Synthetic oligodeoxynucleotides (ODNs) containing cytosine-guanosine (CpG) motifs stimulate B and plasmacytoid dendritic cells of the vertebrate immune system. We found that in primates strong stimulation of these cells could also be achieved using certain non-CpG ODNs. The immunostimulatory motif in this case is a sequence with the general formula PyNTTTTGT in which Py is C or T, and N is A, T, C, or G. Assays performed on purified cells indicated that the immunostimulatory activity is direct. The use of a nuclease-resistant phosphorothioate backbone is not a necessary condition, since phosphodiester PyNTTTTGT ODNs are active. It was also demonstrated that ODN 2006, a widely used immunostimulant of human B cells, possess two kinds of immunostimulatory motifs: one of them mainly composed of two successive TCG trinucleotides located at the 5′ end and another one (duplicated) of the PyNTTTTGT kind here described. Even though PyNTTTTGT ODNs are mainly active on primate cells, some of them, bearing the CATTTTGT motif, have a small effect on cells from other mammals. This suggests that the immunostimulatory mechanism activated by these ODNs was present before, but optimized during, evolution of primates. Significant differences in the frequency of PyNTTTTGT sequences between bacterial and human DNA were not found. Thus, the possibility that PyNTTTTGT ODNs represent a class of pathogen-associated molecular pattern is unlikely. They could, more reasonably, be included within the category of danger signals of cell injury.
Aims/hypothesis IMT504 is an oligonucleotide that promotes tissue repair in bone injury and neuropathic pain models by stimulating progenitor cells. Here we evaluated the effect of IMT504 on the recovery of islet function in a streptozotocin (STZ)-induced model of diabetes in the rat. Methods Male Sprague-Dawley rats were injected with STZ (60 mg/kg, i.p., day1) or citrate buffer (Control). Animals with glycaemia between 11 and 20 mmol/l on day 4 were injected with IMT504 (4 mg/animal in saline, s.c., STZ-IMT504) or with saline (STZ-Saline) for 10 days. Glycaemia and water and food intake were recorded for 33 days. Intraperitoneal glucose tolerance tests (IPGTTs) were performed on day30. On day35, overnight-fasted animals were killed and blood samples and pancreases collected for hormonal and histological studies. A second group of STZ-IMT504 rats was killed, together with Control and STZ-Saline rats, after two consecutive days of blood glucose decreases after the beginning of IMT504 treatment. Pancreases were collected and proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), nestin and neurogenin 3 (NGN3) detected by immunohistochemistry. Results IMT504 greatly improved blood glucose and food and water intakes in STZ-IMT504 rats by day8, as well as IPGTTs on day30. Significant increases in islet number and beta cell content were observed in STZ-IMT504 rats (day 33). Furthermore, after two to five IMT504 injections, blood glucose decreased, and an increase in pancreatic nestin (mainly in endothelial cells), PCNA and NGN3 production (in islets) was observed in STZ-IMT504 rats. Conclusions/interpretation IMT504 induced a marked recovery of STZ-induced diabetes that correlated with early production of progenitor cell markers, such as nestin and NGN3.
Nucleic acid immunization is a new vaccination technology. DNA vaccines do not only carry the genetic information for the antigen of interest but also deliver an adjuvant effect due to the presence of immunostimulatory sequences within the plasmid backbone. It is generally assumed that the adjuvant properties of plasmid DNA are equal to those described for oligodeoxynucleotides (ODN) containing immunostimulatory CpG motifs. To challenge this hypothesis we have carried out a series of experiments comparing the ability of single-and double-stranded ODN containing CpG motifs to induce the activation of mouse spleen cells. Moreover, we compared the immunostimulatory properties of plasmids that were modified by the addition of two to four CpG motifs. Our results establish that plasmid DNA express their adjuvanticity as either double or single strands, and no differences were observed between modified and unmodified plasmids. On the other hand, the strongest stimulatory ODN sequences lost their adjuvant properties when administered as double-strand DNA. Furthermore, the profile of cytokines induced on spleen cells by plasmid DNA and ODN is different. Strikingly, plasmid DNA induces a moderate synthesis of IL-6 and a strong synthesis of IFN-+ , whereas stimulation with ODN showed an inverse profile with a higher increase in the synthesis of IL-6 but a moderate increase in IFN-+ . Finally, in vivo studies were consistent with the results obtained in vitro. Mice immunized with modified or unmodified plasmids encoding the glycoprotein D of HSV showed similar levels of cellular and humoral immune responses.
CD56+ cells have been recognized as being involved in bridging the innate and acquired immune systems. Herein, we assessed the effect of two major classes of immunostimulatory oligonucleotides (ODNs), PyNTTTTGT and CpG, on CD56+ cells. Incubation of human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (hPBMC) with some of these ODNs led to secretion of significant amounts of interferon gamma (IFN-γ), tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α) and granulocyte/monocyte colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), but only if interleukin 2 (IL2) was present. IMT504, the prototype of the PyNTTTTGT ODN class, was the most active. GM-CSF secretion was very efficient when non-CpG ODNs with high T content and PyNTTTTGT motifs lacking CpGs were used. On the other hand, CpG ODNs and IFNα inhibited this GM-CSF secretion. Selective cell type removal from hPBMC indicated that CD56+ cells were responsible for GM-CSF secretion and that plasmacytoid dendritic cells (PDCs) regulate this process. In addition, PyNTTTTGT ODNs inhibited the IFNα secretion induced by CpG ODNs in PDCs by interference with the TLR9 signaling pathway. Since IFNα is essential for CD56+ stimulation by CpG ODNs, there is a reciprocal interference of CpG and PyNTTTTGT ODNs when acting on this cell population. This suggests that these synthetic ODNs mimic different natural alarm signals for activation of the immune system.
It is well known that synthetic oligodeoxynucleotides (ODNs) containing unmethylated CpG dinucleotides within a given context stimulate B lymphocytes and plasmacytoid dendritic cells (PDCs) of the vertebrate immune system. We have reported that B lymphocyte and PDC stimulation in humans could also be efficiently achieved by using non-CpG ODNs bearing the immunostimulatory sequence (motif) PyNTTTTGT, wherein Py is C or T and N is any deoxyribonucleotide. We are now reporting a series of studies that gives further precision regarding the composition of this immunostimulatory motif. The analysis of hundreds of ODNs led us to the conclusion that the motif for optimal CpG-independent immune stimulation can be represented by a sequence of the following general formula: PyN(T/A)(T/C/G)(T/C/G)(T/G)GT, wherein Py is C or T and N is any deoxyribonucleotide and wherein at least two of the positions represented within parentheses are Ts. Requirements for optimal ODN activity are as follows: (1) at least one of the versions of the general motif must be located near the central portion of the ODN; and (2) the ODN must be 20 or more nucleotides long. PyN(T/A)(T/C/G)(T/C/G)(T/G)GT ODNs are active in a phosphorothioate or in a phosphodiester backbone. In a phosphodiester backbone a canonical motif is strongly required whereas in a phosphorothioate backbone specificity is, within certain limits, less strict. On the other hand, PyN(T/A)(T/C/G)(T/C/G)(T/G)GT oligonucleotides are inactive as a double chain or as a modified (phosphorothioate or hydroxyl-methyl modified) or unmodified RNA backbone.
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