Cargando…

CD40 Activity on Mesenchymal Cells Negatively Regulates OX40L to Maintain Bone Marrow Immune Homeostasis Under Stress Conditions

BACKGROUND: Within the bone marrow (BM), mature T cells are maintained under homeostatic conditions to facilitate proper hematopoietic development. This homeostasis depends upon a peculiar elevated frequency of regulatory T cells (Tregs) and immune regulatory activities from BM-mesenchymal stem cell...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Bassani, Barbara, Tripodo, Claudio, Portararo, Paola, Gulino, Alessandro, Botti, Laura, Chiodoni, Claudia, Jachetti, Elena, Bolli, Niccolò, Ciciarello, Marilena, Joehrens, Korinna, Anagnostopoulos, Ioannis, Na, Il-Kang, Curti, Antonio, Colombo, Mario P., Sangaletti, Sabina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8168593/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34084166
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2021.662048
_version_ 1783701906272550912
author Bassani, Barbara
Tripodo, Claudio
Portararo, Paola
Gulino, Alessandro
Botti, Laura
Chiodoni, Claudia
Jachetti, Elena
Bolli, Niccolò
Ciciarello, Marilena
Joehrens, Korinna
Anagnostopoulos, Ioannis
Na, Il-Kang
Curti, Antonio
Colombo, Mario P.
Sangaletti, Sabina
author_facet Bassani, Barbara
Tripodo, Claudio
Portararo, Paola
Gulino, Alessandro
Botti, Laura
Chiodoni, Claudia
Jachetti, Elena
Bolli, Niccolò
Ciciarello, Marilena
Joehrens, Korinna
Anagnostopoulos, Ioannis
Na, Il-Kang
Curti, Antonio
Colombo, Mario P.
Sangaletti, Sabina
author_sort Bassani, Barbara
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Within the bone marrow (BM), mature T cells are maintained under homeostatic conditions to facilitate proper hematopoietic development. This homeostasis depends upon a peculiar elevated frequency of regulatory T cells (Tregs) and immune regulatory activities from BM-mesenchymal stem cells (BM-MSCs). In response to BM transplantation (BMT), the conditioning regimen exposes the BM to a dramatic induction of inflammatory cytokines and causes an unbalanced T-effector (Teff) and Treg ratio. This imbalance negatively impacts hematopoiesis, particularly in regard to B-cell lymphopoiesis that requires an intact cross-talk between BM-MSCs and Tregs. The mechanisms underlying the ability of BM-MSCs to restore Treg homeostasis and proper B-cell development are currently unknown. METHODS: We studied the role of host radio-resistant cell-derived CD40 in restoring Teff/Treg homeostasis and proper B-cell development in a murine model of BMT. We characterized the host cellular source of CD40 and performed radiation chimera analyses by transplanting WT or Cd40-KO with WT BM in the presence of T-reg and co-infusing WT or - Cd40-KO BM-MSCs. Residual host and donor T cell expansion and activation (cytokine production) and also the expression of Treg fitness markers and conversion to Th17 were analyzed. The presence of Cd40+ BM-MSCs was analyzed in a human setting in correlation with the frequency of B-cell precursors in patients who underwent HSCT and variably developed acute graft-versus-host (aGVDH) disease. RESULTS: CD40 expression is nearly undetectable in the BM, yet a Cd40-KO recipient of WT donor chimera exhibited impaired B-cell lymphopoiesis and Treg development. Lethal irradiation promotes CD40 and OX40L expression in radio-resistant BM-MSCs through the induction of pro-inflammatory cytokines. OX40L favors Teff expansion and activation at the expense of Tregs; however, the expression of CD40 dampens OX40L expression and restores Treg homeostasis, thus facilitating proper B-cell development. Indeed, in contrast to dendritic cells in secondary lymphoid organs that require CD40 triggers to express OX40L, BM-MSCs require CD40 to inhibit OX40L expression. CONCLUSIONS: CD40+ BM-MSCs are immune regulatory elements within BM. Loss of CD40 results in uncontrolled T cell activation due to a reduced number of Tregs, and B-cell development is consequently impaired. GVHD provides an example of how a loss of CD40+ BM-MSCs and a reduction in B-cell precursors may occur in a human setting.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8168593
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-81685932021-06-02 CD40 Activity on Mesenchymal Cells Negatively Regulates OX40L to Maintain Bone Marrow Immune Homeostasis Under Stress Conditions Bassani, Barbara Tripodo, Claudio Portararo, Paola Gulino, Alessandro Botti, Laura Chiodoni, Claudia Jachetti, Elena Bolli, Niccolò Ciciarello, Marilena Joehrens, Korinna Anagnostopoulos, Ioannis Na, Il-Kang Curti, Antonio Colombo, Mario P. Sangaletti, Sabina Front Immunol Immunology BACKGROUND: Within the bone marrow (BM), mature T cells are maintained under homeostatic conditions to facilitate proper hematopoietic development. This homeostasis depends upon a peculiar elevated frequency of regulatory T cells (Tregs) and immune regulatory activities from BM-mesenchymal stem cells (BM-MSCs). In response to BM transplantation (BMT), the conditioning regimen exposes the BM to a dramatic induction of inflammatory cytokines and causes an unbalanced T-effector (Teff) and Treg ratio. This imbalance negatively impacts hematopoiesis, particularly in regard to B-cell lymphopoiesis that requires an intact cross-talk between BM-MSCs and Tregs. The mechanisms underlying the ability of BM-MSCs to restore Treg homeostasis and proper B-cell development are currently unknown. METHODS: We studied the role of host radio-resistant cell-derived CD40 in restoring Teff/Treg homeostasis and proper B-cell development in a murine model of BMT. We characterized the host cellular source of CD40 and performed radiation chimera analyses by transplanting WT or Cd40-KO with WT BM in the presence of T-reg and co-infusing WT or - Cd40-KO BM-MSCs. Residual host and donor T cell expansion and activation (cytokine production) and also the expression of Treg fitness markers and conversion to Th17 were analyzed. The presence of Cd40+ BM-MSCs was analyzed in a human setting in correlation with the frequency of B-cell precursors in patients who underwent HSCT and variably developed acute graft-versus-host (aGVDH) disease. RESULTS: CD40 expression is nearly undetectable in the BM, yet a Cd40-KO recipient of WT donor chimera exhibited impaired B-cell lymphopoiesis and Treg development. Lethal irradiation promotes CD40 and OX40L expression in radio-resistant BM-MSCs through the induction of pro-inflammatory cytokines. OX40L favors Teff expansion and activation at the expense of Tregs; however, the expression of CD40 dampens OX40L expression and restores Treg homeostasis, thus facilitating proper B-cell development. Indeed, in contrast to dendritic cells in secondary lymphoid organs that require CD40 triggers to express OX40L, BM-MSCs require CD40 to inhibit OX40L expression. CONCLUSIONS: CD40+ BM-MSCs are immune regulatory elements within BM. Loss of CD40 results in uncontrolled T cell activation due to a reduced number of Tregs, and B-cell development is consequently impaired. GVHD provides an example of how a loss of CD40+ BM-MSCs and a reduction in B-cell precursors may occur in a human setting. Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-05-18 /pmc/articles/PMC8168593/ /pubmed/34084166 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2021.662048 Text en Copyright © 2021 Bassani, Tripodo, Portararo, Gulino, Botti, Chiodoni, Jachetti, Bolli, Ciciarello, Joehrens, Anagnostopoulos, Na, Curti, Colombo and Sangaletti https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Immunology
Bassani, Barbara
Tripodo, Claudio
Portararo, Paola
Gulino, Alessandro
Botti, Laura
Chiodoni, Claudia
Jachetti, Elena
Bolli, Niccolò
Ciciarello, Marilena
Joehrens, Korinna
Anagnostopoulos, Ioannis
Na, Il-Kang
Curti, Antonio
Colombo, Mario P.
Sangaletti, Sabina
CD40 Activity on Mesenchymal Cells Negatively Regulates OX40L to Maintain Bone Marrow Immune Homeostasis Under Stress Conditions
title CD40 Activity on Mesenchymal Cells Negatively Regulates OX40L to Maintain Bone Marrow Immune Homeostasis Under Stress Conditions
title_full CD40 Activity on Mesenchymal Cells Negatively Regulates OX40L to Maintain Bone Marrow Immune Homeostasis Under Stress Conditions
title_fullStr CD40 Activity on Mesenchymal Cells Negatively Regulates OX40L to Maintain Bone Marrow Immune Homeostasis Under Stress Conditions
title_full_unstemmed CD40 Activity on Mesenchymal Cells Negatively Regulates OX40L to Maintain Bone Marrow Immune Homeostasis Under Stress Conditions
title_short CD40 Activity on Mesenchymal Cells Negatively Regulates OX40L to Maintain Bone Marrow Immune Homeostasis Under Stress Conditions
title_sort cd40 activity on mesenchymal cells negatively regulates ox40l to maintain bone marrow immune homeostasis under stress conditions
topic Immunology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8168593/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34084166
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2021.662048
work_keys_str_mv AT bassanibarbara cd40activityonmesenchymalcellsnegativelyregulatesox40ltomaintainbonemarrowimmunehomeostasisunderstressconditions
AT tripodoclaudio cd40activityonmesenchymalcellsnegativelyregulatesox40ltomaintainbonemarrowimmunehomeostasisunderstressconditions
AT portararopaola cd40activityonmesenchymalcellsnegativelyregulatesox40ltomaintainbonemarrowimmunehomeostasisunderstressconditions
AT gulinoalessandro cd40activityonmesenchymalcellsnegativelyregulatesox40ltomaintainbonemarrowimmunehomeostasisunderstressconditions
AT bottilaura cd40activityonmesenchymalcellsnegativelyregulatesox40ltomaintainbonemarrowimmunehomeostasisunderstressconditions
AT chiodoniclaudia cd40activityonmesenchymalcellsnegativelyregulatesox40ltomaintainbonemarrowimmunehomeostasisunderstressconditions
AT jachettielena cd40activityonmesenchymalcellsnegativelyregulatesox40ltomaintainbonemarrowimmunehomeostasisunderstressconditions
AT bolliniccolo cd40activityonmesenchymalcellsnegativelyregulatesox40ltomaintainbonemarrowimmunehomeostasisunderstressconditions
AT ciciarellomarilena cd40activityonmesenchymalcellsnegativelyregulatesox40ltomaintainbonemarrowimmunehomeostasisunderstressconditions
AT joehrenskorinna cd40activityonmesenchymalcellsnegativelyregulatesox40ltomaintainbonemarrowimmunehomeostasisunderstressconditions
AT anagnostopoulosioannis cd40activityonmesenchymalcellsnegativelyregulatesox40ltomaintainbonemarrowimmunehomeostasisunderstressconditions
AT nailkang cd40activityonmesenchymalcellsnegativelyregulatesox40ltomaintainbonemarrowimmunehomeostasisunderstressconditions
AT curtiantonio cd40activityonmesenchymalcellsnegativelyregulatesox40ltomaintainbonemarrowimmunehomeostasisunderstressconditions
AT colombomariop cd40activityonmesenchymalcellsnegativelyregulatesox40ltomaintainbonemarrowimmunehomeostasisunderstressconditions
AT sangalettisabina cd40activityonmesenchymalcellsnegativelyregulatesox40ltomaintainbonemarrowimmunehomeostasisunderstressconditions