Refine
Has Fulltext
- yes (2) (remove)
Is part of the Bibliography
- yes (2)
Document Type
- Doctoral Thesis (2) (remove)
Keywords
- Homing (2) (remove)
MDSCs are suppressive immune cells with a high relevance in various pathologies including cancer, autoimmunity, and chronic infections. Surface marker expression of MDSCs resembles monocytes and neutrophils which have immunostimulatory functions instead of suppressing T cells. Therefore, finding specific surface markers for MDSCs is important for MDSC research and therapeutic MDSC manipulation. In this study, we analyzed if the integrin VLA-1 has the potential as a novel MDSC marker. VLA-1 was expressed by M-MDSCs but not by G-MDSCs as well as by Teff cells. VLA-1 deficiency did not impact iNOS expression, the distribution of M-MDSC and G-MDSC subsets, and the suppressive capacity of MDSCs towards naïve and Teff cells in vitro. In mice, VLA-1 had no effect on the homing capability of MDSCs to the spleen, which is a major reservoir for MDSCs. Since the splenic red pulp contains collagen IV and VLA-1 binds collagen IV with a high affinity, we found MDSCs and Teff cells in this area as expected. We showed that T cell suppression in the spleen, indicated by reduced T cell recovery and proliferation as well as increased apoptosis and cell death, partially depended on VLA-1 expression by the MDSCs. In a mouse model of multiple sclerosis, MDSC injection prior to disease onset led to a decrease of the disease score, and this effect was significantly reduced when MDSCs were VLA-1 deficient. The expression of Sema7A by Teff cells, a ligand for VLA-1 which is implicated in negative T cell regulation, resulted in a slightly stronger Teff cell suppression by MDSCs compared to Sema7A deficient T cells. Live cell imaging and intravital 2-photon microscopy showed that the interaction time of MDSCs and Teff cells was shorter when MDSCs lacked VLA 1 expression, however VLA-1 expression had no impact on MDSC mobility. Therefore, the VLA-1-dependent interaction of MDSC and Teff cells on collagen IV in the splenic red pulp is implicated MDSC-mediated Teff cell suppression.
Gegenstand der Arbeit: Es wurde der Einfluss einer Ausreifung dendritischer Zellen mit Poly(I:C), R848 und Prostaglandin E2 (=tlrDCs) zur Verwendung im Rahmen der Tumorvakzine untersucht. Für den Einsatz einer doppelten TLR-Stimulation gibt es zahlreiche zellphysiologische Gründe, wobei PGE2 als Motilitätsförderer eingesetzt wird. Es besitzt negative Teilwirkungen auf die Zytokinsekretion, eine verbesserte Migration stellt aber die wichtigste Stellgröße zur Optimierung der Tumorvakzine dar.
Ergebnisse: Für tlrDCs konnte neben einer hohen Fähigkeit zu Migration und Kostimulation eine überlegene Immunstimulation für naive CTLs und TH1/TC1-Antworten in einem antigenspezifischen Primingmodell nachgewiesen werden. Eine Ausreifungsdauer von 16 h erscheint für die Zytokinsekretion der DCs günstig. Es lässt sich eine hohe Wahrscheinlichkeit für die Generation von Central-Memory-T-Zellen und das T-Zell-Homing ins ZNS ableiten.