Litcius/Paper detail

Regulatory T cells in solid organ transplantation

Muhammad Atif, Filoména Conti, Guy Gorochov, Ye Htun Oo, Makoto Miyara

2020Clinical & Translational Immunology84 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The induction of graft tolerance remains the holy grail of transplantation. This is important as chronic allograft dysfunction and the side effects of immunosuppression regimens place a major burden on the lives of transplant patients and their healthcare systems. This has mandated the need to understand the immunobiology of graft rejection and identify novel therapeutics. Regulatory T (Treg) cells play an important role in modulating pro-inflammatory microenvironments and maintaining tissue homeostasis. However, there are fundamental unanswered questions regarding Treg cell immunobiology. These cells are a heterogeneous entity with functionally diverse roles. Moreover, the adoption of novel deeper immunophenotyping and genomic sequencing technologies has identified this phenotype and function to be more complex than expected. Hence, a comprehensive understanding of Treg cell heterogeneity is needed to safely and effectively exploit their therapeutic potential. From a clinical perspective, the recent decade has seen different clinical teams commence and complete first-in-man clinical trials utilising Treg cells as an adoptive cellular therapy. In this review, we discuss these trials from a translational perspective with an important focus on safety. Finally, we identify crucial knowledge gaps for future study.

Topics & Concepts

TransplantationImmunosuppressionFOXP3Holy GrailCell therapyMedicineClinical trialImmunophenotypingImmunologyFunction (biology)BioinformaticsBiologyStem cellImmune systemFlow cytometryGeneticsSurgeryWorld Wide WebComputer scienceT-cell and B-cell ImmunologyImmune Cell Function and InteractionRenal Transplantation Outcomes and Treatments