Attenuation of Donor‐Reactive T Cells Allows Effective Control of Allograft Rejection Using Regulatory T Cell Therapy |
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Authors: | K. Lee V. Nguyen K.‐M. Lee S.‐M. Kang Q. Tang |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Surgery, University of California, San Francisco, , San Francisco, CA;2. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Korea University, , Seoul, Republic of Korea |
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Abstract: | Regulatory T cells (Tregs) are essential for the establishment and maintenance of immune tolerance, suggesting a potential therapeutic role for Tregs in transplantation. However, Treg administration alone is insufficient in inducing long‐term allograft survival in normal hosts, likely due to the high frequency of alloreactive T cells. We hypothesized that a targeted reduction of alloreactive T effector cells would allow a therapeutic window for Treg efficacy. Here we show that preconditioning recipient mice with donor‐specific transfusion followed by cyclophosphamide treatment deleted 70–80% donor‐reactive T cells, but failed to prolong islet allograft survival. However, infusion of either 5 × 106 Tregs with direct donor reactivity or 25 × 106 polyclonal Tregs led to indefinite survival of BALB/c islets in more than 70% of preconditioned C57BL/6 recipients. Notably, protection of C3H islets in autoimmune nonobese diabetic mice required islet autoantigen‐specific Tregs together with polyclonal Tregs. Treg therapy led to significant reduction of CD8+ T cells and concomitant increase in endogenous Tregs among graft‐infiltrating cells early after transplantation. Together, these results demonstrate that reduction of the donor‐reactive T cells will be an important component of Treg‐based therapies in transplantation. |
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Keywords: | CD8+ T cell diabetes T cell deletion Treg therapy |
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