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Adenosinergic Pathway and Linked Suppression: Two Critical Suppressive Mechanisms of Human Donor Antigen Specific Regulatory T Cell Lines Expanded Post Transplant

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 depende...

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Autores principales: Tripathi, Sudipta, Martin-Moreno, Paloma L., Kavalam, George, Schreiber, Brittany L., Waaga-Gasser, Ana Maria, Chandraker, Anil
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8968184/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35371066
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2022.849939
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author Tripathi, Sudipta
Martin-Moreno, Paloma L.
Kavalam, George
Schreiber, Brittany L.
Waaga-Gasser, Ana Maria
Chandraker, Anil
author_facet Tripathi, Sudipta
Martin-Moreno, Paloma L.
Kavalam, George
Schreiber, Brittany L.
Waaga-Gasser, Ana Maria
Chandraker, Anil
author_sort Tripathi, Sudipta
collection PubMed
description 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.
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spelling pubmed-89681842022-04-01 Adenosinergic Pathway and Linked Suppression: Two Critical Suppressive Mechanisms of Human Donor Antigen Specific Regulatory T Cell Lines Expanded Post Transplant Tripathi, Sudipta Martin-Moreno, Paloma L. Kavalam, George Schreiber, Brittany L. Waaga-Gasser, Ana Maria Chandraker, Anil Front Immunol Immunology 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. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-03-17 /pmc/articles/PMC8968184/ /pubmed/35371066 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2022.849939 Text en Copyright © 2022 Tripathi, Martin-Moreno, Kavalam, Schreiber, Waaga-Gasser and Chandraker 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
Tripathi, Sudipta
Martin-Moreno, Paloma L.
Kavalam, George
Schreiber, Brittany L.
Waaga-Gasser, Ana Maria
Chandraker, Anil
Adenosinergic Pathway and Linked Suppression: Two Critical Suppressive Mechanisms of Human Donor Antigen Specific Regulatory T Cell Lines Expanded Post Transplant
title Adenosinergic Pathway and Linked Suppression: Two Critical Suppressive Mechanisms of Human Donor Antigen Specific Regulatory T Cell Lines Expanded Post Transplant
title_full Adenosinergic Pathway and Linked Suppression: Two Critical Suppressive Mechanisms of Human Donor Antigen Specific Regulatory T Cell Lines Expanded Post Transplant
title_fullStr Adenosinergic Pathway and Linked Suppression: Two Critical Suppressive Mechanisms of Human Donor Antigen Specific Regulatory T Cell Lines Expanded Post Transplant
title_full_unstemmed Adenosinergic Pathway and Linked Suppression: Two Critical Suppressive Mechanisms of Human Donor Antigen Specific Regulatory T Cell Lines Expanded Post Transplant
title_short Adenosinergic Pathway and Linked Suppression: Two Critical Suppressive Mechanisms of Human Donor Antigen Specific Regulatory T Cell Lines Expanded Post Transplant
title_sort adenosinergic pathway and linked suppression: two critical suppressive mechanisms of human donor antigen specific regulatory t cell lines expanded post transplant
topic Immunology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8968184/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35371066
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2022.849939
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