Collagen II-pulsed antigen-presenting cells genetically modified to secrete IL-4 down-regulate collagen-induced arthritis

We explored the possibility that pulsed antigen-presenting cells (APC) provide a model vector system for site-specific delivery of immunosuppressive proteins during collagen-induced arthritis (CIA), an animal model for rheumatoid arthritis. Thus, mice were treated with either B cells or macrophages...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Gene therapy 2001-12, Vol.8 (24), p.1855-1862
Hauptverfasser: GUERY, L, CHIOCCHIA, G, BATTEUX, F, BOISSIER, M.-C, FOURNIER, C
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:We explored the possibility that pulsed antigen-presenting cells (APC) provide a model vector system for site-specific delivery of immunosuppressive proteins during collagen-induced arthritis (CIA), an animal model for rheumatoid arthritis. Thus, mice were treated with either B cells or macrophages engineered to secrete IL-4 and loaded (or not) with type II collagen (CII). Systemic injection of an IL-4-producing B cell hybridoma resulted in a reduction of arthritis severity which was further improved when APC were incubated with CII before their transfer. Unmanipulated B cells loaded with CII also exerted a potent suppressive effect. Likely, clinical amelioration was observed in mice given at priming syngeneic bone marrow-derived macrophages producing IL-4 and pulsed with CII in comparison to the other groups. When the same dose of cells was transferred at disease onset, a moderate beneficial effect was observed. Whatever the APC inoculated, the beneficial effect did not rely upon an IL-4-driven shift towards Th2 phenotype. Systemic administration of fluorescent dye labeled macrophages to arthritic mice has shown that some of these cells rapidly migrate to joints. Moreover, IL-4 transfected macrophages retained their potent capacity to present CII peptides to T cells. These findings validate the use of CII peptide-loaded engineered APC as therapeutic vector cells in CIA and allow consideration of this strategy for the administration of various anti-inflammatory proteins.
ISSN:0969-7128
1476-5462
DOI:10.1038/sj.gt.3301613