A human promyelocytic-like population is responsible for the immune suppression mediated by myeloid-derived suppressor cells

Samantha Solito(University of Padua), Erika Falisi(University of Padua), C. Marcela Díaz‐Montero(University of Miami), Andrea Doni(Istituti di Ricovero e Cura a Carattere Scientifico), Laura Pinton(University of Padua), Antonio Rosato(University of Padua), Samuela Francescato(University of Padua), Giuseppe Basso(University of Padua), Paola Zanovello(University of Padua), Georgiana Onicescu(Medical University of South Carolina), Erik Mayer(Medical University of South Carolina), Alberto J. Montero(University of Miami), Vincenzo Bronte(Istituto Oncologico Veneto), Susanna Mandruzzato(University of Padua)
Cited by 331Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

We recently demonstrated that human BM cells can be treated in vitro with defined growth factors to induce the rapid generation of myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs), hereafter defined as BM-MDSCs. Indeed, combination of G-CSF + GM-CSF led to the development of a heterogeneous mixture of immature myeloid cells ranging from myeloblasts to band cells that were able to suppress alloantigen- and mitogen-stimulated T lymphocytes. Here, we further investigate the mechanism of suppression and define the cell subset that is fully responsible for BM-MDSC-mediated immune suppression. This population, which displays the structure and markers of promyelocytes, is however distinct from physiologic promyelocytes that, instead, are devoid of immuosuppressive function. In addition, we demonstrate that promyelocyte-like cells proliferate in the presence of activated lymphocytes and that, when these cells exert suppressive activity, they do not differentiate but rather maintain their immature phenotype. Finally, we show that promyelocyte-like BM-MDSCs are equivalent to MDSCs present in the blood of patients with breast cancer and patients with colorectal cancer and that increased circulating levels of these immunosuppressive myeloid cells correlate with worse prognosis and radiographic progression.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis