4.4 Article

Stability of human rapamycin-expanded CD4+CD25+ T regulatory cells

Journal

HAEMATOLOGICA-THE HEMATOLOGY JOURNAL
Volume 96, Issue 9, Pages 1357-1365

Publisher

FERRATA STORTI FOUNDATION
DOI: 10.3324/haematol.2011.041483

Keywords

T-regulatory cells; ex vivo expansion; rapamycin; cell therapy; T-regulatory-cell stability

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Funding

  1. Telethon [TGT11E01] Funding Source: Medline

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Background The clinical use of ex vivo-expanded T-regulatory cells for the treatment of T-cell-mediated diseases has gained increasing momentum. However, the recent demonstration that FOXP3(+) T-regulatory cells may contain interleukin-17-producing cells and that they can convert into effector cells once transferred in vivo raises significant doubts about their safety. We previously showed that rapamycin permits the ex vivo expansion of FOXP3(+) T-regulatory cells while impairing the proliferation of non-T-regulatory cells. Here we investigated the Th17-cell content and the in vivo stability of rapamycin-expanded T-regulatory cells as pertinent aspects of cell-based therapy. Design and Methods T-regulatory-enriched cells were isolated from healthy volunteers and were expanded ex vivo with rapamycin with a pre-clinical applicable protocol. T-regulatory cells cultured with and without rapamycin were compared for their regulatory activity, content of pro-inflammatory cells and stability. Results We found that CD4(+)CCR6(+)CD161(+) T cells (i.e., precursor/committed Th17 cells) contaminate the T-regulatory cells cultured ex vivo in the absence of rapamycin. In addition, Th17 cells do not expand when rapamycin-treated T-regulatory cells are exposed to a Th17-favorable environment. Rapamycin-expanded T-regulatory cells maintain their in vitro regulatory phenotype even after in vivo transfer into immunodeficient NOD-SCID mice despite being exposed to the irradiation-induced pro-inflammatory environment. Importantly, no additional rapamycin treatment, either in vitro or in vivo, is required to keep their phenotype fixed. Conclusions These data demonstrate that rapamycin secures ex vivo-expanded human T-regulatory cells and provide additional justification for their clinical use in future cell therapy-based trials.

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