IRAK-M Removal Counteracts Dendritic Cell Vaccine Deficits in Migration and Longevity

  • Turnis M
  • Song X
  • Bear A
  • et al.
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Abstract

To function optimally as vaccines, dendritic cells (DCs) must actively migrate to lymphoid organs and maintain a viable, mature state for sufficient time to effectively present their Ag to cognate T cells. Unfortunately, mature DCs rapidly lose viability and function after injection, and only a minority leaves the vaccine site and migrates to lymph nodes. We show that all of these functions can be enhanced in DCs by removal of IL-1R–associated kinase M (IRAK-M). We found that IRAK-M is induced in DCs by TLR ligation and that its absence from these cells leads to increased activation of the p38-MAPK and NF-κB pathways, which, in turn, improves DC migration to lymph nodes, increases their longevity, and augments their secretion of Th1-skewing cytokines and chemokines. These biological effects have immunological consequences. IRAK-M−/− DCs increase the proliferation and activation of Ag-specific T cells, and a single vaccination with Ag-pulsed, LPS-matured IRAK-M−/− DCs eliminates established tumors and prolongs the survival of EG7 or B16.f10 tumor-bearing mice, without discernible induction of autoimmune disease. Thus, manipulation of IRAK-M levels can increase the potency of DC vaccines by enhancing their Ag-presenting function, migration, and longevity.

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Turnis, M. E., Song, X.-T., Bear, A., Foster, A. E., Gottschalk, S., Brenner, M. K., … Rooney, C. M. (2010). IRAK-M Removal Counteracts Dendritic Cell Vaccine Deficits in Migration and Longevity. The Journal of Immunology, 185(7), 4223–4232. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.0903507

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