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Regulating the regulators: Is introduction of an antigen-specific approach in regulatory T cells the next step to treat autoimmunity?

Ibo Janssens, Nathalie Cools

2020Cellular Immunology30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

regulatory T cells (Tregs) induce peripheral tolerance in vivo by means of direct cell-cell contact and release of soluble factors, or indirectly through antigen-presenting cells (APC), thereby controlling auto-reactive effector T cells. Based on these unique capacities of Tregs, preclinical studies delivered proof-of-principle for the clinical use of Tregs for the treatment of autoimmune diseases. To date, the first clinical trials using ex vivo expanded polyclonal Tregs have been completed. These pioneering studies demonstrate the feasibility of generating large numbers of polyclonal Tregs in a good manufacturing practices (GMP)-compliant manner, and that infusion of Tregs is well tolerated by patients with no evidence of general immunosuppression. Nonetheless, only modest clinical results were observed, arguing that a more antigen-specific approach might be needed to foster a durable patient-specific clinical cell therapy without the risk for general immunosuppression. In this review, we discuss current knowledge, applications and future goals of adoptive immune-modulatory Treg therapy for the treatment of autoimmune disease and transplant rejection. We describe the key advances and prospects of the potential use of T cell receptor (TCR)- and chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-engineered Tregs in future clinical applications. These approaches could deliver the long-awaited breakthrough in stopping undesired autoimmune responses and transplant rejections.

Topics & Concepts

AutoimmunityImmunologyImmunosuppressionPeripheral toleranceImmune systemBiologyAntigenRegulatory T cellCell therapyT cellT-cell receptorChimeric antigen receptorAdoptive cell transferImmune toleranceTransplant rejectionIL-2 receptorCell biologyStem cellCAR-T cell therapy researchT-cell and B-cell ImmunologyImmune Cell Function and Interaction
Regulating the regulators: Is introduction of an antigen-specific approach in regulatory T cells the next step to treat autoimmunity? | Litcius