Triptolide promotes differentiation of human monocytes into immunosuppressive MDSCs

•MDSCs induced by GM-CSF combined with Triptolide showed stable immunosuppression in vivo and in vitro.•MDSCs induced by GM-CSF combined with Triptolide could inhibit T cell proliferation through iNOS, and Triptolide treatment significantly enhanced the MDSC immunosuppressive activity.•This study pr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cellular immunology 2024-07, Vol.401-402, p.104836, Article 104836
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Haozhou, Yang, Hui, Zhang, Xiaodong, Zhou, Xiaoguang
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•MDSCs induced by GM-CSF combined with Triptolide showed stable immunosuppression in vivo and in vitro.•MDSCs induced by GM-CSF combined with Triptolide could inhibit T cell proliferation through iNOS, and Triptolide treatment significantly enhanced the MDSC immunosuppressive activity.•This study proposes a novel strategy to induce MDSCs and may have clinical utility in the regulation of graft rejection. Myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) negatively modulate immune activity. Prior investigations have shown much promise in using MDSCs-assisted immunotherapy for organ transplantation patients. Additionally, owing to its immunosuppressive activity, MDSCs can also be used to manage immune-associated disorders. Granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) was employed to stimulate myeloid progenitor cell differentiation. Triptolide (PG490) was introduced toward the later phases of in vitro MDSCs induction. Lastly, real-time PCR (RT-PCR) and flow cytometry were used to assess transcript expression and cell phenotype, and a mouse skin transplantation model was established to evaluate the MDSCs-mediated immune suppression in vivo. Co-stimulation with PG490 and GM-CSF potently induced myeloid-derived monocytes to form MDSCs, with remarkable immune-suppressive activity. The underlying mechanism involved downregulation of T cell proliferation, activation, enhancement of inflammatory cytokine release, as well as T cell conversion to Treg cells. PG490 strongly enhanced iNOS expression in MDSCs, and iNOS inhibition successfully reversed the immune-suppression. The PG490- and GM-CSF-induced MDSCs substantially extended survival duration of murine skin grafts, thereby validating their strong immune-suppressive activity in vivo. Herein, we presented a new approach involving MDSCs-based immunosuppression in vitro. PG490 and GM-CSF co-treatment strongly induced immuno-suppressive activity in MDSCs both in vitro and in vivo. Our findings highlight the promise of applying MDSCs-based therapy in clinical organ transplantation treatment.
ISSN:0008-8749
1090-2163
1090-2163
DOI:10.1016/j.cellimm.2024.104836