| Literature DB >> 32477325 |
Anje Cauwels1, Jan Tavernier1,2.
Abstract
Autoimmune diseases such as multiple sclerosis (MS), type I diabetes (T1D), inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD), and rheumatoid arthritis (RA) are chronic, incurable, incapacitating and at times even lethal conditions. Worldwide, millions of people are affected, predominantly women, and their number is steadily increasing. Currently, autoimmune patients require lifelong immunosuppressive therapy, often accompanied by severe adverse side effects and risks. Targeting the fundamental cause of autoimmunity, which is the loss of tolerance to self- or innocuous antigens, may be achieved via various mechanisms. Recently, tolerance-inducing cellular therapies, such as tolerogenic dendritic cells (tolDCs) and regulatory T cells (Tregs), have gained considerable interest. Their safety has already been evaluated in patients with MS, arthritis, T1D, and Crohn's disease, and clinical trials are underway to confirm their safety and therapeutic potential. Cell-based therapies are inevitably expensive and time-consuming, requiring laborious ex vivo manufacturing. Therefore, direct in vivo targeting of tolerogenic cell types offers an attractive alternative, and several strategies are being explored. Type I IFN was the first disease-modifying therapy approved for MS patients, and approaches to endogenously induce IFN in autoimmune diseases are being pursued vigorously. We here review and discuss tolerogenic cellular therapies and targeted in vivo tolerance approaches and propose a novel strategy for cell-specific delivery of type I IFN signaling to a cell type of choice.Entities:
Keywords: autoimmunity; cDC; dendritic cells; pDC; tolerance; tolerogenic dendritic cells; type-I-IFN
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32477325 PMCID: PMC7241419 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.00674
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
FIGURE 1Comparison of ex vivo- and in vivo-generated tolDC. (A) For cellular tolDC therapy, monocytes are isolated from patient-derived peripheral blood, driven into moDC development using cytokine therapy, and subsequently tolerized by immunosuppressive agents such as vitamin D3 or rapamycin. These autologous tolDCs are then used for patient-specific treatment. From peripheral blood, Tregs may also be sorted and further expanded ex vivo. Once injected back into the patient, these Tregs dampen the immune system via multiple pathways, including the suppression of DC maturation. (B) In vivo induction of tolDC may be achieved by several approaches. Examples include delivering autoAg to DCs specifically via 1/antibody-mediated targeting of DC surface markers, 2/encapsulation in nanoparticles, microparticles, or liposomes, loaded (or not) with an immunosuppressive agent, or 3/infusion of Ag-carrying erythrocytes that will be cleared via phagocytosis predominantly by DCs and macrophages. (C) Delivery of self-Ag may add to disease development in a pro-inflammatory microenvironment, and autoAg patterns are not always uniform or stable over time. Alternatively, selective delivery of IFN-I signaling in pDC and cDC1 by AcTaferons (AFNs, targeted using SiglecH or Clec9A single-domain antibodies) may safely and cell-specifically induce systemic tolerance.
Summary of approaches to inducing tolDC in vivo.
| EAE (PLP, SJL) | PLP Ag delivery | cDC1 + LC | DEC205 Ab | −10 d/−15 d | Prevent and reduce disease severity ∼prevent Ag response + T suppressive mechanism | [ |
| EAE (MOG, C57Bl/6) | MOG Ag delivery | pDC | SiglecH Ab | −1 d | Delay onset and reduce disease ∼prevent Ag response, no effect Tregs | [ |
| EAE (MOG, C57Bl/6) | NP + peptide + AhR ligand | APC | Non-specific | d0 | Suppress disease progression ∼expand Tregs | [ |
| EAE (MOG, C57Bl/6) | MOG Ag delivery | cDC1 + LC cDC1 migratory cDC1 resident cDC2 | DEC205 Ab Langerin Ab Treml4 Ab DCIR2 Ab | −14 d −14 d −14 d −14 d | Prevent and reduce disease Prevent and reduce disease Prevention/reduction minimal Prevention/reduction minimal ∼Protection correlates with Treg generation | [ |
| EAE (spinal cord, C57Bl/6) | MOG Ag delivery | cDC1 + LC | DEC205 scFv | −7 and −3 d or +7 and 11 d | Prevent disease TGFβ-dependently ∼reduce IL-17 & IFNγ in CD4+ T cells ∼induce TGFβ+ capacity in DCs | [ |
| EAE (MOG, C57Bl/6) | NP + peptide + IL-10 | APC | Non-specific | −30 and −15d or +8 and 22d | Reduce disease severity ∼reduced IFNγ and IL-17 by splenic T cells | [ |
| EAE (PLP, SJL) | Highly negative MP | Inflammatory mono | via MARCO | +7 d; start relapse | Prevent disease; relapse ∼reduced inflammation CNS (especially DC) | [ |
| EAE (MOG, C57Bl/6; MPB, B10.PL) | NP + Ag | Liver sinus EC accumulation | Selected NP | +1 d; +8−12 d | Prevent; reduce disease score ∼TGFβ and Treg dependently | [ |
| EAE (PLP, SJL) | NP + Ag + rapamycin | APC | Non-specific | −14 and −21 d; +13 d | Prevent disease; relapse ∼prevent Ag response, induce Treg/Breg | [ |
| EAE (MOG, PLP, C57Bl/6) | NP + MHCII-MOG-peptide or MHCII-PLP-peptide | APC | Non-specific | +14 d; +21 d | Reduce disease severity ∼Ag-ex perienced Teff→Tr1 (APC-dependent) ∼formation and expansion Bregs | [ |
| EAE (MOG, C57Bl/6) | MOG Ag decorated rbc | Phagocytes | Non-specific | 7 d/+5 d/+11 d | Prevent or cure disease ∼Th17 decrease in CNS | [ |
| EAE (PLP, SJL) | NP + peptide + rapamycin | APC | Non-specific | +14 d = peak | Prevent relapse ∼prevent Ag response + expand Tregs | [ |
| EAE (PLP, SJL) | PLP Ag delivery | CD11b+ cDC2 | DCIR2 Ab | −10d | Prevent and reduce disease ∼reduce pathogenic T | [ |
| EAE (MOG, C57Bl/6) | Engineered IFNα delivery | pDC, cDC1 | SiglecH sdAb or Clec9A sdAb | +7 d/+12 d | Delay onset, reduce disease progression ∼IDO/TGFβ+ pDC; IL-10/TGFβ+ Treg and Bregs | [ |
| Diabetes (p31-T transfer) | p31 peptide delivery | rbc → uptake DC | Ly76 scFv → non-specific | +8 h till 7 d | Prevent hyperglycemia ∼deletion transferred diabetogenic T cells | [ |
| Diabetes (NOD/BDC2.5) | NP + IAg7 (NOD/BDC2.5 MHCII) | APC | Non-specific | 10 wk of age | Prevent incidence ∼Ag-experienced Teff → Tr1 (APC-dependent) ∼formation and expansion Bregs | [ |
| Diabetes (NOD+BDC2.5-T) | BDC2.5 peptide delivery | cDC2 cDC1 | DCIR2 Ab DEC205 Ab | −1 and 0 d −1 and 0 d | Delay diabetes induction ∼ T cell apoptosis no effect | [ |
| Diabetes (NOD mice) | NP + Ins Ag + AhR ligand | APC | Non-specific | 8 wk of age | Reduce disease development ∼tolDC, Treg differentiation | [ |
| Diabetes (NOD mice) | Ins Ag decorated rbc | Phagocytes | Non-specific | 10 wk of age | 80% protection | [ |
| IBD (DSS, C57Bl/6) | Highly negative MP | Inflammatory mono | via MARCO | +1−6 d | Suppress disease score ∼reduced inflammation/colon | [ |
| Inflammatory arthritis | liposomes + Ag + NFκB⊥ | cDC, pDC, mf | Non-specific | +6 d | Reduce disease severity ∼induction Tregs, suppression Teffs | [ |
| Arthritis (CIA) | NP + MHCII-collagen peptide | APC | Non-specific | @130% swelling | Reduce disease severity ∼Ag-experienced Teff → Tr1 (APC-dependent) ∼formation and expansion Bregs | [ |
| Skin transplantation | MHC-I monomer delivery | cDC2 | DCIR2 Ab | −14 d | Long term allograft survival if CD8-depleted | [ |
| Liver transplantation | NP + tacrolimus | APC | Non-specific | +4 till 10 d | Prolong allograft survival | [ |
| Heart transplantation | Targeted NP + αCD3 | HEV, LN | MECA79 Ab | −1 d till 3 d | Prolong allograft survival ∼Treg dependent | [ |
| Heart transplantation | HDL-NP + rapamycin | Myeloid cells (mf) | Non-specific | +6 d | Long term allograft survival ∼Mreg dependent | [ |
FIGURE 2Schematic representation of immunocytokines and AcTakines. (A) Immunocytokines are typically engineered by coupling a wild-type (WT) cytokine to a targeting module, usually an antibody or antibody fragment. (B) AcTakines consist of a mutated (engineered) e-cytokine with reduced cognate receptor affinity, coupled C-terminally via a 20xGGS linker to a targeting moiety. In general, a camelid-derived single domain antibody (sdAb = VHH) is used for the latter, although peptides or ligands can also be employed. For purification purposes, AcTakines are decorated with a C-terminal affinity tag.