection was observed in patients with low T-cell subset counts. Monitoring ALC remains the most effective way of identifying patients at risk of subsequently developing prolonged moderate to severe lymphopenia, a risk factor for progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy in DMF-treated patients.Trial registration numbersEUDRA CT 2015-001973-42, NCT00168701, NCT00420212, NCT00451451, and NCT00835770.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (Suppl 3) ◽  
pp. A738-A738
Author(s):  
Bryan Grogan ◽  
Reice James ◽  
Michelle Ulrich ◽  
Shyra Gardai ◽  
Ryan Heiser ◽  
...  

BackgroundRegulatory T cells (Tregs) play an important role in maintaining immune homeostasis, preventing excessive inflammation in normal tissues. In cancer, Tregs hamper anti-tumor immunosurveillance and facilitate immune evasion. Selective targeting of intratumoral Tregs is a potentially promising treatment approach. Orthogonal evaluation of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) in solid tumors in mice and humans have identified CCR8, and several tumor necrosis family receptors (TNFRs), including TNFSFR8 (CD30), as receptors differentially upregulated on intratumoral Tregs compared to normal tissue Tregs and other intratumoral T cells, making these intriguing therapeutic targets.Brentuximab vedotin (BV) is approved for classical Hodgkin lymphoma (cHL) across multiple lines of therapy including frontline use in stage III/IV cHL in combination with doxorubicin, vinblastine, and dacarbazine. BV is also approved for certain CD30-expressing T-cell lymphomas. BV is comprised of a CD30-directed monoclonal antibody conjugated to the highly potent microtubule-disrupting agent monomethyl auristatin E (MMAE).The activity of BV in lymphomas is thought to primarily result from tumor directed intracellular MMAE release, leading to mitotic arrest and apoptotic cell death.The role CD30 plays in normal immune function is unclear, with both costimulatory and proapoptotic roles described. CD30 is transiently upregulated following activation of memory T cells and expression has been linked to highly activated/suppressive IRF4+ effector Tregs.MethodsHere we evaluated the activity of BV on CD30-expressing T cell subsets in vitro and in vivo.ResultsTreatment of enriched T cell subsets with clinically relevant concentrations of BV drove selective depletion of CD30-expressing Tregs > CD30-expressingCD4+ T memory cells, with minimal effects on CD30-expressing CD8+ T memory cells. In a humanized xeno-GVHD model, treatment with BV selectively depleted Tregs resulting in accelerated wasting and robust T cell expansion. The observed differential activity on Tregs is likely attributable to significant increases in CD30 expression and reduced efflux pump activity relative to other T cell subsets. Interestingly, blockade of CD25 signaling prevents CD30 expression on T cell subsets without impacting proliferation, suggesting a link between CD25, the high affinity IL-2 receptor, and CD30 expression.ConclusionsTogether, these data suggest that BV may have an immunomodulatory effect through selective depletion of highly suppressive CD30-expressing Tregs.AcknowledgementsThe authors would like to thank Michael Harrison, PharmD for their assistance in abstract preparation.Ethics ApprovalAnimals studies were approved by and conducted in accordance with Seattle Genetics Institutional Care and Use Committee protocol #SGE-024.


Author(s):  
Takayoshi Yamauchi ◽  
Toshifumi Hoki ◽  
Takaaki Oba ◽  
Kristopher Attwood ◽  
Xuefang Cao ◽  
...  

AbstractThe use of tumor mutation-derived neoantigen represents a promising approach for cancer vaccines. Preclinical and early-phase human clinical studies have shown the successful induction of tumor neoepitope-directed responses; however, overall clinical efficacy of neoantigen vaccines has been limited. One major obstacle of this strategy is the prevailing lack of sufficient understanding of the mechanism underlying the generation of neoantigen-specific CD8+ T cells. Here, we report a correlation between antitumor efficacy of neoantigen/toll-like receptor 3 (TLR3)/CD40 vaccination and the generation of antigen-specific CD8+ T cells expressing CX3C chemokine receptor 1 (CX3CR1) in a preclinical model. Mechanistic studies using mixed bone marrow chimeras identified that CD40 and CD80/86, but not CD70 signaling in Batf3-dependent conventional type 1 dendritic cells (cDC1s) is required for antitumor efficacy of neoantigen vaccine and generation of neoantigen-specific CX3CR1+ CD8+ T cells. Although CX3CR1+ CD8+ T cells exhibited robust in vitro effector function, depletion of this subset did not alter the antitumor efficacy of neoantigen/TLR3/CD40 agonists vaccination, suggesting that the expanded CX3CR1+ CD8+ T cell subset represents the post-differentiated in vivo effective CX3CR1-negative CD8+ T cell subset. Taken together, our results reveal a critical role of CD40 and CD80/86 signaling in cDC1s in antitumor efficacy of neoantigen-based therapeutic vaccines, and implicate the potential utility of CX3CR1 as a circulating predictive T-cell biomarker in vaccine therapy.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 225-225
Author(s):  
Kazuyuki Murase ◽  
Yutaka Kawano ◽  
Jeremy Ryan ◽  
Ken-ichi Matsuoka ◽  
Gregory Bascug ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 225 CD4+CD25+Foxp3+ regulatory T cells (Treg) are known to play a central role in the maintenance of self-tolerance and immune homeostasis. After allogeneic stem cell transplantation, impaired recovery of Treg is associated with the development of cGVHD. Interleukin-2 (IL-2) is a critical regulator of Treg development, expansion and survival and lack of IL-2 results in Treg deficiency. In patients with cGVHD, we previously demonstrated that Treg proliferate at high levels but this subset is also highly susceptible to apoptosis leading to inadequate Treg numbers (Matsuoka et al. JCI 2010). We also reported that low-dose IL-2 administration resulted in selective expansion of Treg in vivo and clinical improvement of cGVHD (Koreth et al. NEJM 2011). To identify mechanisms responsible for increased Treg susceptibility to apoptosis in cGVHD we used a new flow cytometry-based assay to measure mitochondrial membrane depolarization in response to a panel of pro-apoptotic BH3 peptides (BIM, BID, BAD, NOXA, PUMA, BMF, HRK). This assessment allowed us to compare BH3 peptide-induced mitochondrial membrane depolarization (“priming”) in different T cell subsets, including CD4 Treg, conventional CD4 T cells (CD4 Tcon), and CD8 T cells. Expression of Bcl-2, CD95 and Ki67 were also studied in each T cell subset. We studied peripheral blood samples from 36 patients with hematologic malignancies (median age 59 yr) who are > 2 years post HSCT (27 patients with cGVHD and 9 patients without cGVHD) and 15 patients who received daily subcutaneous IL-2 for 8 weeks for treatment of steroid-refractory cGvHD. Severity of cGVHD was classified according to NIH criteria. In patients without cGVHD, BH3 priming was similar in all 3 T cell subsets (CD4 Treg, CD4 Tcon and CD8). In patients with cGVHD, CD4 Treg were more primed than CD4 Tcon when challenged with BIM, BAD, PUMA, BMF and the combination of BAD + NOXA peptides (p<0.01 – 0.0001). Treg were more primed than CD8 T cells when challenged with PUMA peptide (p<0.0001), but priming in Treg and CD8 T cells was similar for other BH3 peptides in patients with cGVHD. We also compared BH3 priming of each T cell subset in patients with different grades of cGVHD. When challenged with BH3 peptides, Treg, Tcon and CD8 T cells were less primed in patients with severe cGVHD. In patients with cGVHD, Treg expressed higher levels of Ki-67, higher levels of CD95 and lower levels of Bcl-2 than Tcon. Expression of CD95 did not vary with severity of GVHD in any T cell subset, but expression of Bcl-2 was significantly increased in all subsets in patients with severe cGVHD. Increased BH3 priming and high expression of CD95 indicate that Treg are more susceptible to apoptosis than Tcon in cGVHD. However, both Treg and Tcon become less primed and Bcl-2 levels increase in severe cGVHD suggesting that these cells are less susceptible to mitochondrial pathway apoptosis. Since the total number of Treg and Tcon are significantly reduced in patients with cGVHD, these findings suggest that the remaining circulating cells are relatively resistant to mitochondrial pathway apoptosis. CD95 expression in Treg remains high indicating no change in death receptor pathway apoptosis. Daily treatment with low-dose IL-2 for 8 weeks selectively expands Treg in vivo in patients with severe cGVHD. As the number of Treg increase, BH3 profiling shows that these cells gradually become more primed and therefore more susceptible to mitochondrial pathway apoptosis. Taken together, these studies help define the complex and distinct pathways that regulate survival in different T cell subsets and changes in these pathways that occur in patients with chronic GVHD. These pathways play important roles in the maintenance of T cell homeostasis and targeting these complex pathways can provide new opportunities to promote immune tolerance after allogeneic HSCT. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Da Som Kim ◽  
Youngjae Park ◽  
Jeong-Won Choi ◽  
Sung-Hwan Park ◽  
Mi-La Cho ◽  
...  

ObjectiveTacrolimus (Tac) is an immunosuppressant used in the treatment of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE); however, it induces T cell subset imbalances by reducing regulatory T (Treg) cells. Lactobacillus acidophilus (LA) is reported to have therapeutic efficacy in immune-mediated diseases via T cell regulation.MethodsThis study investigated whether a combination therapy of LA and Tac improves the therapeutic efficacy of Tac by modulating T cell subset populations in an animal model of SLE. Eight-week-old MRL/lpr mice were orally administered with 5 mg/kg of Tac and/or 50 mg/kg of LA daily for 8 weeks. Cecal microbiota compositions, serum autoantibodies levels, the degree of proteinuria, histological changes in the kidney, and populations of various T cell subsets in the spleen were analyzed.ResultsMice presented with significant gut dysbiosis, which were subsequently recovered by the combination treatment of Tac and LA. Double negative T cells in the peripheral blood and spleens of MRL/lpr mice were significantly decreased by the combination therapy. The combination treatment reduced serum levels of anti-dsDNA antibodies and Immunoglobulin G2a, and renal pathology scores were also markedly alleviated. The combination therapy induced Treg cells and decreased T helper 17 (Th17) cells both in vitro and in vivo. In vitro treatment with LA induced the production of indoleamine-2,3-dioxygenase, programmed death-ligand 1, and interleukin-10 via the specific intracellular adhesion molecule-3 grabbing non-integrin homolog-related 3 receptor signals.ConclusionThe present findings indicate that LA augments the therapeutic effect of Tac and modulates Th17/Treg balance in a murine model of SLE.


Blood ◽  
1993 ◽  
Vol 82 (1) ◽  
pp. 298-306 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Theobald ◽  
D Bunjes

Recent studies have shown that host-reactive interleukin-2 (IL-2)- secreting donor T lymphocytes (TI) are critically involved in the development of acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) after allogeneic HLA-identical sibling bone marrow transplantation (BMT). To further characterize the responding TI, we determined the frequency of pretransplant IL-2-secreting TI-precursors (TI-p) between eight HLA-A, - B, -C, -DR, and -DQ-identical sibling donor-host pairs in both the graft-versus-host (GVH) and the host-versus-graft (HVG) direction. High frequencies of pretransplant host-reactive donor TI-p (1/18,000 to 1/49,000) were detectable in five patients with grade II acute GVHD. Donor-reactive host TI-p (1/3,700 to 1/31,000) were observed in previously in vivo primed (n = 5) and unprimed (n = 1) patients. In two pairs tested after previous in vivo priming, pretransplant donor- reactive host TI-p were highly enriched within the CD45RO+ memory T- cell subset. Previously unprimed host-reactive donor TI-p occurred in almost equal frequencies within CD45RO+ and CD45RO- T cells. Both CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell subsets contributed in comparable frequencies to host- and donor-reactive TI-p. Recognition of minor histocompatibility (mH) antigens by CD8+ TI-p appeared to be class I major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-restricted, whereas CD4+ TI-p operated in a class II (HLA- DR) MHC-restricted fashion. Even between oligonucleotide-defined HLA- DPB1-disparate sibling donor-host pairs (n = 3), either responding T- cell subset was found to recognize cellularly defined mH antigens. These data indicate that various T-cell subsets contribute to host- and donor-reactive IL-2-secreting TI in allogeneic sibling BMT.


2020 ◽  
Vol 117 (36) ◽  
pp. 22367-22377
Author(s):  
Claire L. McIntyre ◽  
Leticia Monin ◽  
Jesse C. Rop ◽  
Thomas D. Otto ◽  
Carl S. Goodyear ◽  
...  

The γδ T cells reside predominantly at barrier sites and play essential roles in immune protection against infection and cancer. Despite recent advances in the development of γδ T cell immunotherapy, our understanding of the basic biology of these cells, including how their numbers are regulated in vivo, remains poor. This is particularly true for tissue-resident γδ T cells. We have identified the β2family of integrins as regulators of γδ T cells. β2-integrin–deficient mice displayed a striking increase in numbers of IL-17–producing Vγ6Vδ1+γδ T cells in the lungs, uterus, and circulation. Thymic development of this population was normal. However, single-cell RNA sequencing revealed the enrichment of genes associated with T cell survival and proliferation specifically in β2-integrin–deficient IL-17+cells compared to their wild-type counterparts. Indeed, β2-integrin–deficient Vγ6+cells from the lungs showed reduced apoptosis ex vivo, suggesting that increased survival contributes to the accumulation of these cells in β2-integrin–deficient tissues. Furthermore, our data revealed an unexpected role for β2integrins in promoting the thymic development of the IFNγ-producing CD27+Vγ4+γδ T cell subset. Together, our data reveal that β2integrins are important regulators of γδ T cell homeostasis, inhibiting the survival of IL-17–producing Vγ6Vδ1+cells and promoting the thymic development of the IFNγ-producing Vγ4+subset. Our study introduces unprecedented mechanisms of control for γδ T cell subsets.


Blood ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 90 (9) ◽  
pp. 3662-3672 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nobukazu Watanabe ◽  
Stephen C. De Rosa ◽  
Anthony Cmelak ◽  
Richard Hoppe ◽  
Leonore A. Herzenberg ◽  
...  

Abstract We investigated the representation of T cells in patients who had been treated for Hodgkin's disease (HD). We found a marked depletion in both CD4 and CD8 naive T-cell counts that persists up to 30 years after completion of treatment. In contrast, CD4 and CD8 memory T-cell subsets recovered to normal or above normal levels by 5 years posttreatment. Thus, the previously-reported long-term deficit in total CD4 T-cell counts after treatment for HD is due to specific depletion of naive T cells. Similarly, total CD8 T-cell counts return to normal by 5 years only because CD8 memory T cells expand to higher than normal levels. These findings suggest that the treatment (mediastinal irradiation) results in a longterm dysregulation of T-cell subset homeostasis. The profound depletion of naive T cells may explain the altered T-cell function in treated patients, including the poor response to immunization after treatment for HD. Further, in some individuals, we identified expansions of unusual subsets expressing low levels of CD8. Eight-color fluorescence-activated cell sorting analyses showed that these cells largely express CD8αα homodimers and CD57, consistent with the phenotype of potentially extrathymically derived T cells. In addition, these cells, both CD4+ and CD4−, are probably cytotoxic lymphocytes, as they express high levels of intracellular perforin. In adults treated for HD, an increased activity of extrathymic T-cell differentiation may partially compensate for the loss of thymic-derived T cells.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 119 (11) ◽  
pp. 2443-2451 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tatiana Akimova ◽  
Ulf H. Beier ◽  
Yujie Liu ◽  
Liqing Wang ◽  
Wayne W. Hancock

Abstract Clinical and experimental studies show that inhibition of histone/protein deacetylases (HDAC) can have important anti-neoplastic effects through cytotoxic and proapoptotic mechanisms. There are also increasing data from nononcologic settings that HDAC inhibitors (HDACi) can exhibit useful anti-inflammatory effects in vitro and in vivo, unrelated to cytotoxicity or apoptosis. These effects can be cell-, tissue-, or context-dependent and can involve modulation of specific inflammatory signaling pathways as well as epigenetic mechanisms. We review recent advances in the understanding of how HDACi alter immune and inflammatory processes, with a particular focus on the effects of HDACi on T-cell biology, including the activation and functions of conventional T cells and the unique T-cell subset, composed of Foxp3+ T-regulatory cells. Although studies are still needed to tease out details of the various biologic roles of individual HDAC isoforms and their corresponding selective inhibitors, the anti-inflammatory effects of HDACi are already promising and may lead to new therapeutic avenues in transplantation and autoimmune diseases.


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