Taming the lions: manipulating dendritic cells for use as negative cellular vaccines in organ transplantation
- 1 August 2008
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Current Opinion in Organ Transplantation
- Vol. 13 (4) , 350-357
- https://doi.org/10.1097/mot.0b013e328306116c
Abstract
Dendritic cells are well known for their potent ability, when fully differentiated or 'mature', to stimulate immune responses to antigens they present efficiently to T cells. Mature DC have been used as experimental cellular vaccines against cancer, an approach that has produced limited immune responses and tumor regressions in patients with late-stage disease. Contrastingly, with respect to therapy of organ transplant rejection, we highlight herein how immature/maturation-resistant dendritic cells are emerging as 'negative cellular vaccines', with the ability to induce anergy/apoptosis in alloreactive T cells, while potentially stimulating regulatory T-cell populations. New insights have shed increasing light on dendritic cell immunobiology and the complex processes by which dendritic cell subsets perform both stimulatory and tolerogenic functions. Alloantigen-pulsed host-derived dendritic cells, conditioned with immunosuppressive agents (e.g. rapamycin (RAPA) or dexamethasone) or anti-inflammatory cytokines (e.g. IL-10), are resistance to maturation, and when infused systemically, can promote experimental transplant tolerance, especially when combined with low-dose immunosuppression. Such 'negative' dendritic cell cellular vaccines are proving effective at stimulating/enriching for alloantigen-specific regulatory T cell. Increased understanding of what makes dendritic cells tolerogenic, accompanied by the identification of agents that stably inhibit dendritic cell maturation in the face of proinflammatory stimuli, has given rise to several promising experimental tolerance-inducing protocols. Their translation into clinical testing has the potential to reduce patients' reliance on indefinite, drug-based immunosuppression.Keywords
This publication has 68 references indexed in Scilit:
- Taking dendritic cells into medicineNature, 2007
- Dendritic cells: versatile controllers of the immune systemNature Medicine, 2007
- Dendritic cell subsets in health and diseaseImmunological Reviews, 2007
- Tolerogenic dendritic cells and the quest for transplant toleranceNature Reviews Immunology, 2007
- Steady-state and inflammatory dendritic-cell developmentNature Reviews Immunology, 2006
- Tolerogenic Dendritic CellsAnnual Review of Immunology, 2003
- Antigen-bearing immature dendritic cells induce peptide-specific CD8+ regulatory T cells in vivo in humansBlood, 2002
- Antigen-Specific Inhibition of Effector T Cell Function in Humans after Injection of Immature Dendritic CellsThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2001
- Dendritic cells and the control of immunityNature, 1998
- IDENTIFICATION OF A NOVEL CELL TYPE IN PERIPHERAL LYMPHOID ORGANS OF MICEThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1973