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* Biocenter, Division of Biological Chemistry,
Department of Dermatology and Venerology, and
Division of General and Transplant Surgery, Department of Surgery, Innsbruck Medical University, Innsbruck, Austria
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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However, several lines of evidence suggest that inhibition of iNOS cannot entirely explain the immunosuppressive effect of H4-aminobiopterin. In the sepsis model, inhibition of iNOS was observed only upon continuous infusion of H4-aminobiopterin but not after the bolus dose given 2 h after LPS challenge that was sufficient to improve the 6-day survival rate. Moreover, administration of the NOS inhibitor NG-monomethyl-L-arginine that had similar effects on plasma nitrite plus nitrate levels as H4-aminobiopterin, did not improve survival rate (8). H4-Aminobiopterin also appears to be more efficient in prolonging allograft survival than other NOS inhibitors, i.e., NG-monomethyl-L-arginine that prolonged allograft survival only from 5.1 to 6.3 days (9) or aminoguanidine that prolonged allograft survival from 10.1 to 15.0 days under continuous treatment until rejection (10), whereas H4-aminobiopterin prolonged allograft survival from 8 to 14.8 days when treatment was discontinued on day 7 after transplantation (7). In a recent study, we found that, unlike H4-aminobiopterin, the iNOS-specific inhibitor N6-(1-iminoethyl)-L-lysine (L-NIL) could not prolong allograft survival despite clearly affecting plasma nitrite plus nitrate levels and reducing nitrotyrosine staining in the allografted hearts (G. Brandacher, M. Maglione, S. Schneeberger, P. Obrist, G. Thoeni, O. A. Wrulich, G. Werner-Felmayer, R. Margreiter, and E. R. Werner, unpublished data). However, in a rat cardiac allograft model, L-NIL was able to prolong allograft survival from 7 to
10 days under certain conditions (11). Also work with iNOS knockout (iNOS/) mice yielded controversial results: in one study using wild-type and iNOS/ recipients, no involvement of inducible NO formation in rejection was observed (12), whereas in another more recent study where recipients and donor hearts were from iNOS/ mice, participation of iNOS in the inflammatory response leading to rejection was demonstrated (13). Furthermore, participation of iNOS in developing cardiac allograft vasculopathy in the course of chronic rejection has been shown (14). Taken together, these findings illustrate that induction of iNOS contributes to but is not sufficient to develop allograft rejection. Rather, additional mechanisms that may also be affected by H4-aminobiopterin and which presumably take place before activation of T cells, formation of proinflammatory cytokines and induction of iNOS and other effectors, appear to be involved.
One of the key events during an immune response is maturation of dendritic cells and priming of T cells. Therefore, to explore additional immunosuppressive properties of H4-aminobiopterin, we studied its impact on dendritic cells and their ability to stimulate alloreactive T cells. For comparison, the effects of H4-biopterin, the natural cofactor of NOSs, and of sepiapterin, a dihydropteridine that is intracellularly converted into H4-biopterin via a salvage pathway (15), were tested. To dissect effects involving inducible NO formation from those that do not require inducible NO, we compared effects of the pteridines to those of L-NIL or applied the drugs to cells isolated from iNOS/ mice.
| Materials and Methods |
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Mice of inbred strains C57BL/6, OT-II, and BALB/c were purchased from Charles River Laboratories Germany, bred in the animal facility of the Innsbruck Medical University and used at 212 mo of age. CD4+ T cells from OT-II mice express a transgenic V
2V
5 TCR specific for the OVA peptide 323339 in the context of I-Ab (16). The iNOS/ mice were from The Jackson Laboratory (obtained via Charles River Laboratories Germany).
Dendritic cells
Precursors were purified from bone marrow of femurs and tibias. A total of 5 x 105 cells per well were seeded in six-well plates and cultured in 3 ml/well of RPMI 1640 supplemented with 10% (v/v) heat-inactivated FCS, 2 mM L-glutamine, 50 µM 2-ME, and 50 µg/ml gentamicin in the presence of 200 U/ml recombinant mouse GM-CSF (17) that was derived from a supernatant of the transfected plasmacytoma cell line X38-Ag8 (a kind gift from A. Lanzavecchia, Institute for Research in Biomedicine, Bellinzona, Switzerland). At day 3 of culture, an additional 3 ml of culture medium were added, and at day 6, after having replaced 3 ml of the culture medium with fresh medium, cells were treated with various test compounds at a concentration of 500 µM without or with 100 ng/ml LPS from Escherichia coli O111:B4 (Sigma-Aldrich) for further 48 h. Test compounds were H4-biopterin, H4-aminobiopterin, sepiapterin (Schircks Laboratories) and L-NIL (Alexis). Cells were washed two times with 20 ml of culture medium before mixing with T lymphocytes (see Oxidative mitogenesis). Cell preparations contained 7580% dendritic cells, as was estimated by FACS analyses for CD11c-positive cells.
T cells
T cells were purified from C57BL/6 or OT-II spleens and lymph nodes using negative magnetic separation after mechanical tissue disruption and lysis of erythrocytes with ammonium chloride. Cell suspensions were incubated with a lineage mixture consisting of mAbs anti-MHC II (clone M5.114), anti-CD45RA (clone B220), anti-Ly-6C (clone Rb6), anti-heat stable Ag (clone M1/69), and anti-NK1.1 (clone 4D11). For isolation of CD4+ T cells from OT-II mice, anti-CD8 (clone Lyt-2) was added to the Ab mix. In a next incubation step, anti-rat/anti-mouse IgG coupled to Biomag-beads (Qiagen) were used and negative fractions were collected. The resulting T cell suspension contained over 90% CD3+- or CD4+-positive T cells.
Oxidative mitogenesis
C57BL/6 or iNOS/ T cells were oxidized at 2 x 107 cells/ml with 250 µg/ml sodium periodate in PBS for 15 min at 4°C (18). Oxidative mitogenesis was set up in triplicates in 96-well plates mixing graded numbers (300, 1,000, 3,000, and 10,000 per well) of dendritic cells with 3 x 105 periodate-treated T cells thus yielding a stimulator to responder ratio of 1:30 to 1:1000. After incubation for 24 h at 37°C and 5% CO2, [3H]thymidine (1 µCi/well; New England Nuclear) was added for further 16 h. T cell proliferation was determined in a HVD Life Sciences detector after harvesting with a MACH III M Tomtec harvester (HVD Life Sciences) and solubilizing the samples with MeltiLex solid scintillator (Microsealer; PerkinElmer). In some experiments, catalase (from bovine liver; 20005000 U/mg protein; Sigma-Aldrich) for neutralizing possible effects of pteridines caused via hydrogen peroxide, or 50 µM hypoxanthine plus 20 µM thymidine to overcome possible effects of H4-aminobiopterin on dihydrofolate reductase activity (6), were added to the cultures.
OVA peptide presentation
Dendritic cells pretreated with pteridines were pulsed for 2 h with 10 µM OVA peptide 323339, which binds to I-Ab molecules. Afterward, the cells were carefully washed, and various numbers (300, 1,000, 3,000, and 10,000 per well) of dendritic cells were cocultured with 2 x 105 OT-II T cells for 48 h. [3H]Thymidine (1 µCi/well) was added for further 16 h and the proliferation of CD4+ T cells was measured by incorporation of radioactivity as described in Oxidative mitogenesis.
Detection of Ag expression by FACS analysis
A total of 13 x 105 dendritic cells treated as outlined above were incubated in 100 µl of PBS containing 1% (w/v) of BSA and various fluorescence-labeled Abs (diluted according to the suppliers instructions) for 15 min on ice. Cells were then washed with 500 µl of PBS/BSA and resuspended in 200 µl of PBS for flow cytometry using a Beckman Coulter EPICS XL/MCL 4 cl instrument (Coulter Electronics) and the EXPO32 ADC software. Abs used were labeled with FITC or PE. They were purchased either from BD Pharmingen (CD40-FITC, CD86-FITC, CD80-PE, CD11c-allophycocyanin, I-A/I-E-PE) or from eBiosciences (B7-H1-PE, B7-DC-PE, ICOS-L-PE). Isotype controls were IgG2a-FITC or IgG2b-PE (BD Pharmingen). For detecting intracellular MHC class II expression, cells were permeabilized with the Perm/wash kit from BD Pharmingen according to the manual.
Detection of intracellular cytokines in dendritic cells by FACS
Immature bone-marrow derived dendritic cells on day 8 of culture were stimulated for 4 h with 1 µg/ml LPS and 5 µg/ml anti-CD40 mAb (clone H3/23; BD Pharmingen) to induce cytokine production. To prevent secretion of cytokines, 1 µg/ml brefeldin A (BD Pharmingen) was added during the whole stimulation period. For FACS analyses, cells were permeabilized with a cell permeabilization kit (An der Grub) and stained with IL-12p40/70-PE (clone C15.6), IL-10-PE (clone JES5-16E3), and TNF-
-PE (MP6-XT22) to detect cytokines in dendritic cells, which were identified by labeling with anti-CD11-allophycocyanin (HL3) mAb.
Detection of T cell cytokine production by ELISA
To avoid possible side effects of sodium periodate treatment on cytokine production by T cells, we set up mixed lymphocyte reactions (MLRs) to check whether pteridine-treated dendritic cells affect T cell cytokine production. Allogeneic T cells were isolated from lymph nodes and spleens of BALB/c mice as described for the other mouse strains (see T cells). CD3+ T cells were cocultured with immature bone-marrow derived dendritic cells from C57BL/6 mice that had been either left untreated or were treated for 48 h with H4-aminobiopterin or H4-biopterin at 500 µM. After thoroughly washing dendritic cells, these were cocultured with the BALB/c T cells for 3 days. Supernatants were collected for determination of IL-2, IFN-
, IL-10, and IL-4 by ELISA (BenderMed Systems).
Determination of apoptosis
Apoptosis of dendritic cells and T cells was assessed by annexin V/propidium iodide double staining using the Annexin VFITC Apoptosis Detection kit from Alexis according to the suppliers instructions and propidium iodide (Sigma-Aldrich) added before FACS analysis at a final concentration of 1 µg/ml.
Quantitative PCR
Total RNA was isolated from dendritic cells with TRIzol reagent from Invitrogen Life Technologies according to the manufacturers protocol. Random primed cDNA was prepared using 500 ng of total RNA using Super Script II RNase H reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen Life Technologies). Quantitative PCR was performed with TaqMan technology using an AbiPrism 7700 sequence detector (Applied Biosystems) with the Brilliant Quantitative PCR Core kit (Stratagene) and Microamp plasticware from Applied Biosystems. Probes (5' FAM- and 3' TAMRA-labeled) and primer sequences (selected with the Primer Express software from Applied Biosystems) were as follows: murine MHC class II Ag A,
(H2-Aa) (GenBank NM_010378): probe: 5'-TGGGAACCTGAGATTCCAGCCCC-3'; forward primer: 5'-GGAGGAGCCGGTTCTGAAAC-3'; reverse primer: 5'-CCAGGGCACAGACCACAGT-3'. Murine ICOS ligand (ICOS-L) (GenBank NM_015790): probe: 5'-TCCTTGGGAACCAGGCAGCCTGTT-3'; forward primer: 5'-GCAGCTAAAGTGTCCCTGTTTTG-3'; reverse primer: 5'-CGCTAGAAACATGGAGCTTCTTC-3'. Murine indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (GenBank M69109): forward primer: 5'-GGCTTTGCTCTACCACATCCAC-3'; reverse primer: 5'-TAGCCAC-AAGGACCCAGGG-3'; probe: 5'-CTGTATGCGTCGGGCAGCTCCA-3'. Murine endothelial nitric oxide synthase (GenBank NM_008713): probe 5'-CCAATGCAGTGAAGG TCTCTGCCTCA-3'; forward primer: 5'-CACCAGGAAGAAGACCTTTAAGGA-3'; reverse primer: 5'-CACACGCTTCGCCATCAC-3'. Murine neuronal nitric oxide synthase (GenBank NM_008712): probe: 5'-CAGTCTCCCGCCTCGGGCAA-3'; forward primer: 5'-CCTCAACAACCCGTATTCAGAGA-3'; reverse primer: 5'-GACTGCCATTCTTGGTAGGAGACT-3'. For normalization, a 18S ribosomal RNA probe was applied to cDNAs diluted 1/1000. All probes and primers were from Microsynth.
Determination of pteridines and nitrite plus nitrate
H4-biopterin and its oxidation products H2-biopterin and biopterin were detected in supernatants or cell extracts (19) after iodine oxidation at alkaline (7,8-H2-biopterin plus biopterin) or acidic (total biopterins) pH as previously described (19). For detection of H4-aminobiopterin and its oxidation products, a protocol recently detailed in Ref.20 using MnO2 oxidation, was used. Samples were then analyzed by HPLC (20). Nitrite plus nitrate were quantified by reversed phase HPLC equipped with a cadmium reactor to reduce nitrate to nitrite and postcolumn detection of nitrite by the Griess reaction as outlined previously (20).
| Results |
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Dendritic cells isolated from wild-type (C57BL/6) but not from iNOS/ mice formed high amounts of nitrite plus nitrate, a measure for iNOS activity, in response to treatment with LPS (Fig. 1A). Sepiapterin did not alter iNOS activity significantly (Fig. 1A) because, like in other rodent cells (21), intracellular H4-biopterin levels of untreated controls were already high and obviously saturating iNOS (199.7 ± 32.4 pmol/mg, mean of four determinations ± SD). Constitutive nitrite plus nitrate production of dendritic cells from iNOS/ mice was
3-fold higher than that of unstimulated dendritic cells from wild-type animals (Fig. 1A). Expression of constitutive NOSs present in addition to iNOS and generating NO in the absence of inflammatory stimuli has been demonstrated in various cell types including rodent macrophages (22, 23, 24). However, in dendritic cells from both wild-type and iNOS/ mice, endothelial nitric oxide synthase as well as neuronal nitric oxide synthase mRNA expression were close to the detection limit of
5 x 109 mRNA copies per 18 S rRNA (data not shown).
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535%, which was clearly linked to NO formation because it was abolished by L-NIL and was not observed in dendritic cells from iNOS/ mice (Fig. 1B). The minor beneficial effect of pteridines on LPS-induced apoptosis of wild-type dendritic cells may be explained by their potential to oxidize NO (25, 21) as well as by their general scavenging properties (21). Surface marker expression of dendritic cells
Dendritic cell preparations from bone-marrow cells contained between 70 and 80% of CD11c-positive cells. The percentage of CD11c-positive cells was not altered by H4-pteridines (Fig. 2A). Using LPS as a maturation stimulus (24), we tested for expression of various surface markers and the influence of pteridines and L-NIL. As is shown in Fig. 2, expression of CD40 as well as of MHC class II was induced by LPS in both wild-type and iNOS/ dendritic cells. Although neither of the test compounds affected CD40 expression (Fig. 3A), H4-aminobiopterin reduced MHC class II expression in cells of both mouse strains in absence or presence of LPS. In contrast, H4-biopterin, sepiapterin, and L-NIL had no such effect (Fig. 3B). A comparable effect of H4-aminobiopterin on MHC class II expression was also seen when gating for CD11c-positive cells (Fig. 2B).
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1 x 105 mRNA copies per 18 S rRNA (data not shown). Further characterization of the effect of H4-aminobiopterin on MHC class II expression by assessing not only surface but also total MHC class II levels in permeabilized cells showed that H4-aminobiopterin did not affect the transport of MHC class II protein from intracellular stores to the surface (Fig. 4B). Also MHC class II mRNA levels remained unchanged (
5 x 104 MHC class II mRNA copies per 18 S rRNA) in cells of both wild-type and iNOS/ mice treated with pteridines or L-NIL alone or in combination with LPS (see Fig. 5A). Therefore, H4-aminobiopterin appeared to affect overall MHC class II protein levels.
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Oxidative mitogenesis was used to assess the T cell priming capacity of dendritic cells from C57BL/6 wild-type or iNOS/ mice treated with pteridines or L-NIL in absence or presence of LPS for 48 h. As can be seen from Fig. 6, A and B, inhibition of iNOS by L-NIL in C57BL/6 wild-type dendritic cells increased T cell proliferation in response to both untreated and LPS-treated dendritic cells. This is in line with previous work on peritoneal macrophages (26) and is explained by the direct antiproliferative and proapoptotic effect of NO on T cells (reviewed in Ref.27). Accordingly, no effect of L-NIL was observed when dendritic cells from iNOS/ animals were used (Fig. 6, C and D). In contrast to L-NIL, H4-aminobiopterin attenuated the T cell activating potential of dendritic cells from both strains while H4-biopterin did not (Fig. 6). Interestingly, the effect of H4-aminobiopterin was only weakly seen in wild-type cells treated with LPS (Fig. 6B), whereas it was clearly more pronounced for immature and mature iNOS/ dendritic cells (Fig. 6, C and D). Also sepiapterin reduced T cell activation by dendritic cells from both strains albeit to a lesser extent than H4-aminobiopterin and not in presence of LPS (Fig. 6). Because H4-aminobiopterin acts also as an inhibitor of dihydrofolate reductase (6), we tested whether this mechanism was involved in the T cell-antiproliferative effect of H4-aminobiopterin. However, providing thymidine and hypoxanthine, thus overcoming possible effects of dihydrofolate reductase inhibition on nucleotide metabolism (15), made no significant difference for H4-aminobiopterin-induced inhibition of T cell proliferation (data not shown). This indicated that inhibition of dihydrofolate reductase was not involved in the observed effects.
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To test whether the observed H4-aminobiopterin-induced down-regulation of MHC class II expression on dendritic cells was functional in terms of impaired Ag presentation, we performed a MLR of H4-aminobiopterin-treated dendritic cells from C57BL/6 mice loaded with OVA peptide and T cells isolated from OT-II mice (16). As is shown in Fig. 7, H4-aminobiopterin significantly impaired the Ag-specific T cell response to immature and, to a lesser extent, to LPS-matured dendritic cells. The inhibitory effect of H4-aminobiopterin was also clearly seen when gating for CD11c expression thus indicating that the compound indeed acted on dendritic cells (Fig. 7B).
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To further clarify the effect of H4-pteridines on dendritic cells, we tested for cytokine production in dendritic cells as well as in MLR. As can be seen from Fig. 8A, the amount of TNF-
- and IL-12-producing CD11c-positive cells was significantly reduced by H4-aminobiopterin but not by H4-biopterin. Accordingly, impaired production of IL-2 and IFN-
was found in supernatants from MLRs using H4-aminobiopterin-pretreated dendritic cells for T cell activation (Fig. 8B). H4-biopterin treatment had no such effect and even enhanced IL-2 production (Fig. 8B). No IL-10-producing CD11c-positive cells or IL-10 and IL-4 production by T cells could be found in MLRs (Fig. 8).
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Unlike in the case of pretreating dendritic cells with the test substances (see above), adding H4-pteridines for 48 h directly to the oxidative mitogenesis cultures caused complete inhibition of T cell proliferation, whereas sepiapterin or L-NIL had no such effect (Fig. 9A). The complete lack of T cell response was caused by efficient apoptosis of T cells (Fig. 9B). In recent work using RAW264.7 cells, we found that H4-pteridines induced apoptosis via formation of hydrogen peroxide (20). Therefore, we tested for the effect of catalase on T cell survival and found that only H4-biopterin-induced apoptosis but not H4-aminobiopterin-induced apoptosis was efficiently attenuated by catalase (Fig. 9B) thus indicating that H4-aminobiopterin-induced apoptosis of T cells involved effects additional to formation of hydrogen peroxide. Catalase also restored T cell proliferation of H4-biopterin-treated cultures more efficiently than of H4-aminobiopterin-treated cells (Fig. 9C).
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| Discussion |
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On dendritic cells, H4-aminobiopterin had no proapoptotic effect as on T cells (this study) or RAW264.7 cells (20) but affected dendritic cell function by reducing their ability to stimulate T cell proliferation. Besides ICOS-L (see below), MHC class II was the only marker from a panel of seven molecules involved in T cell activation whose expression was influenced by H4-aminobiopterin. The down-regulation of the MHC class II expression appeared to be specific for the compound because it was not seen with H4-biopterin. MHC class II expression was also not altered by sepiapterin, L-NIL, or in iNOS/ dendritic cells. This indicates that the effects of H4-aminobiopterin on MHC class II expression are not due to inhibition of iNOS and also cannot be explained by the redox properties or possible NO-scavenging effect of the compound (20, 21, 25). H4-Aminobiopterin-treated dendritic cells also produced less proinflammatory cytokines, i.e., TNF-
and IL-12. Both down-regulation of MHC class II surface expression and reduced production of proinflammatory cytokines by dendritic cells can account for the reduced T cell proliferation as is reflected by reduced [3H]thymidine incorporation in MLR, and impaired IL-2 and IFN-
production (28). The lack of IL-10-producing dendritic cells that could induce formation of regulatory T cells (29) as well as the lack of IL-10 production in MLRs that could render dendritic cells tolerogenic (30) indicates that the immunosuppressive effects of H4-aminobiopterin cannot be explained by generation of regulatory T cells in this experimental setting. Moreover, the lack of IL-4 production in MLRs in parallel to reducing production of proinflammatory cytokines also shows that the immunosuppressive effect is not caused by a switch from Th1 to Th2 response.
In MLRs, T cell proliferation was stimulated by L-NIL in wild-type but not in iNOS/ cells (as expected according to previous work (26, 27)), whereas H4-aminobiopterin had the opposite effect thus underlining again that iNOS inhibition was not involved in the observed effects. Also sepiapterin reduced the capacity of dendritic cells to stimulate T cell proliferation although to a lesser degree than H4-aminobiopterin. The mechanism for this is currently unclear but it may be related to its scavenging properties under certain experimental conditions (21).
Interestingly, reduction of MHC class II expression by H4-aminobiopterin was more pronounced in immature than in LPS-matured dendritic cells, which may be explained by the very strong induction of MHC class II-positive cells by LPS, which cannot be fully counteracted by H4-aminobiopterin (Fig. 3B). This is also indicated by the observation that cultures of LPS-matured dendritic cells treated with H4-aminobiopterin still contained some highly MHC class II-positive cells that can induce T cell proliferation while in immature dendritic cells no such population was observed (Fig. 3). As is shown here, H4-aminobiopterin did not affect MHC class II mRNA levels or the distribution pattern of MHC class II protein but rather reduced overall MHC class II protein levels. The mechanism for this effect remains to be clarified. However, because maturation of dendritic cells as it is induced, e.g., by LPS (31), leads to stabilization of MHC class II molecules by prolonging MHC class II protein half-life (32), a possible mechanism for down-regulation of MHC class II protein levels by H4-aminobiopterin could be that the compound affects protein stability. Also other mechanisms like, e.g., decreased translation of MHC class II mRNA could account for this effect of H4-aminobiopterin.
In addition to MHC class II expression, H4-aminobiopterin also affected surface expression of ICOS-L, a costimulatory member of the B7 family that is involved in regulating T cell activation (33). To our knowledge, down-regulation of ICOS-L surface expression in the course of LPS-induced maturation of dendritic cells was so far not reported. In human dendritic cells derived from CD14+ monocytes, maturation through LPS, TNF-
, or CD40 did not alter ICOS-L expression and the only agent from a panel of proinflammatory stimuli including LPS that was able to induce ICOS-L surface expression in human CD14+ monocytes was IFN-
(33). It is currently unclear, whether and, if yes, how the comparatively moderate (
3-fold) down-regulation of ICOS-L expression on LPS-matured murine dendritic cells would affect T cell activation. However, H4-aminobiopterin antagonized this maturation effect of LPS, not by altering mRNA levels but by increasing ICOS-L protein levels.
The effect of H4-aminobiopterin on T cells was complementary to its effect on dendritic cells in that the compound very efficiently induced apoptosis of T cells. Unlike in RAW264.7 cells where we could show that the proapoptotic effect of H4-aminobiopterin was entirely related to formation of hydrogen peroxide due to auto-oxidation of the compound (20), this was not the case for primary T cells. Accordingly, catalase could not efficiently prevent H4-aminobiopterin-induced apoptosis or restore the T cell response while it did so for the H4-biopterin effects. Presently, it is unclear why the two H4-pteridines appear to operate by an identical mechanism, i.e., formation of hydrogen peroxide, in RAW264.7 cells (20), whereas this is not the case in primary T cells. However, the chemistry of reduced pteridines is very complex, and cell type-specific biochemical features such as, e.g., redox status, catalase, or glutathione content, therefore, might influence their behavior in various experimental settings (reviewed in Ref.21). Future work will aim to clarify whether the apparent hydrogen peroxide-independent part of the H4-aminobiopterin effect on T cells is related to its redox activity or to another mechanism.
In summary, our work shows that H4-aminobiopterin can directly interfere with function (dendritic cells) and survival (T cells) of the key players of the immune response. Dendritic cells as a target of immunosuppressive drugs have only been recently acknowledged since it became clear that many of the well established immunosuppressive drugs not only affect lymphocytes but interfere with dendritic cell development and function at virtually any stage (34). As we show here, H4-aminobiopterin fits well into this concept by affecting dendritic cell function and T cell survival. The complexity of the H4-aminobiopterin chemistry makes it difficult to distinguish between its different properties. However, the observed effects neither involve inhibition of iNOS nor can they be attributed to formation of hydrogen peroxide due to auto-oxidation. They also cannot be explained by an effect of H4-aminobiopterin on indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (see Fig. 5B), an enzyme that was recently identified as a key player for tolerance induction in T cells (35). Therefore, we conclude that the compound has additional not yet clarified properties that account for its immunosuppressive effect and anticipate that further chemically related substances could be developed to optimize for its immunosuppressive action.
| Disclosures |
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| Footnotes |
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1 This work was supported by the Austrian Research Funds "Zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung", Grants 14949 (to N.R.), 16021 (to C.H.), and 16188 (to. E.R.W.). ![]()
2 G.T. and P.S. contributed equally to this work. ![]()
3 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Ernst R. Werner, Biocenter, Division of Biological Chemistry, Innsbruck Medical University, Fritz-Pregl-Strasse 3/VI, A-6020 Innsbruck, Austria. E-mail address: ernst.r.werner{at}uibk.ac.at ![]()
4 Abbreviations used in this paper: iNOS, inducible NO synthase; H4-biopterin, (6R)-5,6,7,8-tetrahydro-L-biopterin; H4-aminobiopterin, 2,4-diamino-6(R,S)-6-(L-erythro-1',2'-dihydroxypropyl)-5,6,7,8-tetrahydropteridine; ICOS-L, ICOS ligand; L-NMMA, NG-monomethyl-L-arginine; L-NIL, N6-(1-iminoethyl)-L-lysine; NOS, NO synthase. ![]()
Received for publication August 12, 2004. Accepted for publication March 17, 2005.
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