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Publication | Open Access

Comparative Analysis of Protocols to Induce Human CD4+Foxp3+ Regulatory T Cells by Combinations of IL-2, TGF-beta, Retinoic Acid, Rapamycin and Butyrate

102

Citations

95

References

2016

Year

TLDR

Regulatory T cells suppress immune responses and are essential for peripheral tolerance, prompting clinical trials of Treg manipulation, yet protocols for generating human induced Tregs remain controversial. The study aims to develop and compare protocols for generating human induced regulatory T cells from naïve T cells. The authors compared multiple established and novel induction protocols that combine TGF‑β with other agents such as retinoic acid, rapamycin, and additional compounds. Human iTregs expressed Foxp3, CTLA‑4, and EOS with low cytokine production, and the TGF‑β/retinoic acid/rapamycin combination showed superior in‑vitro suppression, but failed to maintain Foxp3 expression or suppress in vivo, underscoring the need for further research.

Abstract

Regulatory T cells (Tregs) suppress other immune cells and are critical mediators of peripheral tolerance. Therapeutic manipulation of Tregs is subject to numerous clinical investigations including trials for adoptive Treg transfer. Since the number of naturally occurring Tregs (nTregs) is minute, it is highly desirable to develop a complementary approach of inducing Tregs (iTregs) from naïve T cells. Mouse studies exemplify the importance of peripherally induced Tregs as well as the applicability of iTreg transfer in different disease models. Yet, procedures to generate iTregs are currently controversial, particularly for human cells. Here we therefore comprehensively compare different established and define novel protocols of human iTreg generation using TGF-β in combination with other compounds. We found that human iTregs expressed several Treg signature molecules, such as Foxp3, CTLA-4 and EOS, while exhibiting low expression of the cytokines Interferon-γ, IL-10 and IL-17. Importantly, we identified a novel combination of TGF-β, retinoic acid and rapamycin as a robust protocol to induce human iTregs with superior suppressive activity in vitro compared to currently established induction protocols. However, iTregs generated by these protocols did not stably retain Foxp3 expression and did not suppress in vivo in a humanized graft-versus-host-disease mouse model, highlighting the need for further research to attain stable, suppressive iTregs. These results advance our understanding of the conditions enabling human iTreg generation and may have important implications for the development of adoptive transfer strategies targeting autoimmune and inflammatory diseases.

References

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