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Cutting Edge |
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, College of Veterinary Medicine, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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The type of response induced by DC appears to depend upon the nature of the activating signal (be it pathogen or model Ag) and may be associated with the activation status of the DC (8). The ability of DC to produce substantial amounts of IL-12, both directly in response to pathogen-inherent signals and on secondary stimulation of the DC during communication with T cells, is well documented and is generally thought to be contributory to Th1 response initiation and development (9, 10, 11). In contrast to this, there is a general paucity of data regarding DC induction of Th2 responses and whether DC might produce IL-4 during this process. Recently, it has been suggested that DC IL-4 may play an important role in Th2 development (12), although we have previously been unable to detect DC IL-4 production either at the protein or message level (13).
To determine whether the ability of DC to produce polarizing IL-4 or IL-12 was necessary for induction of polarized T cell responses, we generated murine bone marrow-derived DC from wild-type (WT), IL-4-/-, or IL-12-/- mice. We then compared the ability of these DC, pulsed with Ag that inherently drive either strong Th1 or Th2 responses, to induce polarized T cell responses after transfer into recipient mice. Additionally, we assessed how important it is for the recipient to be able to produce IL-4 or IL-12 during the polarization process by transferring WT DC into IL-4-/- or IL-12-/- recipients. Using this approach we found that DC are not required to produce IL-4 for effective Th2 induction. More surprisingly, given the well-known ability of DC to produce IL-12, we also found that DC IL-12 production was not an absolute requirement for Th1 induction, although it did enhance the resultant Th1 response. Importantly, in the absence of recipient ability to produce IL-4 or IL-12, we were unable to detect either Th2 or Th1 response development, respectively. These data help define the source and importance of IL-4 and IL-12 during immune response development initiated by DC, and underscore the vital role of these cytokines in promoting response progression and expansion.
| Materials and Methods |
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C57BL/6 mice were purchased from Taconic Farms (Germantown, NY), and IL-12(p40)-deficient mice were purchased from The Jackson Laboratory (Bar Harbor, ME). IL-4-deficient (14) mice were bred in-house. Six- to 12-wk-old age- and sex-matched mice were used as a source of bone marrow for DC generation or as recipients for transfer of DC. For a Th2 Ag we used Schistosoma mansoni egg Ag, which is a highly effective Th2 inducer (15, 16). Soluble egg Ag (SEA) was prepared from isolated schistosome eggs as previously described (13, 17, 18). For a Th1 stimulus we used heat-killed Propionibacterium acnes (Pa, a Gram-positive bacterium previously known as Corynebacterium parvum) (19), a stock of which was kindly provided by the Trudeau Institute (Saranac Lake, NY).
DC generation
DC were generated from murine bone marrow by culture
in GM-CSF (PeproTech, Rocky Hill, NJ) for 11 days as described in
detail previously (13, 20). Cells generated by this method
comprised 95% DC (class
II+CD11c+), with the
remainder of the cells being predominantly granulocytes. No
contaminating B cells, macrophages, CD4 or CD8 T cells, or
CD8+ DC were generated under these conditions, as
determined by FACS using mAbs specific for B220, F4/80, CD4, and
CD8-
(data not shown). For activation of DC with polarizing Ag,
cells were treated in the same way, but with the addition of the chosen
Ag (50 µg/ml SEA or 5 µg/ml Pa) for the final 18 h of
culture.
Determination of DC priming ability
For in vivo transfer experiments, mice were injected i.p. with 5 x 105 DC or DC that had been pulsed with SEA or Pa (as above). After 7 days, spleens were removed aseptically and splenocytes were incubated with medium, SEA (50 µg/ml), Pa (5 µg/ml), or mAb anti-CD3 (0.5 µg/well, plate bound; BD PharMingen, San Diego, CA). Splenocytes (2 x 106) were stimulated in 200 µl DMEM supplemented with 2 mM L-glutamine (Life Technologies, Gaithersburg, MD), 100 U/ml penicillin plus 100 µg/ml streptomycin (Life Technologies), and 50 µM 2-ME (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO) and 3% normal mouse serum (Cedarlane Laboratories, Hornby, Ontario, Canada). Cytokine levels in supernatants harvested from 72-h cultures were measured by ELISA. Cytokine ELISAs were performed on culture supernatants using paired mAb purchased from BD PharMingen or purified from hybridoma supernatants in our laboratory. Using this system, we have previously shown that transfer of DC primed with SEA or Pa induces polarized Th2 or Th1 responses, respectively, in recipient mice via a mechanism that is dependent upon expression of MHC class II by the injected DC (13). Importantly, this class II dependence suggests that Ag is being presented by the transferred DC and not by resident cells that acquire Ag from these DC.
Statistical analysis
Students t test was used to determine the statistical significance between groups. A p value <0.05 was considered to be a significant difference.
| Results |
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Previously, we have been unable to detect either IL-4 mRNA or
protein by SEA (or Pa)-pulsed DC (13). However, this did
not preclude the possibility that DC primed with SEA might produce IL-4
following interaction with T cells in vivo. Furthermore, given recent
data indicating that DC IL-4 may play an important role in Th2
development (12), we wanted to more closely examine a role
for DC-derived IL-4 in Th2 induction by SEA-pulsed DC. To this end, we
generated DC from WT or IL-4-/- mice and then
differentially activated them by overnight exposure to either SEA or
Pa. DC generated from WT or IL-4-/- mice
exhibited similar phenotypic characteristics both before and after
exposure to Ag, with activation markers (class II, CD80, CD86, and
CD40) not being significantly up-regulated after exposure to SEA, but
in all cases being markedly elevated after exposure to Pa (data not
shown). Mice that had been injected 1 wk previously with SEA-pulsed DC
mounted a marked SEA-specific Th2 response irrespective of whether the
DC were able to produce IL-4 (Fig. 1
).
Furthermore, the Pa-specific Th1 response did not differ between mice
injected with Pa-pulsed WT or IL-4-/-
DC.
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It is generally thought that the IL-12 made by DC at the
initiation of T cell activation contributes to the development of a Th1
response. To test this hypothesis directly, and to see what impact
removal of the ability of DC to produce IL-12 might have on Th2
response initiation, we generated IL-12-/- DC
and examined their ability to induce Th1 and Th2 responses after in
vivo transfer into WT mice. DC generated from WT or
IL-12(p40)-/- mice did not differ
phenotypically either before or after exposure to Ag, displaying
similar activation states after exposure to SEA, and marked activation
after exposure to Pa (data not shown). As expected, animals that
received Pa-primed IL-12-/- DC mounted a
reduced IFN-
response in comparison to animals that had been
injected with similarly activated WT DC (p <
0.05) (Fig. 2
). However, although IFN-
production was reduced in splenocyte cultures from these animals, the
amount produced was still significant in comparison to mice injected
with IL-12-/- DC alone
(p < 0.05), indicating that DC IL-12
production is not an absolute requirement for initiation of a Th1
response to Pa. The SEA-specific Th2 response did not differ between
mice injected with SEA-pulsed WT or
IL-12-/- DC.
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To assess the importance of the cytokine contribution made by
resident cells in the induction of Th2 and Th1 responses by injected
DC, we transferred SEA- or Pa-pulsed WT DC into WT,
IL-4-/-, or IL-12-/-
recipient mice. Restimulation of splenocytes removed from these animals
1 wk later revealed that recipient IL-4 was absolutely required for Th2
induction, because spleen cells from IL-4-/-
recipients of SEA-pulsed WT DC failed to produce IL-4, IL-5 (Fig. 3
A), or IL-13 (data not shown)
in response to restimulation with SEA. Splenocytes from
IL-4-/- recipient animals stimulated with
anti-CD3 also failed to produce Th2 cytokines (Fig. 3
B
and data not shown). Strikingly, spleen cells from
IL-12-/- recipients of Pa-pulsed WT DC failed
to produce IFN-
on stimulation with Pa (Fig. 3
A) and
produced significantly less IFN-
on stimulation with anti-CD3
(Fig. 3
B) than WT recipients (2.6 ± 1.2 compared with
62.6 ± 17.7 ng/ml), indicating that recipient IL-12 production is
necessary for Th1 induction by DC. In addition,
IL-12-/- recipients of SEA-pulsed DC made
significantly more Ag-specific IL-5 (Fig. 3
A) and IL-13
(data not shown) than WT recipients. This was more evident following
mitogenic stimulation, where IL-12-/-
recipients of SEA-pulsed DC made significantly more IL-4, IL-5 (Fig. 3
B), and IL-13 (data not shown) than WT recipients.
Similarly, IL-4-/- recipients of Pa-pulsed WT
DC made significantly more IFN-
than WT recipients, which was
evident on stimulation with either Pa (Fig. 3
A) or
anti-CD3 (Fig. 3
B).
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| Discussion |
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, and TNF-
are possible
candidates.
Our data raise the interesting question of what role DC IL-12 might
play if it is not essential for Th1 induction. Recent work addressing
the kinetics of DC activation by proinflammatory Ag has shown that DC
IL-12 production peaks and then is lost early after stimulation, and
that DC ability to produce bioactive IL-12 on secondary stimulation and
via CD40 is similarly transient (23, 24). We have shown
that it is not necessary for DC to produce IL-12 to drive a potent Th1
response after activation with a proinflammatory Ag. Furthermore, we
have previously shown that, following activation with a proinflammatory
Ag, it is not necessary for DC to express CD40 to induce a Th1 response
(25). Thus, these data suggest a role for DC IL-12 at the
site of Ag encounter, rather than during DC interaction with naive T
cells in the lymphatics. DC production of cytokines such as IL-12 in
the periphery could affect the local response by promoting IFN-
production by NK and memory T cells.
In contrast to our data indicating that a DC-derived IL-4 and IL-12 are
not necessary for the induction of polarized responses, we have shown
that recipient-derived IL-4 is vital for DC-induced Th2 development,
and IL-12 for Th1 development. These results indicate that IL-4 and
IL-12 function in this respect cannot be compensated by production of
other cytokines such as IL-13 and IL-18. Surprisingly, particularly in
the case of IL-12, these data also indicate that it is production of
polarizing cytokines by cells other than the transferred DC that is
vital for expansion/amplification of the T cell response initiated by
DC. In relation to this, recent work has shown that the decision to
become a Th1 cell can occur independently of IL-12, production of which
then serves as an essential factor for prolonged Th1 survival
(26). Similarly, it has been shown that Th2 development
can occur in the absence of STAT-6 or IL-4 (27).
Furthermore, expression of genes such as Gata-3 and
T-bet is alone sufficient to induce production of the key
polarizing cytokines IL-4 and IFN-
(27, 28). Taken
together, these data present the intriguing possibility that DC could
initiate Th polarization by inducing the expression of genes that are
important for Th polarization, but support the idea that selection,
survival, and expansion of such cells then becomes reliant upon
cytokines from other sources (29). In addition, they
support the suggestion that continued IL-12 production is required for
Th1 response maintenance (30, 31) and promote a similarly
important role for IL-4 in Th2 response maintenance.
We do not yet know the source of the recipient-derived IL-12 or IL-4. It is possible that transferred Pa-pulsed DC may cross-prime resident cells (32) to make IL-12 via a mechanism that is not reliant upon DC IL-12 production. IL-4 production by resident cells could also be induced in a similar way. Such a mechanism could involve interaction of transferred DC either directly with resident DC or indirectly via priming of CD4 or CD8 T cells or other cell types. It is likely that CD4 T cells themselves provide the requisite source of IL-4 (33). We are currently addressing these possibilities.
In summary, we have shown that Th2 induction by DC occurs independently of DC IL-4 but is reliant upon recipient IL-4 production. Similarly, although DC IL-12 production can potentiate Th1 development, this process is ultimately dependent upon recipient IL-12.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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2 Current address: Department of Pathobiology, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104. ![]()
3 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Edward J. Pearce, Department of Microbiology, University of Pennsylvania, 203D Johnson Pavilion, 3610 Hamilton Walk, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6076. E-mail address: ejpearce{at}mail.med.upenn.edu ![]()
4 Abbreviations used in this paper: DC, dendritic cell; SEA, soluble egg Ag; WT, wild type; Pa, Propionibacterium acnes. ![]()
Received for publication January 8, 2002. Accepted for publication February 4, 2002.
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