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IVIg Promote Cross-Tolerance against Inflammatory Stimuli In Vitro and In Vivo
Author(s) -
Ángeles DomínguezSoto,
Miriam SimónFuentes,
Mateo de las Casas-Engel,
Víctor D. Cuevas,
Marı́a López-Bravo,
Jorge DomínguezAndrés,
Paula Saz-Leal,
David Sancho,
Carlos Ardavı́n,
Juliana OchoaGrullón,
Silvia SánchezRamón,
Miguel A. Vega,
Angel L. Corbı́
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
the journal of immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.737
H-Index - 372
eISSN - 1550-6606
pISSN - 0022-1767
DOI - 10.4049/jimmunol.1701093
Subject(s) - in vivo , proinflammatory cytokine , immunology , cytokine , macrophage , medicine , inflammation , in vitro , monocyte , biology , biochemistry , microbiology and biotechnology
IVIg is an approved therapy for immunodeficiency and for several autoimmune and inflammatory diseases. However, the molecular basis for the IVIg anti-inflammatory activity remains to be fully explained and cannot be extrapolated from studies on animal models of disease. We now report that IVIg impairs the generation of human monocyte-derived anti-inflammatory macrophages by inducing JNK activation and activin A production and limits proinflammatory macrophage differentiation by inhibiting GM-CSF-driven STAT5 activation. In vivo, IVIg provokes a rapid increase in peripheral blood activin A, CCL2, and IL-6 levels, an effect that can be recapitulated in vitro on human monocytes. On differentiating monocytes, IVIg promotes the acquisition of altered transcriptional and cytokine profiles, reduces TLR expression and signaling, and upregulates negative regulators of TLR-initiated intracellular signaling. In line with these effects, in vivo IVIg infusion induces a state tolerant toward subsequent stimuli that results in reduced inflammatory cytokine production after LPS challenge in human peripheral blood and significant protection from LPS-induced death in mice. Therefore, IVIg conditions human macrophages toward the acquisition of a state of cross-tolerance against inflammatory stimuli, an effect that correlates with the net anti-inflammatory action of IVIg in vivo.

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