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Laboratoire Immunochimie, Commissariat à lEnergie Atomique-Grenoble, Départment de Biologie Moléculaire et Structurale/Immunochimie, Institute National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale, Unité 238, Université Joseph Fourier, Grenoble, France
| Abstract |
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-
CD11b+). This population, which can be purified,
represented
20% of the total TDC and differs from the population of
lymphoid TDC (CD11c+ CD8+ CD11b-)
by its incapacity to produce IL-12p70 under double stimulation by LPS
and anti-CD40. Furthermore, using an original culture system
allowing expansion of DC from myeloid progenitors, we demonstrated that
DC exhibiting a similar myeloid phenotype can be derived from a common
DC/macrophage progenitor resident in the adult mouse thymus. We found
that, in contrast with myeloid splenic DC expanded in the same
conditions, these cultured TDC were unable to produce IL-12p70 under
double stimulation by LPS and anti-CD40 or LPS and IFN-
. Thus,
our results suggest that 1) adult mouse thymus contains at least two
phenotypically and functionally distinct populations of DC; and 2)
cultured myeloid DC derived from thymus and spleen differ by their
ability to produce IL-12p70. The mechanisms underlying the differences
in IL-12-secreting capacities of the cultured splenic and thymic DC are
under current investigation. | Introduction |
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0.1% of all thymic cells and
reside in the medulla and at the cortico-medullary junction. DC comprise at least two distinct subsets according to their myeloid or lymphoid origin. DC of the myeloid lineage can be generated in vitro from BM (5, 6)-, spleen (7)-, or PBL (8)-derived progenitors using myeloid growth factors such as GM-CSF. In mice, the myeloid-related DC are CD11c+ CD11b+ CD8- DEC 205-. The other lineage of DC appear to be closely related to lymphocytes and have been mainly characterized in the mouse. These lymphoid-related DC are found in the thymus and in the secondary lymphoid organs. They are CD11c+ CD11b- CD8+ DEC 205+ and can be produced in recipient mice on transfer of CD4low early thymocyte progenitors (9, 10).
Besides their distinct phenotypes, functional heterogeneity has been
described between these two subsets of DC.
CD8
+ DC from mouse spleen, unlike
CD8
- DC, have been considered to perform a
tolerogenic function (11) due to their ability to induce
apoptosis in responsive CD4+ T lymphocytes
(12). Furthermore, recent reports proposed a differential
role of CD8
- and
CD8
+ DC in the polarization of the immune
response toward the Th-1 and Th-2 pathways. The orientation of the T
helper development appeared to be mainly determined by the ability of
DC to produce IL-12. Studies showed that IL-12 was produced by
CD8
+ DC rather than
CD8
- DC (13, 14), but other
authors demonstrated that CD8
- DC were also
able to secrete IL-12 (7, 15, 16). This discrepancy may
result from the different methods of isolation or generation of DC and
the origin of DC (human vs mouse). Finally, work performed with
BM-derived DC (16) showed that, using different
combinations of cytokines during generation in vitro, myeloid DC could
direct the differentiation of Th-1 or Th-2 cells. This study supports
the hypothesis that environmental factors may be more critical than
lineage origin for DC functions (17).
To date, TDC were considered to be a homogeneous population of lymphoid-related DC. But their study has been hampered by the low number of cells that could be obtained either by purification (18) or by culture of CD4low precursors (19).
We have recently described a highly effective culture system inducing
proliferation and differentiation of DC from myeloid progenitors of the
spleen (7). By adapting this procedure to the thymus, we
questioned the presence of myeloid DC in the thymus. Using this
original culture system, we were able to expand DC from thymic-resident
myeloid-related progenitors. Cultured TDC (cTDC) exhibited a myeloid
phenotype similar to a subset of freshly isolated DC from thymus and
were obtained in sufficient number for further functional analysis.
cTDC stimulate proliferation of allogenic lymphocytes but with less
efficiency than myeloid splenic DC (SDC) obtained in the same culture
conditions. Furthermore, unlike cultured SDC (cSDC) and purified
CD8
+ TDC, they were unable to produce IL-12p70
under three different types of double-stimulation combining LPS,
anti-CD40, and IFN-
.
| Materials and Methods |
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Four-week-old BALB/c and C57BL/6 mice were purchased from IFFA-CREDO Laboratories (LArbresle, France). Complete culture medium consisted of IMDM supplemented with 12.5% heat-inactivated FCS (both obtained from Life Technologies, Grand Island, NY), nonessential amino acids (0.1 mM), sodium pyruvate (1 mM), 50 µM 2-ME, 50 U/ml penicillin, 50 µg/ml streptomycin, and 0.5% fungizone. Murine-recombinant GM-CSF produced by a myeloma cell line transfected with the murine GM-CSF gene (provided by David Gray, Institute of Cell Animal and Population Biology, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, U.K.) was used at 1% in the culture medium. Purified murine recombinant Flt3-ligand, stem cell factor (SCF), and GM-CSF were purchased from R&D Systems (Abingdon, U.K.) and used at 50, 25, and 2 ng/ml, respectively.
The following mAbs labeled with FITC, PE, Cy-Chrome, or biotin were
purchased from PharMingen (San Diego, CA): anti-CD8
(53-6.7,
PE-conjugated, biotin-conjugated and Cy-Chrome-conjugated);
anti-CD11b (M1/70, FITC-conjugated and biotin-conjugated);
anti-CD11c (HL3, PE-conjugated); anti-CD 40 (3/23,
FITC-conjugated); anti-B220 (RA3-6B2, biotin-conjugated);
anti-TER119 (TER119, biotin-conjugated); anti-Gr1 (RB6-8C5,
biotin-conjugated); anti-I-Ab that
cross-reacts with I-Ad of BALB/c mouse (25.9.17,
FITC- and biotin-conjugated). Anti-CD80 (RMMP-2, PE-conjugated), and
anti-CD86 (RMMP-1, PE-conjugated) were obtained from Caltag
(Burlingame, CA). Anti-mannose receptor DEC 205 (NLDC-145) was
purchased as neat culture supernatant from Serotec (Oxford, U.K.). Rat
IgG2a (Dako, Glostrup, Denmark) was used as a negative control label
for NLDC-145 unconjugated rat Ab. Purified 2.4G2 (rat anti-mouse
Fc
RII/III, CD32) was purchased from PharMingen.
F(ab')2 goat anti-rat IgG (FITC-conjugated)
was obtained from Jackson ImmunoResearch (West Grove, PA).
Biotin-conjugated Ab was revealed using streptavidin-FITC,
streptavidin-PE, or streptavidin-Cy-Chrome obtained from
PharMingen.
Cell culture
Thymus was cut into fragments under aseptic conditions, and the entire tissue was digested for 30 min at 37°C with collagenase B (2 mg/ml)/DNase I (0.4 mg/ml) (Boehringer Mannheim, Mannheim, Germany) in PBS/10% FCS. Thymic cells were washed and counted. Cell concentration was adjusted to 4 x 106/ml of complete culture medium supplemented with GM-CSF, Flt3-ligand, and SCF. This suspension (0.5 ml/well) was plated in multidish 4 wells (Nunclon, Glostrup, Denmark). At day 3 of culture, cells were boosted by addition of the three cytokines. At day 7, the supernatant was removed and replaced with fresh cytokine-supplemented medium. At day 14, medium was changed in the same manner unless the stroma had become confluent and acidified it. In this case, the aggregates were detached by PBS containing 3 mM EDTA (Sigma, St. Louis, MO). The removed cells were counted and split at a concentration of 1.5 x 106 cells/ml. At different time points, cells were counted and cytospins prepared and stained with May-Grünwald-Giemsa (Sigma). cSDC were obtained as previously described (7).
Purification of TDC and SDC
Thymi and spleens from 4- to 6-wk-old BALB/c mice were digested
for 30 min at 37°C with collagenase B (2 mg/ml)/DNase I (0.4 mg/ml;
Boehringer Mannheim) in PBS/10% FCS and further dissociated in
Ca2+-free HBSS/EDTA 10 mM. Thymic and splenic
cells were separated on a Nycodenz (Nycomed, Oslo, Norway) gradient.
Low-density cells were enriched for CD11c expression and further
separated according to CD8
expression using a multisort
anti-FITC kit (Miltenyi Biotec, Paris, France). For IL-12p70
detection purified DC (106 cells/ml) were
cultured for 24 h in regular medium containing GM-CSF, SCF, and
Flt3-ligand without or with different combinations of LPS (1 µg/ml),
anti-CD40 (1 µg/ml), and IFN-
(20 ng/ml).
Immunolabeling procedures
Cell surface phenotype was studied by flow cytometry. Two- or
three-fluorescence color stainings were conducted in 96-well
plates in 10 µl of mAb at optimal concentration for 10 min at
room temperature with agitation. Cells were preincubated with 2.4G2 to
prevent binding to Fc
RII/III. Data of a minimum of 10,000 cells,
collected using a FACSCalibur flow cytometer (Becton Dickinson), were
analyzed using CellQuest software.
Intracellular distribution of MHC class II molecules was studied on cytospins. The slides were fixed in methanol/acetone (1:1) for 5 min at room temperature and washed in TBS before staining with mAb anti I-A. Ab fixation was revealed by alkaline phosphatase-conjugated avidin-biotin complex (ABC complex AP; Dako) according to the manufacturers recommendations.
Semisolid cultures of clonogenic progenitors of DC produced in liquid cultures
Semisolid assays for clonogenic progenitors present in the initial thymic cell suspensions and PBL were prepared in complete collagen culture medium, as previously described (7). Briefly, cell suspensions were cultured in triplicate wells (multidish 4 wells; Nunclon) containing 0.3 ml IMDM supplemented with 25% FCS, 50 µM of 2-ME, antibiotics, and collagen (I + III from Hemeris Laboratories, Sassenage, France) at a concentration of 1 mg/ml of culture. Thymic cells were plated at 2 x 106 cells/ml, and PBL were plated at 2 x 105 cells/ml. The growth of colonies was stimulated by an optimal mixture of growth factors containing SCF (25 ng/ml), Flt3-ligand (50 ng/ml), and GM-CSF (10 µl/ml). The cells were incubated for 13 days at 37°C in a fully humidified incubator containing 5% CO2, and the colonies were counted under an inverted microscope. Hence, the total number of colonies per initial suspension could be calculated from this colony count and the initial total number of cells. To characterize the proportion of MHC class II-positive cells present in each colony, the gels were then desiccated in situ and used for the immunocytochemical detection of MHC class II molecules.
Allogenic MLR
CD4+ T lymphocytes were negatively
selected from C57BL/6 splenocytes by magnetic cell sorting using
anti-CD8
, anti-B220, anti-CD11b, anti-Gr-1, and
anti-TER 119 biotin-conjugated Abs and streptavidin magnetic
microbeads (Miltenyi Biotec). Purity of CD4+ T
cells was between 90 and 95%. Triplicates of 1 x
105 enriched CD4+ T cells
were seeded into a 96-well round-bottom plate (Falcon; Elvetec,
Venissieux, France) together with titrated numbers of mitomycin
C-treated (50 µg/ml, 20 min, 37°C; Sigma) splenic or thymic-derived
DC in 0.2 ml RPMI 1640 supplemented with 10% FCS and 2-ME (50 µM).
Three days later, cells were pulsed with 1 µCi/well of
[3H]TdR for an additional 12 h before
harvesting and scintillation counting.
IL-12p70 production by cSDC and cTDC
IL-12p70 production was determined by the OptEIA set for mouse
IL-12p70 from PharMingen, according to the procedure recommended by the
manufacturer. The Ab used in this test specifically recognizes the p70
heterodimer but not free p40 chains. The detection limit was 30 pg/ml
of IL-12. Days 1314 cSDC or cTDC (5 x 105
cells/ml) were cultured for 24 h in regular medium containing SCF
(25 ng/ml), Flt3-ligand (50 ng/ml), and GM-CSF (10 µl/ml). Cells were
stimulated or not by three types of double stimulation combining LPS (1
µg/ml) + anti-CD40 (1 µg/ml), LPS (1 µg/ml) + IFN-
(20
ng/ml), and anti-CD40 (1 µg/ml) + IFN-
(20 ng/ml),
respectively referred to as DS1, DS2, and DS3. IL-12 measurements were
performed in duplicate on each culture supernatant. To exclude the
contribution of a contaminating cell type to the secretion of IL-12p70,
positive sorting of cSDC and cTDC was performed after labeling with
biotinylated anti-CD11c and anti-class II Abs followed by
streptavidin magnetic microbeads (Miltenyi Biotec). Total and purified
CD11c+ and class II+ cell
suspensions were stimulated by LPS+anti-CD40 (DS1) and LPS+IFN-
(DS2), and IL-12p70 was measured 24 h later in the supernatants
as previously indicated.
| Results |
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Unfractionated thymic cell suspensions were cultured in the
presence of Flt3-ligand, SCF, and GM-CSF. A low number of cells with
mature DC morphology appeared in the supernatant within 7 days of
culture, mixed with dead thymocytes and some granulocytes and
macrophages. At this time, these nonadherent cells were completely
removed with the supernatant allowing the observation of adherent
fibroblasts in contact of which small aggregates of round cells were
growing (Fig. 1
A). After
1214 days, culture cells grew in characteristic clusters (Fig. 1
B) strongly adherent to a stroma made up of fibroblasts and
macrophages. At the same time, a low number of DC were released but
most of them remained in large adherent clusters that persisted until
days 1921. Cytological examination of cells from clusters at day 14
of culture indicated that >90% of them had typical bean-like nuclei
and irregular membranes (Fig. 1
C). Very few (0.1%) blastic
cells with round nuclei and reduced basophilic cytoplasm were found.
Immunostaining for MHC class II showed that cells produced from day 14
possessed extensive, fine, and often beaded dendritic processes
expressing high level of MHC class II molecules (Fig. 1
D).
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cTDC exhibit a phenotype of myeloid-related DC
cTDC obtained between days 12 and 21 could be subdivided into two
populations on the basis of their intermediate or high surface
expression of MHC class II molecules (Fig. 3
, A and B). All
MHC class II+ cells were
CD11c+ CD11b+ but CD11b
expression was reduced on MHC class IIhigh DC.
All MHC class IIhigh DC coexpressed B7.2 and
CD40, whereas DEC 205 was only detectable on a small proportion of
them. MHC class IIint DC were negative for these
three markers. According to the B7.2 and CD40 expression, MHC class
IIhigh DC exhibited a more mature or activated
phenotype than MHC class IIint DC. A small
proportion of each MHC class II+ population
expressed F4.80, and both MHC class II+
populations were negative for B7.1 and CD8
. The surface phenotype of
TDC remained roughly similar between days 12 and 21 with a progressive
increase in the proportion of MHC class IIhigh.
Nevertheless, the rapidity of this maturation differed from one culture
to another, presumably as a consequence of the variability of the
stroma. The cTDC phenotype was compared with the corresponding
cSDC (Fig. 3
, C and D). The presence of
CD11b and the absence of DEC 205 and CD8
confirmed that both DC
types are related to myeloid DC lineage. Conversely, the percentages of
MHC class II, B7-2, and CD40 positive cells exhibit some variations
probably due to differences in the kinetics of maturation from one cSDC
culture to another. However, the percentage of
CD40+ cells was consistently higher in cSDC than
in cTDC.
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, and CD11b in TDC purified
according to CD11c expression (Fig. 3
- cells were
B7-1 negative, whereas 58% of CD11c+
CD8
+ cells were also B7-1 positive. The
CD11cint CD8-/low
CD11bhigh cells represented between 16 and 28%
of the TDC in four separate experiments. So, our results clearly
indicated that DC with myeloid phenotype could be found in significant
numbers in the adult mouse thymus.
Comparative phenotypic studies were performed on
CD11c+CD8
+ and
CD11c+CD8
- DC
populations purified from the spleen of BALB/c mice. As previously
reported by others (13, 14) the
CD11c+ CD8
+ SDC
represented between 19 and 26% of the total
CD11c+ cells that were predominantly
CD8
- (data not shown).
Thymus contains resident clonogenic progenitors able to give rise to DC and macrophages
To approach the question of the origin of the cTDC obtained in our
cultures, we look for the presence of DC progenitors in the total
thymic cell suspensions. Semisolid cultures were performed in the
presence of Flt3-ligand, SCF, and GM-CSF, the cytokines present in the
liquid cultures. The use of collagen gel allowed the in situ
identification of DC in the colonies by immunostaining of MHC class II
cells after desiccation. Total thymic cell suspensions formed 2.7
± 0.6 colonies per 106 cells (Table I
). The mean of colonies obtained at day
13 per total thymus was 586 ± 271. One third of the colonies were
of large size, relatively compact, and contained between 1000 and 3000
cells. May-Grünwald-Giemsa staining and MHC class II
immunocytochemistry revealed that these colonies contained between 60
and 90% of MHC class II+ DC mixed with class
II- macrophages (Fig. 4
, AC). The other colonies
were of small size and contained 50200 loosely arranged cells, which
were all positive for MHC class II (Fig. 4
, D and
E). Thus, the majority of DC found in semisolid culture came
from progenitors common with macrophages. It is likely that cTDC
obtained in liquid culture with the same cytokines mainly originated
from these myeloid progenitors.
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3400 PBL, which would give a mean of 0.2 ± 0.07
colonies per thymus. These results showed that contamination of the
total thymic cell suspensions by blood-derived precursors could be
excluded and that the cTDC derived from true thymus-resident
progenitors. cTDC stimulate allogenic MLRs
To determine their functionality, cTDC were compared with cSDC
obtained in the same culture conditions for their ability to stimulate
allogenic MLR. In the experiment shown in Fig. 5
A, unstimulated cTDC were as
competent as unstimulated cSDC in the induction of proliferation of
allogenic CD4+ lymphocytes even though the
proportion of MHC class IIhigh
B7.2+ cells was higher in cTDC (57%) than in
cSDC (34%) (Fig. 5
, BD). Double stimulation by
anti-CD40 and LPS induced maturation of both cTDC and cSDC as shown
in Fig. 5
, CE. Most of the cSDC (74%) and cTDC (84%)
became MHC class IIhigh
B7.2+ and expressed these molecules at similar
levels (identical mean of fluorescence intensity). Both mature cSDC and
cTDC induced a significantly stronger MLR than the corresponding
unstimulated cells. Proliferation induced by mature cTDC was greater
than by unstimulated cSDC. Nevertheless, MLR induced by mature cTDC was
lower than those induced by mature cSDC even though the proportion of
MHC class IIhigh B7.2+
cells was higher in cTDC than in cSDC.
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cTDC are unable to secrete IL-12p70 upon activation
We have previously described that cSDC secrete large amounts of
bioactive IL-12p70 when double-stimulated by anti-CD40 and LPS and
that each stimulus alone was unable to induce IL12p70 production
(7). We extended this observation by studying the IL-12p70
production of cSDC and cTDC in one part and ex vivo purified SDC and
TDC on the other part. All types of DC were subjected to three
different double stimulations, namely, LPS + anti-CD40, LPS +
IFN-
, and anti-CD40 + IFN-
, respectively referred to as DS1,
DS2, and DS3. As shown in Fig. 6
B, cSDC produced high levels
of IL-12p70 when stimulated by DS1 or DS2, whereas DS3 was reproducibly
inefficient. We also verified that PBL-derived DC cultured in the same
conditions produced significant amounts of IL-12p70 when stimulated by
DS1. As previously reported (13, 14), we confirmed that
only the CD11c+ CD8
+ SDC
subset purified ex vivo was able to secrete IL-12p70 under DS1, DS2,
and DS3, whereas the CD11c+
CD8
- subset was not, whatever the type
of stimulation used (Fig. 6
A). Then, we investigated the
capacity of the cTDC to secrete IL-12p70 in response to the same
stimuli. As shown in Fig. 6
B, cTDC were unable to produce
detectable amounts of IL-12p70 under the three types of double
stimulation used. To exclude that a contaminating cell type may be
responsible for the effect obtained, we verified that similar IL-12p70
responses are observed by using DS1 and DS2 on purified CD11c and class
II-positive cells from cSDC and cTDC suspensions. We performed double
labeling of the cells with biotinylated anti-CD11c and
anti-class II Abs followed by magnetic sorting with streptavidin
microbeads. We used double labeling of cultured DC because we observed
that a single staining with anti-CD11c Ab results in the sorting of
the most mature DC, which secreted very low amounts of IL-12p70 as
previously shown (20). The addition of class II Ab allowed
the positive sorting of immature DC, which are responsible for the main
part of IL-12p70 production. As shown in Fig. 6
C, the levels
of IL-12p70 secreted under DS1 and DS2 stimulation by the unseparated
cell suspensions and by the purified CD11c class II-positive cells are
similar. Thus, the incapacity of cTDC to produce IL-12p70 after
stimulation indicated that they were functionally different from cSDC
and PBL-derived DC obtained in the same culture conditions.
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expression to determine which TDC subset
produced IL-12p70. Due to the small number of TDC obtained after the
CD11c+ sorting, we only performed one round of
separation for CD8
yielding fractions enriched in either
CD8
+ or CD8
-/low
cells. The highest levels of IL-12p70 were found in the
CD8
+ TDC-enriched fractions, and low levels of
IL-12p70 were detected in the CD8
-/low
TDC-enriched fractions. For each fraction, the amount of IL-12p70
exactly correlated with the ratio of CD8
+ TDC
to CD8
-/low TDC and the absolute number of
CD8
+ TDC found in the cell suspension
(correlation coefficient: R = 1 and p < 0.01).
These results strongly suggested that the low levels of IL-12p70
detected in the CD8
-/low TDC-enriched
fractions were produced by the few contaminant
CD8
+ TDC. DS2 stimulation was tested in two
other experiments using purified ex vivo TDC showing that
CD11c+CD8
+ TDC also
respond to the combination of LPS + IFN-
by an increased
secretion of IL-12p70, whereas CD11c+
CD8
- cells exhibit a low level of
IL-12p70 (data not shown). Thus, purified
CD8
-/low TDC did not secrete significant
amounts of IL-12p70 under these conditions of stimulation. In
conclusion, the incapacity of cTDC to produce IL-12p70 was shared with
CD8
- TDC purified from thymus.
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| Discussion |
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and DEC
205 and the lack of CD11b (21, 22). TDC and T cells were
shown to be closely related as they are produced in the thymus from a
common CD4low precursor population
(9, 10). However, several recent papers challenged this
consensus. Radtke et al. (23) used mice in which the Notch
1 gene had been conditionally inactivated as BM donors for lethally
irradiated recipients. These mice exhibit a very early block in T cell
development. BM chimeras has normal macrophage, granulocyte, NK, and B
cell development but a total T cell deficiency. This contrasts with an
entirely normal thymic and peripheral DC development showing that
thymic DC and T cells are derived from distinct precursors.
Furthermore, Martin et al. (24) reported that thymic
CD4 low precursors isolated from C57BL/6 mice are able to reconstitute
both populations of CD8
- and
CD8
+ DC of the spleen of an irradiated
recipient. Merad et al. (25) showed that epidermal
Langerhans cells, obtained from murine BM cultures exhibiting a typical
myeloid phenotype (CD11c+,
CD11b+, CD8
-) are able
to express CD8
when they migrate to the draining lymph node after
injection in the footpads of mice and became highly immunostimulatory.
Hence, CD8
expression on these DC appears to reflect a state of
activation, mobilization, or both rather than lineage specificity.
Rodewald et al. (26) identified putative lymphoid and
myeloid DC in the thymus of wild-type and
c-kit-
c- 5-day-old mice with
regard to their respective CD11chigh
CD11b-/low and CD11cint
CD11b+ phenotype. In these mice, the putative
myeloid DC represented
37% of the TDC. Finally, Traver et al.
(27) recently showed that CD8
+
and CD8
- DC can arise from clonogenic common
myeloid progenitors in both thymus and spleen of adult mice. Vremec, in
his analysis of DC subtypes in mouse (28), evoked the
existence of a few CD8
low
CD11b+ TDC. In this study, using an original bulk
culture system allowing differentiation of DC from myeloid progenitors,
we demonstrated the presence of a distinct subset of myeloid-related DC
exhibiting functional specificities in the thymus of normal adult mice.
Furthermore, we clearly observed that in adult mice
20% of the DC
purified from thymus were CD11c+
CD8
-/low CD11bhigh.
This result was in agreement with the observations of Rodewald. The
smaller proportion of CD8
- TDC observed in
our study may be due to the strain or to the age of the mice analyzed
(adult vs postnatal) as it has been shown that the myeloid activity of
the thymus decreases with age (see below). The discrepancy with the
observations of Vremec et al. (21) may be due to the use
of anti-CD11b in the procedure for purification of TDC resulting in
the elimination of most of CD8
- DC.
Our study showed that DC with a myeloid phenotype, similar to those
observed in freshly isolated TDC, could be produced in vitro in
significant numbers from mouse thymus suspension. TDC represent
0.1% of all thymic cells (18, 29) and to date, their
study has been hampered by the low number of cells that could be
obtained either by purification or by culture of early T lymphocyte
progenitors CD4low. Recoveries of DC using the
purification procedure described by Vremec et al. (18)
ranged from 1 to 5 x 105 per thymus. An
equivalent production was obtained by Saunders et al. (19)
who succeeded in generating TDC from CD4low
precursors after 6 days of culture. Our culture system allowed the
production of a mean of 20 x 106 DC per
thymus. Such a procedure was useful for generating myeloid TDC in
numbers allowing functional characterization.
The efficiency of our culture system was due to the use of the early cytokine, SCF, combined with GM-CSF and Flt3-ligand. This mixture previously has been described to be highly effective in inducing proliferation of murine SDC progenitors in vitro (7). Secondly, preliminary results indicated that the stromal cells in the culture provide interactions necessary for the survival and subsequent proliferation and differentiation of TDC progenitors. Similarly, thymic epithelial cell lines have been shown to induce growth and differentiation of CD4low precursors and allowed a limited production of DC (30).
The phenotype (CD11c+
CD8
- CD11b+) and GM-CSF
requirement of the cTDC suggested the presence in the thymus of
myeloid-related progenitors giving rise to DC. Semisolid cultures
performed with the same mixture of cytokines as in liquid cultures
clearly showed that DC could arise from a colony-forming progenitor
common to macrophages and present in the adult murine thymus. The
estimated contamination by PBL of the thymic suspensions was close to
the value found by Antica et al. (31). This result coupled
with the colony-forming capacity of PBL provided evidence that the
macrophage/DC progenitors found in the cell suspensions were not blood
contaminants but thymus-resident cells. Myeloid activity has been
described in the fetal murine thymus, but this myeloid potential
declined between days 12 and 14 of gestation (32).
Nevertheless, in the adult mice, a erythroid-myeloid activity was
described within the population of CD4-
CD8- thymocytes (33). More recently
Wu et al. (34) using in vitro colony assay showed that the
CD4low precursors contained macrophage
colony-forming cell at a frequency of 1 per 200 cells. Considering that
CD4low precursors represent
0.05% of all
thymocytes, the frequency of myeloid activity in total thymocytes can
be estimated at
2.5 per 106 thymocytes, which
is close to those obtained in our semisolid cultures. Furthermore,
preliminary sorting experiments performed in our laboratory indicated
that the macrophage/DC progenitor activity was found within the
CD3- CD8-
B220- Gr1-
Ter119- thymocytes and lost when anti-CD4
was added to the depletion mixture. So, it is likely that the thymic
macrophage/DC progenitor belongs to the CD4low
population. The absence of mixed macrophage/DC colonies in the colony
assay realized by Wu et al. (34) with
CD4low thymocytes could be due to the lack of
Flt3-ligand in the culture. Actually, it remains to be determined
whether the macrophage/DC progenitor identified in our cultures is
committed to the myeloid lineage or whether it can also give rise to
lymphoid cells. But the cytological composition of colonies containing
DC clearly indicated that the thymic macrophage/DC progenitor differs
from the classical DC/myeloid progenitor found in PBL, spleen
(7), or BM (35). Furthermore, the thymic
macrophage/DC progenitor had a very limited self-renewing capacity when
compared with the spleen and BM-derived CFU-GM as indicated by the
incapacity to increase the number of colonies in the first days of
culture (data not shown, Ref. 7) and the absence of
remaining blastic MHC class II-
CD11c- for the second week of culture. Finally,
contrary to spleen- and BM-derived CFU-GM, the macrophage/DC progenitor
appeared to be very dependant on stromal cells that developed in
parallel with them. The small pure DC colonies obtained in the
semisolid cultures may derive from more committed precursor than the
macrophage/DC progenitor. This committed precursor would be only
capable of differentiation into DC and would have a limited
proliferative capacity. Pure DC colonies were very rare in the spleen
(7) and never detected in the BM by Inaba, who showed that
DC arise as a component of mixed granulocytic and macrophagic colonies
(35). However, Young (36) reported the
generation of a number of small, loosely arranged pure DC colonies in
semisolid agarose cultures seeded with purified
CD34+ cells from human BM in the presence of
GM-CSF and TNF-
.
The functional analysis of myeloid cTDC showed that they are able to
stimulate allogenic MLR but with less efficiency than cSDC despite a
more mature phenotype. Different allostimulatory capacity has
previously been described between purified CD8+
and CD8- SDC. CD8+ DC
induced a lower response, associated with marked T cell apoptosis due
to interaction of Fas on activated T cells with Fas-ligand on
CD8+ DC (12). With regard to this
finding it would be interesting to evaluate the ability of cTDC to kill
lymphocytes. Several authors have emphasized the pivotal role of IL-12
secreted by DC in the polarization of Th responses
(37, 38, 39). We have previously reported (7)
that cSDC secreted large amounts of IL-12p70 when double-stimulated
with anti-CD40 and LPS. This study extended this observation by
using LPS + IFN-
, which also induced active secretion of IL-12p70 by
cSDC, whereas IFN-
+ anti-CD40 combination was inefficient. The
capacity of myeloid-related cultured DC to secrete IL-12p70 in response
to appropriate stimulus has been previously reported by using murine BM
(16, 37) and human monocyte-derived DC (40, 41). However, in agreement with others (13, 14, 20), we showed that IL-12p70 is produced by the lymphoid-related
CD8
+ cell subset purified ex vivo from the
spleen of mice. Reis e Sousa et al. (42) reported that
CD11c+CD8
+ (and not
CD11c+CD8
-) SDC
secreted IL-12p70 following in vivo systemic triggering with
Toxoplasma gondii tachyzoites but that they can no longer be
restimulated during 1 wk in vivo, whereas CD8+ as
well as CD8- DC continue to respond in vitro.
This study demonstrate that CD8
- SDC are not
intrinsically unable to secrete IL-12 but they are susceptible to
inhibitory activity of the splenic microenvironment. Concerning TDC, we
showed for the first time that in the thymus also, IL-12p70 is produced
by the CD11c+ CD8
+ cells
and not by the CD11c+
CD8
- subset. This finding is in agreement
with the assigned biological function of TDC: to induce the elimination
of potential autoreactive developing T cell by apoptosis (4, 43, 44) rather than to initiate immune responses. Recent data
indicated that intrathymic IL-12 production was essential for the
negative selection of early CD4low
CD8low thymocytes but did not play a significant
role in the negative selection of CD4+
CD8+ thymocytes and single-positive thymocytes.
Nevertheless, to date, thymic IL-12-producing cells were not
characterized (45). Although we cannot rule out that
purified CD8
- TDC produced small if any
amounts of IL-12p70, our results clearly demonstrated that IL-12p70 was
mainly produced by CD8
+ TDC. To our knowledge,
it is the first evidence of a functional difference between subsets of
purified TDC. This finding suggests that CD8
-
and CD8
+ TDC may play distinct roles in
thymocyte development. They may be involved in negative selection of
distinct subsets of thymocytes. CD8+ TDC would
induce negative selection of CD4low
CD8low thymocytes by an IL-12-dependent
mechanism, whereas CD8- TDC induce negative
selection of more mature thymocytes by a mechanism remaining to be
elucidated. As we are able to culture myeloid-related TDC, we
investigate their ability to secrete IL-12p70. We found that in
contrast with their myeloid cSDC counterparts, they were reproducibly
unable to secrete IL-12p70 in response to the three types of double
stimulation used. This could be due to an intrinsic defect of
myeloid-related TDC or/and to an inhibitory factor present in TDC
culture. If we compared the SDC and TDC culture systems, the kinetics
of DC production is very different. cSDC precursors proliferate quickly
and vigorously in the liquid phase of the culture during the first 10
days of incubation resulting in frequent medium changes. In contrast, a
few cTDC precursors tightly bound to numerous foci of fibroblastoid
cells appeared after 7 days of culture and give birth to semiadherent
typical DC aggregates developing after 1012 days of culture. The
prolonged interactions of cTDC with the adherent stromal layer could
induce inhibitory signals for IL-12p70 production. This hypothesis is
currently under investigation.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
2 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Rolande Berthier, Commissariat à lEnergie Atomique-Grenoble, Départment de Biologie Moléculaire et Structurale/Immunochimie-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale, Unité 238, 17 rue des Martyrs, 38054 Grenoble Cedex 9, France. ![]()
3 Abbreviations used in this paper: DC, dendritic cell(s); TDC, thymic DC; SDC, splenic DC; cTDC, cultured TDC; cSDC, cultured SDC; BM, bone marrow; SCF, stem cell factor. ![]()
Received for publication May 11, 2000. Accepted for publication February 13, 2001.
| References |
|---|
|
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- subclasses of dendritic cells direct the development of distinct T helper cells in vivo. J. Exp. Med. 189:587.
- and CD8
+ dendritic cells are generated from CD4low lymphoid committed progenitors. Blood 96:2511.
-positive dendritic cells in vivo. Blood 96:1865.
-positive dendritic cells from a common myeloid progenitor. Science 290:2152.
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