Cytokine-conditioned dendritic cells induce humoral tolerance to protein therapy in mice

G Sule, M Suzuki, K Guse, R Cela, JR Rodgers… - Human gene …, 2012 - liebertpub.com
G Sule, M Suzuki, K Guse, R Cela, JR Rodgers, B Lee
Human gene therapy, 2012liebertpub.com
A major obstacle in the genetic therapy of inherited metabolic disease is host immune
responses to the therapeutic protein. This is best exemplified by inhibitor formation in the
protein therapy for hemophilia A. An approach to overcoming this is induction of
immunological tolerance to the therapeutic protein. Tolerogenic dendritic cells (DCtols) have
been reported to induce tolerance. In addition, cytokines such as interleukin (IL)-10 and
transforming growth factor (TGF)-β1 are known to induce tolerance. To model protein …
Abstract
A major obstacle in the genetic therapy of inherited metabolic disease is host immune responses to the therapeutic protein. This is best exemplified by inhibitor formation in the protein therapy for hemophilia A. An approach to overcoming this is induction of immunological tolerance to the therapeutic protein. Tolerogenic dendritic cells (DCtols) have been reported to induce tolerance. In addition, cytokines such as interleukin (IL)-10 and transforming growth factor (TGF)-β1 are known to induce tolerance. To model protein therapy, we used ovalbumin (OVA) as antigen in BALB/c mice and their transgenic derivative, DO11.10 mice. In this study we show that adoptive transfer of antigen-pulsed dendritic cells (DCs) treated with a combination of IL-10 and TGF-β1 can suppress the antibody response in mice. Adoptive transfer of cytokine-conditioned DCs in preimmunized mice results in reduction of antibody response in the mice. Furthermore, the effect is antigen specific, as the recipient mice were able to mount a potent antibody response to the control antigen. Last, we show that TGF-β1 and IL-10-conditioned DCs are able to inhibit anti-FVIII antibody responses in FVIII knockout (KO) mice. Analysis of the contribution of IL-10 and TGF-β1 to the DCtol phenotype shows that IL-10 treatment of DCs is sufficient for inducing OVA-specific tolerance in BALB/c mice, but we observed a requirement for treatment with both human TGF-β1 and human IL-10 to significantly inhibit anti-FVIII antibody responses in FVIII KO mice. This paper demonstrates that autologous cell therapy for antigen-targeted immune suppression may be developed to facilitate long-term therapy.
Mary Ann Liebert