Human S100A12 is an endogenous TLR4 ligand that induces monocyte activation, thereby acting as an amplifier of innate immunity during early inflammation and the development of sepsis.
Interference with immune cell proliferation represents a successful treatment strategy in T cell–mediated autoimmune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis and multiple sclerosis (MS). One prominent example is pharmacological inhibition of dihydroorotate dehydrogenase (DHODH), which mediates de novo pyrimidine synthesis in actively proliferating T and B lymphocytes. Within the TERIDYNAMIC clinical study, we observed that the DHODH inhibitor teriflunomide caused selective changes in T cell subset composition and T cell receptor repertoire diversity in patients with relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS). In a preclinical antigen-specific setup, DHODH inhibition preferentially suppressed the proliferation of high-affinity T cells. Mechanistically, DHODH inhibition interferes with oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) and aerobic glycolysis in activated T cells via functional inhibition of complex III of the respiratory chain. The affinity-dependent effects of DHODH inhibition were closely linked to differences in T cell metabolism. High-affinity T cells preferentially use OXPHOS during early activation, which explains their increased susceptibility toward DHODH inhibition. In a mouse model of MS, DHODH inhibitory treatment resulted in preferential inhibition of high-affinity autoreactive T cell clones. Compared to T cells from healthy controls, T cells from patients with RRMS exhibited increased OXPHOS and glycolysis, which were reduced with teriflunomide treatment. Together, these data point to a mechanism of action where DHODH inhibition corrects metabolic disturbances in T cells, which primarily affects profoundly metabolically active high-affinity T cell clones. Hence, DHODH inhibition may promote recovery of an altered T cell receptor repertoire in autoimmunity.
Human and murine studies showed that GM-CSF exerts beneficial effects in intestinal inflammation. To explore whether GM-CSF mediates its effects via monocytes, we analyzed effects of GM-CSF on monocytes in vitro and assessed the immunomodulatory potential of GM-CSF–activated monocytes (GMaMs) in vivo. We used microarray technology and functional assays to characterize GMaMs in vitro and used a mouse model of colitis to study GMaM functions in vivo. GM-CSF activates monocytes to increase adherence, migration, chemotaxis, and oxidative burst in vitro, and primes monocyte response to secondary microbial stimuli. In addition, GMaMs accelerate epithelial healing in vitro. Most important, in a mouse model of experimental T cell–induced colitis, GMaMs show therapeutic activity and protect mice from colitis. This is accompanied by increased production of IL-4, IL-10, and IL-13, and decreased production of IFN-γ in lamina propria mononuclear cells in vivo. Confirming this finding, GMaMs attract T cells and shape their differentiation toward Th2 by upregulating IL-4, IL-10, and IL-13 in T cells in vitro. Beneficial effects of GM-CSF in Crohn’s disease may possibly be mediated through reprogramming of monocytes to simultaneously improved bacterial clearance and induction of wound healing, as well as regulation of adaptive immunity to limit excessive inflammation.
Background & AimsGranulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) treatment induces clinical response in patients with active Crohn’s disease. To explore whether monocytes mediate GM-CSF effects in vivo, we used a mouse model of chronic colitis induced by dextran sulfate sodium (DSS).MethodsMurine bone marrow-derived monocytes were activated with GM-CSF in vitro, and gene expression, phenotype, and function of GM-CSF-activated monocytes (GMaM) were analyzed. Therapeutic effects of GMaM were assessed in a model of chronic colitis induced by repeated cycles of DSS. Monocytes were administered intravenously and their immunomodulatory functions were evaluated in vivo by clinical monitoring, histology, endoscopy, immunohistochemistry, and expression of inflammatory markers in the colon. The distribution of injected monocytes in the intestine was measured by in vivo imaging.ResultsGMaM expressed significantly higher levels of anti-inflammatory molecules. Production of reactive oxygen species was also increased while phagocytosis and adherence were decreased. GMaM up-regulated CD39 and CD73, which allows the conversion of adenosine triphosphate into adenosine and coincided with the induction of Foxp3+ (forkhead-box-protein P3 positive) regulatory T cells (Treg) in cocultures of GMaM and naive T cells. In chronic DSS-induced colitis, adoptive transfer of GMaM led to significant clinical improvement, as demonstrated by reduced weight loss, inflammatory infiltration, ulceration, and colon shrinkage. As GMaM migrated faster and persisted longer in the inflamed intestine compared with control monocytes, their presence induced Treg generation in vivo.ConclusionsGM-CSF leads to specific monocyte activation that modulates experimental colitis via mechanisms that include the induction of Treg. We demonstrate a possible mechanism of Treg induction through CD39 and CD73 expression on monocytes.
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