The immunoreactive signature of monocyte-derived dendritic cells from patients with Down syndrome.

唐氏综合征患者单核细胞衍生树突状细胞的免疫反应特征

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作者:Nakashima Kentaro, Imai Takashi, Shiraishi Akira, Unose Ryoko, Goto Hironori, Nagatomo Yusaku, Kojima-Ishii Kanako, Mushimoto Yuichi, Nishiyama Kei, Yamamura Kenichiro, Nagata Hazumu, Ishimura Masataka, Kusuhara Koichi, Koga Yuhki, Sakai Yasunari, Ohga Shouichi
The clinical spectrum of Down syndrome (DS) ranges from congenital malformations to premature aging and early-onset senescence. Excessive immunoreactivity and oxidative stress are thought to accelerate the pace of aging in DS patients; however, the immunological profile remains elusive. We investigated whether peripheral blood monocyte-derived dendritic cells (MoDCs) in DS patients respond to lipopolysaccharide (LPS) distinctly from non-DS control MoDCs. Eighteen DS patients (age 2-47 years, 12 males) and 22 controls (age 4-40 years, 15 males) were enrolled. CD14-positive monocytes were immunopurified and cultured for 7 days in the presence of granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor and IL-4, yielding MoDCs in vitro. After the LPS-stimulation for 48 hours from days 7 to 9, culture supernatant cytokines were measured by multiplex cytokine bead assays, and bulk-prepared RNA from the cells was used for transcriptomic analyses. MoDCs from DS patients produced cytokines/chemokines (IL-6, IL-8, TNF-α, MCP-1, and IP-10) at significantly higher levels than those from controls in response to LPS. RNA sequencing revealed that DS-derived MoDCs differentially expressed 137 genes (74 upregulated and 63 downregulated) compared with controls. A gene enrichment analysis identified 5 genes associated with Toll-like receptor signaling (KEGG: hsa04620, P†=†0.00731) and oxidative phosphorylation (hsa00190, P†=†0.0173) pathways. MoDCs obtained from DS patients showed higher cytokine or chemokine responses to LPS than did control MoDCs. Gene expression profiles suggest that hyperactive Toll-like receptor and mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation pathways configure the immunoreactive signature of MoDCs in DS patients.

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