Activated plasmacytoid dendritic cells act synergistically with hepatitis B core antigen-pulsed monocyte-derived dendritic cells in the induction of hepatitis B virus-specific CD8 T-cell response.

Journal: Clinical Immunology (Orlando, Fla.)
Published:
Abstract

It is important to further improve the efficiency of hepatitis B core antigen-pulsed monocyte-derived dendritic cell (core-DC) vaccine in clinical immunotherapy for chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection in humans. Our study shows that CpG-treated plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs) can efficiently promote core-DC terminal maturation and increase interleukin-12 production. These CpG-activated pDCs can act synergistically in vitro with core-DCs in inducing autologous HBV-specific CD8 T-cell proliferation and interferon (IFN)-gamma production. This promotion was mainly dependent on pDC-derived IFN-alpha, because blockade of IFN-alpha nearly completely aborted the effects of pDCs on core-DCs. In addition, the supernatants derived from CpG-treated peripheral blood mononuclear cells can also effectively improve the aforementioned maturation and function of core-DCs. These findings will facilitate a better understanding of how the pDCs regulate myeloid dendritic cell-mediated immune responses, and highlight the notion that manipulating pDCs might have implications in DC vaccine therapy for patients with chronic hepatitis B.

Authors
Weiwei Chen, Zheng Zhang, Ming Shi, Liangen Chen, Junliang Fu, Feng Shi, Bing Zhang, Hui Zhang, Lei Jin, Fu-sheng Wang
Relevant Conditions

Hepatitis, Hepatitis B