Objective: Interleukin (IL)-17, which now defines the Th(17) immune response, is a critical cytokine expressed and required for stress granulopoiesis during microbial invasion. Dendritic cells (DC) can instigate this response by inducing IL-17 expression in CD4(+) T cells. Besides IL-17, microbial invasion also stimulates production of the DC growth factor granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF). The objective was the in vitro and in vivo investigation of IL-17 on DC proliferation and function in mice.
Materials and methods: Murine IL-17 (mIL-7) or murine GM-CSF (mGM-CSF), or both, was expressed in C57BL6 mice using adenoviral technology to assess hematopoietic and DC changes. The E-22 tymoma tumor cell line using a previously described vaccinia virus ovalbumin/LacZ murine tumor model was employed to study effects on tumor rejection.
Results: The combination of mIL-17 and mGM-CSF increased peripheral neutrophila by 28-fold and splenic colonies by 11- and 14-fold over each individual factor in mice, respectively. The effect of mIL-17 by itself on murine DCs in vitro and in vivo was minimal; however, the combination greatly enhanced the stimulating effects of mGM-CSF, increasing the total numbers of CD14b/c(+) spleen DC by fourfold, as well as their function measured by enhanced endocytosis. Mixed lymphocyte reactions using mIL-17/mGM-CSF cultured DCs stimulator cells enhanced lymphocyte responses by twofold over mGM-CSF alone. Vaccination against LacZ in the C57BL6 E22 syngenic thymoma tumor model effectively delayed tumor growth in animals pretreated with the mIL-17/mGM-CSF combination prior to vaccination.
Conclusions: mIL-17 effectively synergizes with mGM-CSF in stimulating granulopoiesis and DC expansion, as well as in functional enhancement of DCs.
Copyright © 2010 ISEH - Society for Hematology and Stem Cells. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.