| Literature DB >> 30850479 |
Avery J Lam1,2, Katherine N MacDonald2,3,4, Anne M Pesenacker1,2, Stephen C Juvet5,6, Kimberly A Morishita2,7, Brian Bressler8, James G Pan9, Sachdev S Sidhu9,10, John D Rioux11,12, Megan K Levings13,2,3.
Abstract
Regulatory T cell (Treg) therapy is a potential curative approach for a variety of immune-mediated conditions, including autoimmunity and transplantation, in which there is pathological tissue damage. In mice, IL-33R (ST2)-expressing Tregs mediate tissue repair by producing the growth factor amphiregulin, but whether similar tissue-reparative Tregs exist in humans remains unclear. We show that human Tregs in blood and multiple tissue types produced amphiregulin, but this was neither a unique feature of Tregs nor selectively upregulated in tissues. Human Tregs in blood, tonsil, synovial fluid, colon, and lung tissues did not express ST2, so ST2+ Tregs were engineered via lentiviral-mediated overexpression, and their therapeutic potential for cell therapy was examined. Engineered ST2+ Tregs exhibited TCR-independent, IL-33-stimulated amphiregulin expression and a heightened ability to induce M2-like macrophages. The finding that amphiregulin-producing Tregs have a noneffector phenotype and are progressively lost upon TCR-induced proliferation and differentiation suggests that the tissue repair capacity of human Tregs may be an innate function that operates independently from their classical suppressive function.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30850479 DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1801330
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol ISSN: 0022-1767 Impact factor: 5.422