& lt; i> vitro< / i>外周血单核细胞产生髓源性抑制细胞

Valeria P. Timganova, K. Y. Shardina, M. S. Bochkova, D. I. Usanina, S. A. Zamorina
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引用次数: 0

摘要

髓源性抑制细胞(Myeloid-derived suppressor cells, MDSCs)作为免疫反应的关键调控因子,在生物医学细胞技术的发展和改进中备受关注。增强这些细胞的抑制活性对于开发自身免疫性疾病和流产的治疗方法非常重要,并且由于已知MDSCs可以抑制抗肿瘤免疫,因此对它们的抑制可能对治疗癌症有用。然而,有一个问题阻碍了对MDSCs的积极研究,即难以获得足够数量的这种细胞群。在癌症患者中分离MDSCs提出了一个伦理挑战。此外,由于个体因素,这些MDSC在亚群组成和抑制活性方面可能存在差异。从骨髓细胞中生成人类MDSC的研究人员也可能面临类似的问题。因此,找到一个可靠的和负担得起的这些细胞的来源,以促进其功能的研究是极其重要的。在体外获得人类MDSCs的尝试已经进行了很长时间。GM- CSF、IL-6、IL- 1、IL-4、PGE2、LPS、M-CSF、IFN是诱导MDSC体外分化的因子。然而,尽管使用了多种因素,但并非所有的方案都具有明确的可重复性,从而导致在目标群体中产生足够数量的细胞。在此之前,我们还开发了一种从人外周血中提取的CD11b+细胞分化MDSC的方案,这使得有可能获得一个有形的但仍然不足的细胞百分比来研究功能活性。 为了增加培养中MDSCs的数量,我们开发了一种旨在将这些细胞从外周血单核细胞(CD14+细胞)分化为PCMO(单核细胞来源的程序化细胞)的方案。免疫磁分离分离的单核细胞在去分化培养基(添加M-CSF、IL-3和-巯基乙醇的完全培养基)中培养一周。随后,用GM-CSF替代培养基,培养3天,然后加入LPS和IL-1,以诱导抑制活性。我们发现,在预先创造去分化条件的情况下,以两周的时间培养CD14+细胞会导致培养中活细胞的百分比略有下降。然而,培养MDSCs的比例有增加的趋势(从平均34%到40%),其抑制活性(精氨酸酶和IDO表达)也有增加的趋势。Arg+细胞的百分比平均增加10%,IDO+细胞的百分比平均增加16%。此外,与使用CD11b+细胞的分化方案相比,成熟M-MDSCs的百分比显着(几倍)高。因此,这种MDSCs生产方法使我们能够增加属于MDSCs条件成熟单核细胞亚群的细胞数量,以及群体中功能抑制细胞的百分比。所描述的方案可用于提高旨在调节MDSC功能的研究的质量,以开发新的治疗方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
<i>In vitro</i> production of myeloid-derived suppressor cells from peripheral blood monocytes
Myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) are of interest as key regulators of the immune response for the development and improvement of cellular technologies in biomedicine. Enhancing the suppressive activity of these cells is important for developing therapies for autoimmune diseases and miscarriages, and their suppression may be useful in the treatment of cancer, since MDSCs are known to suppress antitumor immunity. However, there is a problem that prevents the active study of MDSCs, i.e., the difficulty in obtaining sufficient numbers of this cell population. Isolation of MDSCs in cancer patients poses an ethical challenge. Moreover, these MDSC may differ in subpopulation composition and suppressive activity due to individual factors. Researchers who generate human MDSC from bone marrow cells may also face similar problems. Therefore, finding a reliable and affordable source of these cells to facilitate the study of their functions is extremely important. Attempts to obtain human MDSCs in vitro have been ongoing for a long time. GM- CSF, IL-6, IL- 1, IL-4, PGE2, LPS, M-CSF, IFN are described as factors that induce the ex vivo MDSC differentiation. However, despite multiple factors used, not all protocols are clearly reproducible, leading to generation of a sufficient number of cells in the target population. Previously, we had also developed a scheme for MDSC differentiation from CD11b+ cells derived from human peripheral blood, which made it possible to obtain a tangible but still insufficient percentage of cells to study functional activity. To increase the number of MDSCs in cultures, we developed a protocol aimed for differentiation of these cells from peripheral blood monocytes (CD14+ cells) previously transformed into PCMO (programmed cells of monocytic origin). The monocytes isolated by immunomagnetic separation were cultured in a de-differentiating medium (complete culture medium supplemented with M-CSF, IL-3 and -mercaptoethanol) for one week. Later on, the medium was replaced by the addition of GM-CSF, being cultured for three days, followed by addition of LPS and IL-1 in order to induce suppressive activity. We have found that culturing CD14+ cells on a two-week schedule with prior creation of dedifferentiation conditions resulted in a slightly decreased percentage of viable cells in culture. However, there was a trend towards an increased ratio of MDSCs in culture (from an average of 34 to 40%) and an increase in their suppressive activity (arginase and IDO expression). The percentage of Arg+ cells increased by average of 10%, and IDO+ cells, by 16%. Moreover, the percentage of mature M-MDSCs was significantly (several-fold) higher when compared with differentiation protocol using CD11b+ cells. Hence, this method of MDSCs production enables us to increase the number of cells belonging to the conditionally mature monocyte subpopulation of MDSCs, as well as the percentage of functional suppressor cells in the population. The described scheme may be used to improve the quality of studies aimed at modulating MDSC functions in order to develop new therapeutic approaches.
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