Abstract
Dendritic cells (DCs) can initiate and regulate adaptive immunity depending on their maturation status. Many pharmacological and genetic means have been used in the generation of immature/tolerogenic DCs. However, the key factors controlling DCs tolerogenicity remain obscure. In this work, we demonstrated that AZD8055, an ATP-competitive inhibitor of mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR), could also lead to a tolerogenic DC phenotype from several lines of evidence, such as suppression of T cell proliferation, promoting the generation of Tregs, and inducing allogeneic T cell apoptosis. Further studies using RNA-seq method identified 430, 1172 and 1436 differentially expressed genes (DEGs) between AZD-DCs vs. Control-DCs, LPS-DCs vs. Control-DCs, and AZD-DCs vs. LPS-DCs, respectively. The 5 most differentially expressed transcripts identified by RNA-seq expression profiles were validated by quantitative RT-PCR assays. NF-κB, p38MAPK, the ribosome and PPAR signaling pathways may be involved in the induction of tolerogenic DCs by AZD8055. Functional annotation showed some genes like MGL2, Cadherin-1, 4-1BB, RhoB and Pdpn, were quite different between AZD-DCs and Control-DCs/LPS-DCs, which might be related to the tolerogenic properties of AZD-DCs. Our work provided the potential underlying molecular mechanisms involved in the generation of tolerogenic DCs. Further functional characterization of individual target gene in DC tolerogenicity will help to develop novel therapeutic modalities in circumstances like transplant tolerance induction and autoimmunity.
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