Abstract

Monocytes play a critical role in the innate and adaptive immune systems, performing phagocytosis, presenting antigen, and producing cytokines. They are a heterogeneous population that has been divided in humans into classical, intermediate, and non-classical subsets, but the roles of these subsets are incompletely understood. In this study, we investigated the expression patterns of MHC class II (MHCII) and associated molecules and find that the intermediate monocytes express the highest levels of the MHC molecules, HLA-DR (tested in n = 30 samples), HLA-DP (n = 30), and HLA-DQ (n = 10). HLA-DM (n = 30), which catalyzes the peptide exchange on the MHC molecules, is also expressed at the highest levels in intermediate monocytes. To measure HLA-DM function, we measured levels of MHCII-bound CLIP (class II invariant chain peptide, n = 23), which is exchanged for other peptides by HLA-DM. We calculated CLIP:MHCII ratios to normalize CLIP levels to MHCII levels, and found that intermediate monocytes have the lowest CLIP:MHCII ratio. We isolated the different monocyte subsets (in a total of 7 samples) and analyzed their responses to selected cytokines as model of monocyte activation: two M1-polarizing cytokines (IFNγ, GM-CSF), an M2-polarizing cytokine (IL-4) and IL-10. Classical monocytes exhibit the largest increases in class II pathway expression in response to stimulatory cytokines (IFNγ, GM-CSF, IL-4). All three subsets decrease HLA-DR levels after IL-10 exposure. Our findings argue that intermediate monocytes are the most efficient constitutive antigen presenting subset, that classical monocytes are recruited into an antigen presentation role during inflammatory responses and that IL-10 negatively regulates this function across all subsets.

Highlights

  • Monocytes originate from hematopoietic stem cells in the bone marrow and comprise ~10% of blood leukocytes in humans

  • We found that intermediate monocytes had the highest levels of HLA-DM; the lowest levels were found in non-classical monocytes (Fig 2D and 2K)

  • As a more precise measure of CLIP loading onto surface HLA-DR, we used the 14–23 monoclonal antibody, which binds HLA-DR/CLIP complexes, whereas the CERCLIP antibody binds to CLIP loaded onto any MHC class II antigen presentation in human monocyte subsets samples

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Summary

Introduction

Monocytes originate from hematopoietic stem cells in the bone marrow and comprise ~10% of blood leukocytes in humans. Monocytes contribute to the pool of tissue macrophages in certain tissues (intestine, for example) and under certain inflammatory conditions, but recent work demonstrates that monocytes are not the precursor cells of most tissue macrophages during homeostasis or under some inflammatory conditions, with most tissues macrophages originating from embryonic precursors that colonize tissues prenatally [2, 4]. These discoveries are leading to a reassessment of monocyte function, both at homeostasis and during inflammatory responses, and the realization that monocytes and monocyte-derived cells may play important roles alongside macrophages and dendritic cells [2,3,4]

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