Dexamethasone turns tumor antigen-presenting cells into tolerogenic dendritic cells with T cell inhibitory functions |
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Authors: | Cristián Falcón-Beas Andrés Tittarelli Gabriela Mora-Bau Fabián Tempio Claudio Pérez Daniel Hevia Carolina Behrens Iván Flores Felipe Falcón-Beas Paola Garrido Gabriel Ascui Cristián Pereda Fermín E. González Flavio Salazar-Onfray Mercedes N. López |
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Affiliation: | 1. Disciplinary Program of Immunology, Institute of Biomedical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Chile, 8380453 Santiago, Chile;2. Millennium Institute on Immunology and Immunotherapy, Faculty of Medicine, University of Chile, 8380453 Santiago, Chile;3. Cell Therapy Laboratory, Blood Bank Service, University of Chile Clinical Hospital, 8380453 Santiago, Chile;4. Laboratory of Experimental Immunology & Cancer, Department of Conservative Dentistry, Faculty of Dentistry, University of Chile, 8380492 Santiago, Chile |
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Abstract: | BackgroundDendritic cells (DCs) are usually immunogenic, but they are also capable of inducing tolerance under anti-inflammatory conditions. Immunotherapy based on autologous DCs loaded with an allogeneic melanoma cell lysate (TRIMEL/DCs) induces immunological responses and increases melanoma patient survival. Glucocorticoids can suppress DC maturation and function, leading to a DC-mediated inhibition of T cell responses.MethodsThe effect of dexamethasone, a glucocorticoid extensively used in cancer therapies, on TRIMEL/DCs phenotype and immunogenicity was examined.ResultsDexamethasone induced a semi-mature phenotype on TRIMEL/DC with low maturation surface marker expressions, decreased pro-inflammatory cytokine induction (IL-1β and IL-12) and increased release of regulatory cytokines (IL-10 and TGF-β). Dexamethasone-treated TRIMEL/DCs inhibited allogeneic CD4+ T cell proliferation and cytokine release (IFNγ, TNF-α and IL-17). Co-culturing melanoma-specific memory tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes with dexamethasone-treated TRIMEL/DC inhibited proliferation and effector T cell activities, including cytokine secretion and anti-melanoma cytotoxicity.ConclusionsThese findings suggest that dexamethasone repressed melanoma cell lysate-mediated DC maturation, generating a potent tolerogenic-like DC phenotype that inhibited melanoma-specific effector T cell activities. These results suggest that dexamethasone-induced immunosuppression may interfere with the clinical efficacy of DC-based melanoma vaccines, and must be taken into account for optimal design of cellular therapy against cancer. |
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Keywords: | Corresponding author at: Millennium Institute on Immunology and Immunotherapy, Faculty of Medicine, University of Chile. Avenida Independencia 1027, Santiago 8380453, Chile. Dendritic cells Dexamethasone Regulatory T cells Tolerance Melanoma |
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