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The current understanding of innate immune memory encompasses both trained immunity and immune tolerance, where cells can exhibit enhanced responsiveness or immune paralysis upon subsequent stimuli, respectively. Various agents induce either of these responses, including β-glucan, , BCG and LPS. BCG is a clinically approved immunotherapy for bladder cancer and BCG-induced trained immunity is important in driving anti-tumor adaptive immunity. also shows promise in cancer treatment, eliciting potent anti-tumor immune responses, but with transitory effects. This led us to investigate whether LVR01, like BCG, triggers trained immunity and its impact on anti-tumor responses. Herein, we report that induces an enhanced response in bone marrow cells, characterized by a robust cytokine response upon a second stimulus, in a fashion that resembles trained immunity. Coherently with that, administration induces enhanced responsiveness to a tumor implanted later in time, resulting in slow tumor growth and extended survival. However, stimulation of human monocytes and murine bone-marrow derived myeloid-enriched cells with results in decreased production of cytokines resembling immune paralysis. Overall, our results suggest that LVR01 induces enhanced responses of innate immune memory, as well as paralysis on monocytes. These two antagonistic effects could be the basis of the transitory effect of treatment and suggest that further investigation on these phenomena could shed light on how to improve -based immunotherapies for cancer.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2025.1535131 | DOI Listing |
Elife
September 2025
State Key Laboratory of Oncology in South China, Guangdong Provincial Clinical Research Center for Cancer, Sun Yat-sen University Cancer Center, Guangzhou, China.
Innate immune cells can acquire a memory phenotype, termed trained immunity, but the mechanism underlying the regulation of trained immunity remains largely elusive. Here, we demonstrate that inhibition of Aurora kinase A (AurA) dampens trained immunity induced by β-glucan. ATAC-seq and RNA-seq analysis reveal that AurA inhibition restricts chromatin accessibility of genes associated with inflammatory pathways such as JAK-STAT, TNF, and NF-κB pathways.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTransplant Direct
September 2025
Unidad Transplante de О́rganos, Centro Nacional de Microbiología, Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Madrid, Spain.
Extracorporeal photopheresis (ECP) is a well-established, safe, and effective immunomodulatory therapy currently used in clinics to decrease T cell-mediated immunity in various disorders, including autoimmune diseases and chronic rejection in organ transplantation. Although the ECP procedure has been shown to induce apoptotic cells that are reintroduced into the patient at the end of the treatment, the precise tolerogenic mechanisms mediated by ECP are not fully understood. Previous in vitro studies have demonstrated that early apoptotic cells express annexins on their cell surface, which suppress myeloid cell activation on stimulation with bacterial lipopolysaccharide through Toll-like receptors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Med Chem
August 2025
Laboratory of Molecular Genetic Modeling of Inflammaging, Institute of General Pathology and Pathophysiology, 8, Baltiiskaya Street, 125315 Moscow, Russia.
Elife
September 2025
Department of Pediatrics, Division of Infectious Diseases, and Stem Cells and Regenerative Medicine Center, Baylor College of Medicine and Texas Children's Hospital, Houston, United States.
Human and murine studies reveal that innate immune cells are able to mount enhanced responses to pathogens after primary inflammatory exposure. Innate immune memory has been shown to last for months to years, longer than the lifespan of most innate immune cells. Indeed, long-lived hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) serve as a cellular reservoir for innate immune memory.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdv Healthc Mater
September 2025
Nanoengineered Systems Laboratory, UCL Mechanical Engineering, University College London, London, WC1E 7JE, UK.
Kidney transplant recipients face a high risk of acute rejection (AR), where the immune system attacks the transplanted organ. Current diagnostics rely on invasive biopsies with procedural risks, costs, and limited temporal resolution. While urinary chemokines CXCL9 and CXCL10 are promising non-invasive AR biomarkers, clinical adoption is limited by labor-intensive detection and lack of point-of-care (POC) solutions.
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