Generation of Immature, Mature, and Tolerogenic Dendritic Cells from Monocytes
Generation of Immature, Mature, and Tolerogenic Dendritic Cells from Monocytes
Transkript
To elicit an immune response, dendritic cells, DCs, present an antigen displayed with MHC class-II and the co-stimulatory molecules CD80 and CD86. Based on immune response characteristics, they are subdivided into immature, mature, and tolerogenic DCs.
To generate various dendritic cell subsets in vitro, begin with a multi-well plate containing human monocytes — immune precursor cells in a complete medium containing growth factors and the cytokine IL-4 — a signaling molecule.
Incubate the cells for a prolonged duration. The growth factors and IL-4 induce monocyte proliferation and differentiation into immature DCs.
Immature DCs possess pattern recognition receptors, PRRs, and express low MHC class-II and co-stimulatory molecules, exhibiting a diminished capacity to elicit an immune response.
Treat one well containing immature DCs with immunomodulatory agents — vitamin D3 and glucocorticoids. These immunomodulatory agents downregulate MHC class-II and co-stimulatory molecules' expression. This leads to differentiation into tolerogenic DCs — immuno-regulatory cells that prevent exaggerated or undesirable immune responses.
Treat another well containing immature DCs with lipopolysaccharide, LPS — an antigen. LPS interacts with cells' toll-like receptor-4 — a PRR, initiates a signaling cascade, and differentiates them into mature cells. These cells express high MHC class-II, co-stimulatory molecules, and PRRs — efficient for antigen processing and presentation.
Observe the differentially-treated wells for distinct morphological characteristics representing the dendritic cell subtypes.