Induction of anergic allergen-specific suppressor T cells using tolerogenic dendritic cells derived from children with allergies to house dust mites.

2010 
Background Dendritic cells (DCs) regulate the immune response to allergens in the lung; they induce either effector or regulatory T cells, which promote or suppress, respectively, the development of allergy. IL-10 is a potent immunosuppressive cytokine that induces type 1 regulatory (Tr1) T cells. Objective To generate allergen-specific Tr1 cells in vitro from children with allergy. Methods Monocyte-derived DCs from children with allergy to house dust mites (HDM) were generated by incubating the cells with IL-10 and pulsing them with Der p 2, a major HDM allergen, or by pulsing them with Der p 2 and incubating them with IL-10 during their last 2 days of differentiation. Results Der p 2–specific T-cell proliferation and T H 2 cytokine production were significantly reduced when T cells from patients with allergy to HDM were activated with autologous Der p 2–pulsed DCs that had been differentiated or incubated with IL-10. T-cell lines generated with Der p 2–pulsed DCs that were differentiated with IL-10 were hyporesponsive to reactivation with Der p 2 and able to suppress Der p 2–specific T H 2 effector cells. Conclusion Dendritic cells differentiated in the presence of IL-10 and pulsed with allergen gave rise to a population of tolerogenic DCs that induced allergen-specific Tr1 cells. This finding represents an important step forward to the prospective clinical application of tolerogenic DCs to modulate allergen-specific T-cell responses.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    58
    References
    49
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []