Inhibiting Inflammation with Myeloid Cell-Specific Nanobiologics Promotes Organ Transplant Acceptance

  • Mounia S Braza
  • Mandy M T van Leent
  • Marnix Lameijer
  • Brenda L Sanchez-Gaytan
  • Rob J W Arts
  • Carlos Pérez-Medina
  • Patricia Conde
  • Mercedes R Garcia
  • Maria Gonzalez-Perez
  • Manisha Brahmachary
  • Francois Fay
  • Ewelina Kluza
  • Susanne Kossatz
  • Regine Dress
  • Fadi Salem
  • Alexander Rialdi
  • Thomas Reiner
  • Peter Boros
  • Gustav J Strijkers
  • Claudia C Calcagno
  • Florent Ginhoux
  • Ivan Marazzi
  • Esther Lutgens
  • Gerry A F Nicolaes
  • Christian Weber
  • Filip K Swirski
  • Matthias Nahrendorf
  • Edward A Fisher
  • Raphaël Duivenvoorden
  • Zahi A Fayad
  • Mihai G Netea
  • Willem J M Mulder
  • Jordi Ochando

Abstract

Inducing graft acceptance without chronic immunosuppression remains an elusive goal in organ transplantation. Using an experimental transplantation mouse model, we demonstrate that local macrophage activation through dectin-1 and toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) drives trained immunity-associated cytokine production during allograft rejection. We conducted nanoimmunotherapeutic studies and found that a short-term mTOR-specific high-density lipoprotein (HDL) nanobiologic treatment (mTORi-HDL) averted macrophage aerobic glycolysis and the epigenetic modifications underlying inflammatory cytokine production. The resulting regulatory macrophages prevented alloreactive CD8+ T cell-mediated immunity and promoted tolerogenic CD4+ regulatory T (Treg) cell expansion. To enhance therapeutic efficacy, we complemented the mTORi-HDL treatment with a CD40-TRAF6-specific nanobiologic (TRAF6i-HDL) that inhibits co-stimulation. This synergistic nanoimmunotherapy resulted in indefinite allograft survival. Together, we show that HDL-based nanoimmunotherapy can be employed to control macrophage function in vivo. Our strategy, focused on preventing inflammatory innate immune responses, provides a framework for developing targeted therapies that promote immunological tolerance.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN1074-7613
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 20.11.2018
Extern publiziertJa
PubMed 30413362