9 research outputs found
Enhanced indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase activity in patients with severe sepsis and septic shock.
International audienceBACKGROUND: Severe sepsis results in a sustained deleterious immune dysregulation. Indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO), the rate-limiting enzyme of tryptophan catabolism, plays a pivotal role in immune tolerance and is induced during various inflammatory conditions. METHODS: Plasma samples obtained from patients with septic shock (n = 38), severe sepsis (n = 35), or sepsis (n = 10) and from healthy donors (n = 26) were analyzed for IDO activity by high-performance liquid chromatography. Lymphocyte, monocyte, and regulatory T cell counts as well as monocytic human leukocyte antigen DR (HLA-DR) expression were quantified by flow cytometry. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells and purified CD14(+) and CD14(-) fractions were assayed in vitro for spontaneous and inducible IDO expression and activity. RESULTS: IDO activity gradually increased according to sepsis severity, and septic patients who died had higher IDO activity on admission than did survivors (P = .013). Monocytes were a major source of active IDO in normal peripheral blood. The percentage and absolute number of circulating CD14(+) cells were increased in septic patients, and their monocytes remained fully able to produce functional IDO after NF-kappaB-independent interferon gamma stimulation but not through NF-kappaB-dependent Toll-like receptor engagement. CONCLUSIONS: IDO activity is increased during severe sepsis and septic shock and is associated with mortality. IDO production could be used to better characterize monocyte reprogramming in sepsis
Activated CD4(+) T Cells impact adipose-serived stromal cell function through CD40-dependant activation
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Regulatory B Cells Contribute to the Clinical Response After Bone Marrow-Derived Mesenchymal Stromal Cell Infusion in Patients With Systemic Sclerosis
International audiencecenter dot Initial overexpression of profibrotic factors by B cells is associated with a lack of clinical response to mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) in patients with severe systemic sclerosis (SSc). center dot Increase of regulatory B cells is a marker of clinical response to MSCs in SSc patients. center dot MSCs directly upregulate IL-10 production by activated B cells in vitro. Mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) have recently emerged as an interesting therapeutic approach for patients with progressive systemic sclerosis (SSc), a rare and life-threatening orphan autoimmune disease. Whereas MSC immunomodulatory potential is considered as a central mechanism for their clinical benefit, very few data are available on the impact of MSCs on immune cell subsets in vivo. In the current extended study of a phase I/II clinical trial exploring the injection of a single dose of allogeneic bone marrow-MSCs (alloBM-MSCs) in patients with severe SSc (NCT02213705), we performed a longitudinal in-depth characterization of circulating immune cells in 19 MSC-treated patients, including 14 responders and 5 non-responders. By a combination of flow cytometry and transcriptomic analyses, we highlighted an increase in circulating CD24(hi)CD27(pos)CD38(lo/neg) memory B cells, the main IL-10-producing regulatory B cell (Breg) subset, and an upregulation of IL10 expression in ex-vivo purified B cells, specifically in responder patients, early after the alloBM-MSC infusion. In addition, a deeper alteration of the B-cell compartment before alloBM-MSC treatment, including a higher expression of profibrotic cytokines IL6 and TGF beta by sorted B cells was associated with a non-responder clinical status. Finally, BM-MSCs were able to directly upregulate IL-10 production in activated B cells in vitro. These data suggest that cytokine-producing B cells, in particular Breg, are pivotal effectors of BM-MSC therapeutic activity in SSc. Their quantification as activity biomarkers in MSC potency assays and patient selection criteria may be considered to reach optimal clinical benefit when designing MSC-based clinical trials
Functional alteration of the lymphoma stromal cell niche by the cytokine context: role of indoleamine-2,3 dioxygenase.
International audienceHuman mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) strongly repress activated T-cell proliferation through the production of a complex set of soluble factors, including the tryptophan-catabolizing enzyme indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO), which is induced by IFN-gamma. Conversely, MSCs support survival of follicular lymphoma (FL) B cells, in particular after exposure to tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF) and lymphotoxin-alpha1beta2 (LT). The role of MSCs on normal and malignant B-cell growth in steady-state and inflammatory conditions remains to be fully explored. We show here that resting MSCs sustain activated normal B-cell proliferation and survival, whereas IFN-gamma-conditioned MSCs mediate IDO-dependent B-cell growth arrest and apoptosis. IFN-gamma, TNF, and LT are significantly overexpressed by the microenvironment of invaded FL-lymph nodes, but their relative expression patterns are highly heterogeneous between samples. In vitro, IFN-gamma abrogates the B-cell supportive phenotype induced by TNF and LT on MSCs. Moreover, IFN-gamma overrules the growth promoting effect of MSCs on primary purified FL B cells. Altogether, these results underline the crucial role of the cytokine context in the local crosstalk between malignant cells and their microenvironment and provide new insights into our knowledge of the FL cell niche that emerges as a new promising target for innovative therapeutic strategies
Lenalidomide triggers T-cell effector functions in vivo in patients with follicular lymphoma
International audienceThe immunomodulatory drug lenalidomide is used in patients with follicular lymphoma (FL) with the aim of stimulating T-cell antitumor immune response. However, little is known about the effects of lenalidomide on T-cell biology in vivo in patients with FL. We thus undertook an extensive longitudinal immunologic study, including phenotypic, transcriptomic, and functional analyses, on 44 first-line and 27 relapsed/refractory patients enrolled in the GALEN trial (Obinutuzumab Combined With Lenalidomide for Relapsed or Refractory Follicular B-Cell Lymphoma) to test the efficacy of lenalidomide and obinutuzumab combination in patients with FL. Lenalidomide rapidly and transiently induced an activated T-cell phenotype, including HLA-DR, Tim-3, CD137, and programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) upregulation. Furthermore, sequential RNA-sequencing of sorted PD-1+ and PD-1- T-cell subsets revealed that lenalidomide triggered a strong enrichment for several gene signatures related to effector memory T-cell features, including proliferation, antigen receptor signaling, and immune synapse restoration; all were validated at the phenotypic level and with ex vivo functional assays. Correlative analyses pinpointed a negative clinical impact of high effector T-cell and regulatory T-cell percentages before and during treatment. Our findings bring new insight in lenalidomide mechanisms of action at work in vivo and will fuel a new rationale for the design of combination therapies
Proteasomal Indoleamine 2,3-Dioxygenase Degradation Reduces the Immunosuppressive Potential of Clinical Grade-Mesenchymal Stromal Cells Undergoing Replicative Senescence
International audienceOwing to their immunosuppressive properties, mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) obtained from bone marrow (BM-MSCs) or adipose tissue (ASCs) are considered a promising tool for cell therapy. However, important issues should be considered to ensure the reproducible production of efficient and safe clinical-grade MSCs. In particular, high expansion rate, associated with progressive senescence, was recently proposed as one of the parameters that could alter MSC functionality. In this study, we directly address the consequences of replicative senescence on BM-MSC and ASC immunomodulatory properties. We demonstrate that MSCs produced according to GMP procedures inhibit less efficiently T-cell, but not Natural Killer (NK)- and B-cell, proliferation after reaching senescence. Senescence-related loss-of-function is associated with a decreased indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) activity in response to inflammatory stimuli. In particular, although STAT-1-dependent IDO expression is transcriptionally induced at a similar level in senescent and nonsenescent MSCs, IDO protein is specifically degraded by the proteasome in senescent ASCs and BM-MSCs, a process that could be reversed by the MG132 proteasome inhibitor. These data encourage the use of appropriate quality controls focusing on immunosuppressive mechanisms before translating clinical-grade MSCs in the clinic