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  4. Regulatory T cells engineered with TCR signaling-responsive IL-2 nanogels suppress alloimmunity in sites of antigen encounter
 
research article

Regulatory T cells engineered with TCR signaling-responsive IL-2 nanogels suppress alloimmunity in sites of antigen encounter

Eskandari, Siawosh K.
•
Sulkaj, Ina
•
Melo, Mariane B.
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November 11, 2020
Science Translational Medicine

Adoptive cell transfer of ex vivo expanded regulatory T cells (T-r(egs)) has shown immense potential in animal models of auto- and alloimmunity. However, the effective translation of such T-reg therapies to the clinic has been slow. Because T-reg homeostasis is known to require continuous T cell receptor (TCR) ligation and exogenous interleukin-2 (IL-2), some investigators have explored the use of low-dose IL-2 injections to increase endogenous T-reg responses. Systemic IL-2 immunotherapy, however, can also lead to the activation of cytotoxic T lymphocytes and natural killer cells, causing adverse therapeutic outcomes. Here, we describe a drug delivery platform, which can be engineered to autostimulate T-regs with IL-2 in response to TCR-dependent activation, and thus activate these cells in sites of antigen encounter. To this end, protein nanogels (NGs) were synthesized with cleavable bis(N-hydroxysuccinimide) cross-linkers and IL-2/Fc fusion (IL-2) proteins to form particles that release IL-2 under reducing conditions, as found at the surface of T cells receiving stimulation through the TCR. T-regs surface-conjugated with IL-2 NGs were found to have preferential, allograft-protective effects relative to unmodified T-regs or T-regs stimulated with systemic IL-2. We demonstrate that murine and human NG-modified T-regs carrying an IL-2 cargo perform better than conventional T-regs in suppressing alloimmunity in murine and humanized mouse allotransplantation models. In all, the technology presented in this study has the potential to improve T-reg transfer therapy by enabling the regulated spatiotemporal provision of IL-2 to antigen-primed T-regs.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1126/scitranslmed.aaw4744
Web of Science ID

WOS:000590468700004

Author(s)
Eskandari, Siawosh K.
Sulkaj, Ina
Melo, Mariane B.
Li, Na  
Allos, Hazim
Alhaddad, Juliano B.
Kollar, Branislav
Borges, Thiago J.
Eskandari, Arach S.
Zinter, Max A.
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Date Issued

2020-11-11

Published in
Science Translational Medicine
Volume

12

Issue

569

Article Number

eaaw4744

Subjects

Cell Biology

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Medicine, Research & Experimental

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Research & Experimental Medicine

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dose interleukin-2 therapy

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allograft-rejection

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messenger-rna

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in-vitro

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activation

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memory

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foxp3

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autoimmune

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tolerance

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transplantation

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
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LBI  
Available on Infoscience
December 3, 2020
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/173846
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