Rapamycin-conditioned dendritic cells activated with monophosphoryl lipid-A promote allograft acceptance in vivo
Author
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Campos Acuña, Javier
Author
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Pérez, Francisco
Author
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Narváez, Edgar
Author
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Campos Mora, Mauricio
Author
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Gajardo, Tania
Author
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Catalán Martina, Diego
Author
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Aguillón Gutiérrez, Juan Carlos
Author
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Pino Lagos, Karina
Admission date
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2019-03-18T11:52:17Z
Available date
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2019-03-18T11:52:17Z
Publication date
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2015
Cita de ítem
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Immunotherapy (2015) 7(2), 101–110
Identifier
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17507448
Identifier
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1750743X
Identifier
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10.2217/imt.14.116
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/166480
Abstract
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Aim: To date, there is no human dendritic cell (DC) based therapy to prevent allograft
rejection in transplanted patients. Here, we evaluate a potential protocol using a
murine in vivo transplant model. Materials & methods: We generated murine bone
marrow-derived DCs (BM-DCs), modulated with rapamycin (Rapa) and activated with
monophosphoryl lipid A (Rapamycin-treated and monophosphoryl lipid A-matured
DCs [Rapa-mDCs]). DCs phenotype was evaluated by flow cytometry, cytokine
production by ELISA and their T-cell stimulatory ability was tested in co-cultures
with CD4+ T cells. Using an in vivo skin graft model, we evaluated DCs tolerogenicity.
Results: In vitro, Rapa-mDCs exhibit a semi-mature phenotype given by intermediate
levels of co-stimulatory molecules and cytokines, and inhibit CD4+ T-cell proliferation.
In vivo, skin-grafted mice treated with Rapa-mDCs show high allograft survival,
accumulation of Foxp3+Tregs and cytokine pattern modification. Conclusion: RapamDCs re-educate the inflammatory microenvironment, promoting skin-allograft
survival.