Patera Andriani C, Drewry Anne M, Chang Katherine, Beiter Evan R, Osborne Dale, Hotchkiss Richard S
Infectious Disease and Vaccines Department, MedImmune LLC, Gaithersburg, Maryland, USA
Department of Anesthesiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
J Leukoc Biol. 2016 Dec;100(6):1239-1254. doi: 10.1189/jlb.4HI0616-255R. Epub 2016 Sep 26.
Sepsis is a heterogeneous syndrome comprising a highly diverse and dynamic mixture of hyperinflammatory and compensatory anti-inflammatory immune responses. This immune phenotypic diversity highlights the importance of proper patient selection for treatment with the immunomodulatory drugs that are entering clinical trials. To better understand the serial changes in immunity of critically ill patients and to evaluate the potential efficacy of blocking key inhibitory pathways in sepsis, we undertook a broad phenotypic and functional analysis of innate and acquired immunity in the same aliquot of blood from septic, critically ill nonseptic, and healthy donors. We also tested the ability of blocking the checkpoint inhibitors programmed death receptor-1 (PD-1) and its ligand (PD-L1) to restore the function of innate and acquired immune cells. Neutrophil and monocyte function (phagocytosis, CD163, cytokine expression) were progressively diminished as sepsis persisted. An increasing frequency in PD-L1-suppressor phenotype neutrophils [low-density neutrophils (LDNs)] was also noted. PD-L1 LDNs and defective neutrophil function correlated with disease severity, consistent with the potential importance of suppressive neutrophil populations in sepsis. Reduced neutrophil and monocyte function correlated both with their own PD-L1 expression and with PD-1 expression on CD8 T cells and NK cells. Conversely, reduced CD8 T cell and NK cell functions (IFN-γ production, granzyme B, and CD107a expression) correlated with elevated PD-L1 LDNs. Importantly, addition of antibodies against PD-1 or PD-L1 restored function in neutrophil, monocyte, T cells, and NK cells, underlining the impact of the PD-1:PD-L1 axis in sepsis-immune suppression and the ability to treat multiple deficits with a single immunomodulatory agent.
脓毒症是一种异质性综合征,由高度多样且动态变化的促炎和代偿性抗炎免疫反应混合而成。这种免疫表型多样性凸显了在选择接受正在进行临床试验的免疫调节药物治疗的患者时进行恰当选择的重要性。为了更好地了解重症患者免疫的系列变化,并评估阻断脓毒症关键抑制途径的潜在疗效,我们对脓毒症患者、重症非脓毒症患者和健康供体同一份血液样本中的固有免疫和获得性免疫进行了广泛的表型和功能分析。我们还测试了阻断检查点抑制剂程序性死亡受体-1(PD-1)及其配体(PD-L1)以恢复固有免疫和获得性免疫细胞功能的能力。随着脓毒症持续存在,中性粒细胞和单核细胞功能(吞噬作用、CD163、细胞因子表达)逐渐减弱。还注意到PD-L1抑制表型中性粒细胞[低密度中性粒细胞(LDNs)]的频率增加。PD-L1 LDNs和中性粒细胞功能缺陷与疾病严重程度相关,这与脓毒症中抑制性中性粒细胞群体的潜在重要性一致。中性粒细胞和单核细胞功能降低与其自身的PD-L1表达以及CD8 T细胞和NK细胞上的PD-1表达均相关。相反,CD8 T细胞和NK细胞功能降低(IFN-γ产生、颗粒酶B和CD107a表达)与升高的PD-L1 LDNs相关。重要的是,添加抗PD-1或PD-L1抗体可恢复中性粒细胞、单核细胞、T细胞和NK细胞的功能,强调了PD-1:PD-L1轴在脓毒症免疫抑制中的作用以及用单一免疫调节药物治疗多种缺陷的能力。