4.8 Article

Shuttling Tolerogenic Dendritic Cells across the Blood-Brain Barrier In Vitro via the Introduction of De Novo C-C Chemokine Receptor 5 Expression Using Messenger RNA Electroporation

Journal

FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 8, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.01964

Keywords

tolerogenic dendritic cells; C-C chemokine receptor 5; messenger RNA electroporation; migration; blood-brain barrier; multiple sclerosis

Categories

Funding

  1. BOF-GOA grant of the Special Research Fund (BOF) from the University of Antwerp, Belgium [PS 28313]
  2. Methusalem Funding Program from the University of Antwerp
  3. applied biomedical research project of the Institute for the Promotion of Innovation by Science and Technology in Flanders [IWT-TBM 140191]
  4. Belgian Charcot Foundation
  5. A FACTT network (Cost Action) [BM1305]
  6. EU Framework Programme Horizon
  7. Research Foundation Flanders (FWO-Vlaanderen)

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The use of tolerance-inducing dendritic cells (tolDCs) has been proven to be safe and well tolerated in the treatment of autoimmune diseases. Nevertheless, several challenges remain, including finding ways to facilitate the migration of cell therapeutic products to lymph nodes, and the site of inflammation. In the treatment of neuroinflammatory diseases, such as multiple sclerosis (MS), the blood-brain barrier (BBB) represents a major obstacle to the delivery of therapeutic agents to the inflamed central nervous system (CNS). As it was previously demonstrated that C-C chemokine receptor 5 (CCR5) may be involved in inflammatory migration of DCs, the aim of this study was to investigate CCR5-driven migration of tolDCs. Only a minority of in vitro generated vitamin D-3 (vitD(3))-treated tolDCs expressed the inflammatory chemokine receptor CCR5. Thus, messenger RNA (mRNA) encoding CCR5 was introduced by means of electroporation (EP). After mRNA EP, tolDCs transiently displayed increased levels of CCR5 protein expression. Accordingly, the capacity of mRNA electroporated tolDCs to transmigrate toward a chemokine gradient in an in vitro model of the BBB improved significantly. Neither the tolerogenic phenotype nor the T cell-stimulatory function of tolDCs was affected by mRNA EP. EP of tolDCs with mRNA encoding CCR5 enabled these cells to migrate to inflammatory sites. The approach used herein has important implications for the treatment of MS. Using this approach, tolDCs actively shuttle across the BBB, allowing in situ down-modulation of autoimmune responses in the CNS.

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