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Research Article

Indoleamine-2,3-dioxygenase enzyme expression and activity in polarized dendritic cells

, , , &
Pages 1084-1089 | Published online: 24 Nov 2009
 

Abstract

Background aims

Polarized mature dendritic cells (DC) can activate cytolytic T-lymphocyte (CTL) responses and may be a more effective clinical strategy in DC-based cancer vaccines. A subset of mature DC can down-regulate the T-cell immune response through expression of indoleamine-2,3-dioxygenase (IDO). We determined whether polarizing DC ex vivo increased IDO expression and activity.

Methods

Peripheral blood monocytes from healthy volunteers were cultured ex vivo in polarizing and non-polarizing culture conditions. DC IDO expression was detected by Western blot. IDO enzyme activity was determined by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) measurement of kynurenine (K) and tryptophan (T) concentrations in culture supernatants.

Results

IDO protein was markedly increased in DC after polarization (median 1222.4%, range 331.5–2113.3%) versus non-polarized DC (median 28.3%, range 3.7–119.8%; P=0.04). The median K/T ratio was significantly higher in polarized DC versus non-polarized DC (6.34, range 6.02–6.65, versus 0.047, range 0.004–0.541; P=0.04). IDO protein expression correlated with enzyme activity (r=0.80, P=0.002).

Conclusions

DC polarizing culture conditions increased expression of IDO protein and IDO enzyme activity. DC culture and maturation methodologies may impact the effectiveness of adoptive DC therapy.

Acknowledgments

Supported, in part, by NIH grant RO1 CA5648 and Cancer Center Support Grant NIH CA 23108.

Declaration of Interest: The authors report no coflict of interest. The author alone are responsible for the content and writing of the paper.

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