Correction of anemia with erythropoietin (EPO) is associated with improved kidney transplant outcomes. Emerging evidence, predominantly from animal models, indicates that these observations may be erythropoiesis-independent and that EPO exhibits immunosuppressive properties. We examined the effects of EPO on human T-cell alloimmunity by first documenting that CD4+ and CD8+ TcellsexpressEPO receptor (EPO-R) on their surfaces. In mixed lymphocyte reactions, EPO induced a dose-dependent decrease in allogeneic CD4+ T-cell proliferation (EPO 1000 U/ml: 44.6%±22.9% of vehicle, P<0.05; 2000 U/ml: 11.1%±4% of vehicle, P<0.001) without inducing cell death. The effects required signals transmitted directly through the EPO-R expressed on T cells, resulting in diminished Th1 differentiation without effects on regulatory T-cell induction. Mechanistic studies revealed that EPO prevented IL-2-induced proliferation by uncoupling IL-2 receptor signaling, inhibiting phosphorylation of the intracellular intermediaries AKT and extracellular signal-regulated kinase that are known to mediate T-cell expansion. EPO treatment reduced expansion of human naïve CD4+ T cells after adoptive transfer into NOD scid γcnull mouse recipients, verifying the effects in vivo. Although activated T cells expressed CD131, an alternative EPO receptor, addition of a specific CD131 agonist peptide, ARA290, did not alter T-cell proliferation or cytokine production. Our findings link EPO-R signaling on T cells to inhibition of T-cell immunity, providing one mechanism that could explain the observed protective effects of EPO in kidney transplant recipients.
CITATION STYLE
Cravedi, P., Manrique, J., Hanlon, K. E., Reid-Adam, J., Brody, J., Prathuangsuk, P., … Heeger, P. S. (2014). Immunosuppressive effects of erythropoietin on human alloreactive T cells. Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, 25(9), 2003–2015. https://doi.org/10.1681/ASN.2013090945
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