© 2002 by the American Diabetes Association, Inc. Indoleamine 2,3-Dioxygenase Expression in Transplanted NOD Islets Prolongs Graft Survival After Adoptive Transfer of Diabetogenic Splenocytes
1 Division of Immunogenetics, Department of Pediatrics, Rangos Research Center, Childrens Hospital of Pittsburgh, University of Pittsburgh, School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) catalyzes the breakdown of the amino acid tryptophan into kyneurenine. It has been shown that IDO production by placental trophoblasts prevents the attack of maternal T-cells activated in response to the paternal HLA alleles expressed by the tissues of the fetus. In this article, we show that adenoviral gene transfer of IDO to pancreatic islets can sufficiently deplete culture media of tryptophan and consequently inhibit the proliferation of T-cells in vitro. Experiments in vivo have also demonstrated that transplantation of IDO-expressing islets from prediabetic NOD mouse donors into NODscid recipient mice is associated with a prolongation in islet graft survival after adoptive transfer of NOD diabetogenic T-cells. This protection is attributed to the depletion of tryptophan at the transplantation site beneath the kidney capsule. These results suggest that local modulation of tryptophan catabolism may be a means of facilitating islet transplantation as a therapy for type 1 diabetes.
Clinical expression of type 1 diabetes is the end point of a series of events occurring in genetically susceptible individuals (1). Type 1 diabetes can be considered a T-cell-mediated autoimmune disease that results in the destruction of the insulin-producing ß-cells of the pancreatic islets of Langerhans (2). The only treatment currently available for type 1 diabetic patients is that based on repeated daily injections of insulin. However, despite rigorous insulin replacement therapies, patients are unable to adequately regulate blood glucose levels to completely prevent the serious long-term consequences of hyperglycemia, including premature blindness, end-stage renal disease, and vascular and neuropathic disease (3). Because a complete understanding of the cause(s) of diabetes is still beyond our reach, a successful prevention strategy has yet to be found (4). Transplantation of the insulin-producing islet cells of the pancreas, requiring only a minor surgical procedure, is one way to replace the efficient insulin regulation that is lost in young type 1 diabetic patients (5). To date, successful pancreas or islet transplantation, avoiding both recurrence of autoimmunity and allorejection, has not been achieved without the help of an immunosuppressive regimen (6). Genetic modification of islets ex vivo by gene therapy approaches followed by transplantation is one promising means of efficiently replacing the physiological control of glucose metabolism (7). Catabolism of tryptophan has been shown to play an important role in the immune response by inhibiting T-cell proliferation (8). Localized depletion of tryptophan in vivo has also been implicated in the immune evasion of certain tumors (9,10). Indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO), the enzyme that regulates the rate-limiting step involved in the catabolism of tryptophan to kyneurenine, is also involved in the control of microbial infections (1114) and has been shown to have antioxidant properties (1517). Pregnancy maintenance has also been associated with tryptophan catabolism by preventing the proliferation of maternal T-cells in response to tissues of the fetus expressing HLA alleles of the father (18). Localized expression of IDO seems then to result in tryptophan depletion and in a decrease in T-cell reactivity that is limited to the microenvironment surrounding the tissue of expression. The rest of the immune system remains intact. Consequently, the introduction of the IDO gene into pancreatic islets may provide an efficient immunological shield able to protect the ß-cells from the diabetogenic autoimmune process and potentially promote the survival of allogeneic islets as a therapy for type 1 diabetes. In this study, we used an adenoviral vector encoding IDO to infect intact NOD mouse (19) islets to investigate its potential for local immunomodulation both in vitro and in vivo. These studies performed using the immunodeficient NODscid mouse (20) as transplant recipients demonstrated that expression of IDO in transplanted islets extended their survival time after adoptive transfer of diabetogenic T-cells.
Animals. All mice used were females purchased from The Jackson Laboratories (Bar Harbor, ME). BALB/c, C57BL/6, and NODscid mice (20) were used at 612 weeks of age. Prediabetic NOD (19) females aged 35 weeks were used as islet donors. NODscid transplant recipients were monitored three times a week for the presence of hyperglycemia. Diabetic NOD females, from the ages of 1220 weeks, were used within 2 weeks of disease onset as a source of spleen cells for in vitro experiments and in vivo adoptive T-cell transfers. Mice were housed under specific pathogen-free conditions at the Childrens Hospital of Pittsburgh Rangos Research Center Animal Facility, and all protocols were approved by the institutional Animal Research Care Committee.
Cloning of the murine IDO gene and RT-PCR detection.
Adenovirus production.
Islet infection with adenoviral vectors.
Glucose-stimulated insulin secretion.
T-cell proliferation assay. To assess the proliferative state of the cultured cells, 75 µCi [3H]thymidine (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Piscataway, NJ) was added for the final 6 h on the scheduled day. Plates were then frozen, and the entire experiment was harvested and counted at one time. To determine the amount of labeled thymidine incorporated into the cultured cells, plates were thawed, and the content of each well was transferred to glass fiber filter mats (Filtermate 96-well harvester; Packard Instrument, Meriden, CT) and counted on a Top Count microplate scintillation detector (Packard Instrument). Data are presented as counts per minute.
Concavalin A stimulation test.
Fluorometric assay for functional IDO expression.
Microscopic determination of transgene expression.
Transplantation. To prepare isolated islets for transplantation, groups of 400 islets were aspirated into a section of sterile PE-50 tubing (Harvard Apparatus, Holliston, MA) and aggregated by centrifugation. The recipient mouse was anesthetized with Avertin (intraperitoneal injection of 0.300.40 mg/gram body wt), and the left kidney was exposed under sterile conditions. A small tear was made at one pole in the capsule surrounding the kidney, and the islets were carefully dispensed into the subcapsular space through the tubing connected to a 1-ml syringe. The kidney was then gently replaced and the abdominal wall and skin sutured. Transplant recipients were then monitored for hyperglycemia three times per week to assess graft survival. All recipient blood glucose levels returned to normal within 24 h of transplantation (data not shown). Graft-dependent maintenance of normoglycemia was demonstrated by nephrectomy of the islet-bearing kidney and subsequent glucose monitoring of the mice. In all cases (n = 10, data not shown), the nephrectomized animals presented with hyperglycemia within 2 days of kidney removal.
Disease transfer.
Nephrectomy. To verify the function of islets transplanted beneath the kidney capsule, some mice were nephrectomized, under avertin-induced anesthesia, and the kidneys containing the transplanted islets were processed for histological analysis. Mice were then monitored daily for the onset of hyperglycemia. Thin sections (10 µm) were cut from the formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissues and stained with hematoxylin and eosin for general morphology and with a di-aminobenzidine-labeled anti-insulin antibody (Dako, Carpinteria, CA) for the detection of insulin-producing cells. Islet function was indicated by intense positive staining for insulin, even if there appeared to be infiltrating cells present.
Statistical analysis.
Adenovirus infection of isolated murine pancreatic islets. To determine if the adenovirus we generated was able to infect murine islets, isolated islets were incubated with Ad-LacZ or Ad-IDO at a MOI of 50 or 100. After 48 h of culture, viral infection was confirmed after RNA isolation and RT-PCR testing. A band corresponding to the predicted size (1.3 kb) of IDO is seen only in RNA from islets infected with Ad-IDO (Fig. 1, lanes 3 and 4) and not in Ad-LacZ-treated islets (Fig. 1, lane 2).
Adenoviral infection of the islets was also confirmed in vitro by standard methods of X-gal staining of islets that were infected with Ad-LacZ. Resulting dark blue cells are indicative of LacZ production in normally ß-galactosidase-negative islet cells. An increase in number of LacZ-positive cells per islet was found with increasing MOI of virus (Fig. 2B D), and uninfected (MOI of 0) islets showed no evidence of endogenous ß-gal activity (Fig. 2A). An MOI of 100 was chosen as the standard for all subsequent experiments on the basis that higher virus concentrations do not appreciably increase staining and result in decreased islet viability (data not shown). Blue fluorescence seen from the BFP encoded by the pQBI-CMV5-BFP vector is also seen with increasing amounts relative to the MOI of virus (Fig. 2EH). To confirm that the transgene introduced by the viral vectors was coexpressing both BFP and IDO, islets infected in vitro were pelleted, paraffin-embedded, and stained with a polyclonal murine anti-IDO antibody. Detection of positive cells is seen in a similar distribution to that of BFP expression (Fig. 2G and Fig. 3F), indicating coexpression of both proteins from the single adenovirus construct.
Tryptophan depletion of culture media. To determine whether the infection of islets resulted in functionally active IDO, groups of isolated islets were used: uninfected (control) or infected with Ad-LacZ or Ad-IDO and cultured for several days. At various time points, media were sampled and assayed spectrofluorometrically for tryptophan concentration by tryptophan conversion to norharman. As shown in Table 2, islets infected with Ad-IDO showed a twofold decrease in the level of tryptophan by day 8 and a 10- to 15-fold decrease by day 14. Uninfected or LacZ-infected islets did not exhibit a significant depletion of tryptophan from the media.
Insulin secretion from infected islets. The physiological functionality of adenovirus-infected islets was tested in vitro by measuring insulin production in response to an increase in glucose concentration. As shown in Table 3, islets expressing either the LacZ or IDO transgenes were able to respond to a glucose challenge in a similar manner as uninfected islets. A four- to fivefold increase in insulin secretion was seen in response to high glucose, with an appropriate decrease of insulin output when the islets were returned to a low glucose concentration. On this basis, we concluded that not only is proper insulin regulation maintained by the islets after adenoviral infection, but the production of the virally introduced proteins does not interfere with their physiological function.
In vitro proliferation of diabetic NOD spleen cells exposed to IDO-expressing islet cells. To establish if IDO expressed by infected islets could inhibit T-cell proliferation in vitro, infected islets were dissociated and plated into appropriate wells and cultured for 3 days before the addition of lymph node and irradiated spleen cells from a diabetic NOD mouse. Additional wells were prepared with islets alone and used to test tryptophan levels at the same time points as the thymidine pulse. These wells were plated with either 100 or 200 µl of media. Only wells containing Ad-IDOinfected islets showed a continuous decrease of measured tryptophan (Table 4). The decrease in tryptophan concentration was, as expected, more evident in the 100-µl cultures than in the 200-µl cultures, in which only a partial depletion became evident by day 8. The amount of [3H]thymidine uptake by splenocytes was similar in all treatment groups with the exception of Ad-IDO islets, allowing a 30% lower proliferation of the culture on day 8 (Fig. 4).
ConA stimulation of spleen cells. To further confirm that the inhibition of T-cell proliferation was due to depletion of tryptophan, conditioned media were prepared by culturing control and infected islets for 5 weeks. The harvested media were then assayed for tryptophan content and tested in experiments using ConA stimulation of spleen cells in culture. Results of periodic tryptophan measurement are shown in Fig. 5A, where the Ad-IDO treatment of islets resulted in the depletion of tryptophan from the media. At final collection, fresh complete RPMI contained 24.15 nm/ml tryptophan, negative control media from uninfected islets contained 25.83 nm/ml tryptophan, media from LacZ-infected islets contained 23.53 nm/ml tryptophan, and media from IDO-infected islets contained 6.62 nm/ml tryptophan.
Figure 5B shows the proliferation of spleen cells stimulated by ConA after 2 and 3 days of culture. Fresh RPMI supported a much greater amount of proliferation than the conditioned media, possibly because of the removal of nutrients other than tryptophan in the latter as well as the accumulation of waste products. Media from uninfected (Neg) and Ad-LacZinfected islets resulted in equivalent thymidine uptake, whereas the Ad-IDO conditioned media supported a fourfold lower proliferation. Hardly any increase was seen on day 3 of the Ad-IDO media, whereas the other treated media showed the greatest response to ConA at that time. To verify that the lack of tryptophan was the cause of the reduced response in IDO media, as opposed to accumulation of metabolic waste products, additional wells were cultured with exogenous tryptophan added to the IDO media. The addition of fresh tryptophan was sufficient to sustain cell proliferation that reached control levels (I+T bars in Fig. 5B). Thus, the catabolism of tryptophan by Ad-IDOtreated islets is able to inhibit the proliferation of spleen cells from diabetic NOD mice.
Transplantation of IDO-transduced islets and diabetes development after adoptive transfer of disease. Using the NODscid as the recipient of syngeneic islets and challenging it with diabetogenic NOD spleen cells allows for better experimental control of the autoimmune reaction (28; see also research design and methods). Islets isolated from young (3- to 5-week-old) prediabetic NOD females were infected with Ad-LacZ or Ad-IDO or were used uninfected for control and cultured for 48 h. Islets were then transplanted, in groups of 400, beneath the kidney capsule of STZ-induced diabetic NODscid recipients. Additional animals were STZ treated; transplanted with Ad-LacZ, Ad-IDO, or uninfected islets; and monitored for hyperglycemia without receiving the adoptive transfer of diabetic NOD spleen cells. All of these recipients remained normoglycemic through >90 days of observation, indicating that the expression of the genes carried by the adenoviral vector did not inhibit islet function in vivo. Removal of the islet graft by nephrectomy resulted in an abrupt rise in blood glucose in all animals. Thus, the recipients were maintaining normal glycemia levels solely as a result of the functioning transplanted islets.
Experimental mice were monitored for Using this model, the survival of transplanted control islets, or islets treated with Ad-LacZ or Ad-IDO, was examined. After accruing 915 animals per experimental group, statistical analyses were performed. Table 1 shows the results of the experimental transplants as mean and median survival times of the grafts expressed in days postchallenge with diabetic spleen cells. There was no significant difference between the median survival times of the nontransplanted mice and the animals receiving uninfected or Ad-LacZ islets, whereas the Ad-IDO transplant median survival was 15 days longer than that in the Ad-LacZ treatment group (P = 0.02). As a result of the prolonged survival after diabetogenic T-cell challenge, at the time when hyperglycemia became evident, a visibly greater amount of remaining insulin-positive cells were detected in the Ad-IDO transplants when compared with histological characteristics seen in the normal disease progression in uninfected islet grafts of controls (Fig. 3AD). This could be a result of a slower disease progression in the IDO expression islets maintaining a somewhat greater amount of functioning ß-cell mass at the time of death. This result is supported by histology performed on grafted islets in nonchallenged recipients >100 days after transplantation. IDO antibody staining shows several positive cells remaining (Fig. 3E) in IDO-treated grafts. A loss of gene expression with time in vivo is clearly shown when comparing this expression with the staining before transplantation (Fig. 3F). Thus, the expression of IDO after ex vivo adenoviral gene transfer results in prolonged survival in the midst of a diabetic immune environment, although the transplants do inevitably succumb to the persistence of the lymphocyte infiltration.
Recent results from human trials (6) have indicated that transplantation of isolated human islets is indeed a feasible treatment for human diabetic subjects. Although these adult patients are still receiving some form of immune suppression (tacrolimus, sirolimus, and daclizumab), this study is the first convincing demonstration of normoglycemia attained through the transplantation of islets. Despite the fact that each recipient received islets from more than a single cadaveric donor, the Edmonton study represents an important advance in islet transplantation protocols (6). Efforts to transfer this protocol to children must first involve ways to minimize or completely avoid systemic immunosuppression. Tryptophan is an amino acid necessary for cellular function and therefore a potential point of regulation of cellular activity. This essential amino acid is used in a variety of biosynthesis pathways, including production of cellular protein and nicotinamide cofactors (NAD, NADP) and the eventual production of neurotransmitters such as serotonin and melatonin. Interestingly, nicotinamide has been shown to protect ß-cells from certain toxins and the effects of nitric oxide (31). There is evidence for a role of tryptophan catabolism, by the induction of the specific enzyme IDO, in the immune response of neuronal inflammation due to disease or injury, as well as its involvement in malignancy (9,10), in vitro antimicrobial activity (1114), and in vitro inhibition of T-cell proliferation (8). More recently, tryptophan depletion has been linked to the maintenance of pregnancy (18). Combining the known anti-microbial, tumoricidal, and in vitro T-cell inhibition activities of IDO with its in vivo role in pregnancy makes it a candidate with which to protect against recurrence of autoimmunity in the transplant setting. Additionally, IDO could also have an effect in protecting the allogeneic graft against rejection because it appears to protect the semi-allogeneic fetus from maternal T-cell-mediated rejection (18). Local modulation of tryptophan catabolism by IDO may constitute a new potential way to abrogate both autoimmunity and allorejection of islet transplants because both are ultimately mediated by activated T-cells. This inhibition of the activation of T-cells limited to the local environment of the transplant could be an important step in the success of islet transplantation because it would allow the function of the intact systemic immune responses while providing physiological regulation of insulin secretion in the absence of general immune suppression regimens that can be toxic to islets and other organ systems. The NOD mouse model (19) of human type 1 diabetes provides an excellent tool to test experimental therapeutic protocols that are potentially important to the cure of human disease. The NODscid mouse (20), deficient in mature T- and B-cells, offers a distinct advantage in that disease onset can be more precisely controlled. However, this model also has a distinct disadvantage when compared with the natural disease course of the NOD mouse. By using adoptive transfer of the disease, the transplants in challenged NODscid recipients are being exposed to a sudden onslaught of primed and activated T-cells coming from the spleen of already diabetic mice. In comparison, the progression is much slower in the NOD mouse, in which insulitis becomes evident by 45 weeks of age, and hyperglycemia does not appear until 812 weeks later (19). Thus, any progress made using this more severe adoptive transfer model (i.e., challenge in the NODscid mouse) may be even more pronounced when tested in the setting of natural disease development of the NOD mouse, although it may more faithfully reproduce the situation created by a therapeutic islet allograft. The use of replication-defective adenoviral gene delivery vectors has been primarily limited to proof-of-principle type experiments due to several important factors. One is that adenovirus does not integrate into the host genome as do, for example, retroviruses, which require actively dividing cells for viral DNA integration (7). Thus, if mitotic cells are infected with an adenoviral vector, the transfected DNA will be lost after several cell divisions. Islet cells, however, are rather unique in that they have little replicative ability under normal circumstances, so transgene loss due to cell division is not such an important issue. The second characteristic of adenoviral vectors involves the induction of a strong immune response when the vector is injected directly into the recipient (32,33). The ex vivo methodologies used in our islet transplantation studies do not require direct injection of the virus and also allow for sufficient washing steps before islets are transplanted. However, it has been noted, especially in early experiments with adenoviral vectors, that there can still be a low level of viral protein production found in infected tissues (32,33), which may lead to the immune recognition and clearance of the infected cells. To avoid these adenovirus-specific drawbacks, other viral vectors (e.g., lentivirus, herpes virus, and adeno-associated virus) (3436) and nonviral protocols (37,38) are being intensively investigated for feasibility of use in islet transplantation studies. As with all experimental procedures, patient safety will be the first and foremost issue to consider once human trials become imminent. Our experiments with isolated islets transfected with adenoviral vectors confirmed that the physiological function of the ß-cells, as measured by glucose-stimulated insulin secretion in vitro and by long-term reversal of the diabetic state in vivo, was not affected by production of the foreign proteins ß-galactosidase or IDO. This was important in that even if infected islets were able to completely fend off the autoimmune response, they would be useless to a transplant recipient unless insulin production and regulation remained intact. In addition, in vitro proliferation assays did not detect any increase in immunogenicity of islets as a result of adenovirus infection. This may appear to be in contrast to in vivo studies in the literature where it has been reported that adenovirus-infected cells are cleared from tissues in a relatively short period of time (7,32,33). However, in this setting of ex vivo infection, the isolated islets are washed extensively to remove virus particles before their exposure to T-cells. This can be the reason why a strong response as a result of the virus itself was avoided at least for the length of time that the mouse immune system was exposed to the adeno-treated islets. Although the proliferation of spleen cells in response to islets was measured in vitro after only 58 days of culture, in the transplant setting, the grafts are in the presence of immune-competent cells for a much longer time. As seen with Ad-LacZ, infection by the adenoviral vector containing IDO does not affect the in vitro function of the infected islets with respect to glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. Spleen cells from diabetic donors do not exhibit an increased response to islets expressing IDO when compared with uninfected or Ad-LacZ islets. Also, IDO-infected islets eventually depleted tryptophan from the culture media enough to significantly inhibit the proliferation of diabetic spleen cells once an apparent threshold had been reached, below which additional splenocyte proliferation could not be supported. Islets that had been infected ex vivo and transplanted into STZ-induced diabetic recipients showed a 60% increase in median graft survival time over Ad-LacZ control transplants. The resulting catabolism of tryptophan by the islets was then able to impede their own destruction by the adoptively transferred T-cells.
The fact that IDO expression was able to delay, but not completely prevent, islet destruction could be due to the depletion of enough tryptophan to inhibit proliferation of the infiltrating cells while still allowing these activated cells to initiate the destructive processes. Furthermore, in our model, young prediabetic NOD females were used as islet donors. Infiltration of the islets by T-cells can be seen in these mice as early as 34 weeks of age. We were able to purchase animals only after weaning ( Another possibility to be considered is that IDO expression stops at a certain time, allowing the T-cells to invade the transplanted islets. This prospect, however, could not be easily tested because at the critical time in which the transgene expression should be determined, i.e., at the onset of diabetes, the majority of the islet cells are already dead. However, in support of this possibility, histological analyses of transplants treated with Ad-IDO that survived >100 days in nonchallenged recipients have revealed sparse IDO-positive cells and no visible immune invasion of the grafts. The fact that few IDO-expressing cells remained may be the reason normoglycemia is maintained for a significantly longer duration but eventually does become overcome by the autoimmune destruction. The use of lentivirus or the adeno-associated virus could allow a more complete islet infection with limited immune reactivity and possibly a longer expression time (39).
The introduction of multiple transgenes into one graft is another possible method to aid in survival, either by co-infection of several viruses or by the construction of a vector containing several genes. If tryptophan depletion alone is not sufficient, the addition of anti-apoptotic, antioxidant, or anti-cytotoxic proteins to simultaneously inhibit various pathways of ß-cell death may be needed. This is a working hypothesis that is currently being tested in the laboratory based on encouraging results obtained by using the interleukin-1 receptor antagonist protein (40,41), the inhibitor of NF
This work was supported in part by funds from the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation International (#4-1999-845). We are grateful to our collaborators who provided advice and criticism during our study and who reviewed this manuscript (particularly Dr. Robert Ferrell, Dr. David Finegold, Dr. Nick Giannoukakis, and Dr. Tatiana Zorina). We would like to thank Judy Burnham and Beverly Gambrell for excellent histology, Patrick M. Hnidka for manuscript preparation, and Theodore Scheide for help with electronic generation of the figures.
Address correspondence and reprint requests to Massimo Trucco, Childrens Hospital of Pittsburgh, Rangos Research Center, 3460 Fifth Ave., Pittsburgh, PA 15213. E-mail: mnt{at}pitt.edu. Received for publication 18 December 2000 and accepted in revised form 26 October 2001. BFP, blue fluorescent protein; ConA, concavalin A; CMV, cytomegalovirus; IDO, indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase; KRH, Krebs-Ringer/HEPES buffer; MOI, multiplicity of infection; Neg, negative; STZ, streptozotocin
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