Detection of Hepatic Drug Metabolite-Specific T-Cell Responses Using a Human Hepatocyte, Immune Cell Coculture System



Ali, Serat-E, Meng, Xiaoli ORCID: 0000-0002-7774-2075, Kafu, Laila, Hammond, Sean, Zhao, Qing, Ogese, Monday ORCID: 0000-0002-1873-4032, Sison-Young, Rowena, Jones, Robert ORCID: 0000-0001-5608-001X, Chan, Benjamin, Livoti, Lucia
et al (show 7 more authors) (2023) Detection of Hepatic Drug Metabolite-Specific T-Cell Responses Using a Human Hepatocyte, Immune Cell Coculture System. CHEMICAL RESEARCH IN TOXICOLOGY, 36 (3). pp. 390-401.

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Abstract

Drug-responsive T-cells are activated with the parent compound or metabolites, often via different pathways (pharmacological interaction and hapten). An obstacle to the investigation of drug hypersensitivity is the scarcity of reactive metabolites for functional studies and the absence of coculture systems to generate metabolites in situ. Thus, the aim of this study was to utilize dapsone metabolite-responsive T-cells from hypersensitive patients, alongside primary human hepatocytes to drive metabolite formation, and subsequent drug-specific T-cell responses. Nitroso dapsone-responsive T-cell clones were generated from hypersensitive patients and characterized in terms of cross-reactivity and pathways of T-cell activation. Primary human hepatocytes, antigen-presenting cells, and T-cell cocultures were established in various formats with the liver and immune cells separated to avoid cell contact. Cultures were exposed to dapsone, and metabolite formation and T-cell activation were measured by LC-MS and proliferation assessment, respectively. Nitroso dapsone-responsive CD4+ T-cell clones from hypersensitive patients were found to proliferate and secrete cytokines in a dose-dependent manner when exposed to the drug metabolite. Clones were activated with nitroso dapsone-pulsed antigen-presenting cells, while fixation of antigen-presenting cells or omission of antigen-presenting cells from the assay abrogated the nitroso dapsone-specific T-cell response. Importantly, clones displayed no cross-reactivity with the parent drug. Nitroso dapsone glutathione conjugates were detected in the supernatant of hepatocyte immune cell cocultures, indicating that hepatocyte-derived metabolites are formed and transferred to the immune cell compartment. Similarly, nitroso dapsone-responsive clones were stimulated to proliferate with dapsone, when hepatocytes were added to the coculture system. Collectively, our study demonstrates the use of hepatocyte immune cell coculture systems to detect in situ metabolite formation and metabolite-specific T-cell responses. Similar systems should be used in future diagnostic and predictive assays to detect metabolite-specific T-cell responses when synthetic metabolites are not available.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: Liver, Hepatocytes, Humans, Drug Hypersensitivity, Dapsone, Coculture Techniques, Lymphocyte Activation
Divisions: Faculty of Health and Life Sciences
Faculty of Health and Life Sciences > Institute of Systems, Molecular and Integrative Biology
Depositing User: Symplectic Admin
Date Deposited: 30 Mar 2023 13:26
Last Modified: 04 Apr 2023 10:00
DOI: 10.1021/acs.chemrestox.2c00343
Related URLs:
URI: https://livrepository.liverpool.ac.uk/id/eprint/3169358