Polyclonal Recipient nTregs Are Superior to Donor or Third-Party Tregs in the Induction of Transplantation Tolerance

المؤلفون المشاركون

Unger, L.
Klaus, Christoph
Hock, Karin
Baranyi, Ulrike
Mahr, Benedikt
Farkas, Andreas M.
Wrba, Fritz
Wekerle, Thomas
Pilat, N.

المصدر

Journal of Immunology Research

العدد

المجلد 2015، العدد 2015 (31 ديسمبر/كانون الأول 2015)، ص ص. 1-9، 9ص.

الناشر

Hindawi Publishing Corporation

تاريخ النشر

2015-07-27

دولة النشر

مصر

عدد الصفحات

9

التخصصات الرئيسية

الأحياء

الملخص EN

Induction of donor-specific tolerance is still considered as the “Holy Grail” in transplantation medicine.

The mixed chimerism approach is virtually the only tolerance approach that was successfully translated into the clinical setting.

We have previously reported successful induction of chimerism and tolerance using cell therapy with recipient T regulatory cells (Tregs) to avoid cytotoxic recipient treatment.

Treg therapy is limited by the availability of cells as large-scale expansion is time-consuming and associated with the risk of contamination with effector cells.

Using a costimulation-blockade based bone marrow (BM) transplantation (BMT) model with Treg therapy instead of cytoreductive recipient treatment we aimed to determine the most potent Treg population for clinical translation.

Here we show that CD4+CD25+ in vitro activated nTregs are superior to TGFβ induced iTregs in promoting the induction of chimerism and tolerance.

Therapy with nTregs (but not iTregs) led to multilineage chimerism and donor-specific tolerance in mice receiving as few as 0.5 × 106 cells.

Moreover, we show that only recipient Tregs, but not donor or third-party Tregs, had a beneficial effect on BM engraftment at the tested doses.

Thus, recipient-type nTregs significantly improve chimerism and tolerance and might be the most potent Treg population for translation into the clinical setting.

نمط استشهاد جمعية علماء النفس الأمريكية (APA)

Pilat, N.& Klaus, Christoph& Hock, Karin& Baranyi, Ulrike& Unger, L.& Mahr, Benedikt…[et al.]. 2015. Polyclonal Recipient nTregs Are Superior to Donor or Third-Party Tregs in the Induction of Transplantation Tolerance. Journal of Immunology Research،Vol. 2015, no. 2015, pp.1-9.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1068521

نمط استشهاد الجمعية الأمريكية للغات الحديثة (MLA)

Pilat, N.…[et al.]. Polyclonal Recipient nTregs Are Superior to Donor or Third-Party Tregs in the Induction of Transplantation Tolerance. Journal of Immunology Research No. 2015 (2015), pp.1-9.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1068521

نمط استشهاد الجمعية الطبية الأمريكية (AMA)

Pilat, N.& Klaus, Christoph& Hock, Karin& Baranyi, Ulrike& Unger, L.& Mahr, Benedikt…[et al.]. Polyclonal Recipient nTregs Are Superior to Donor or Third-Party Tregs in the Induction of Transplantation Tolerance. Journal of Immunology Research. 2015. Vol. 2015, no. 2015, pp.1-9.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1068521

نوع البيانات

مقالات

لغة النص

الإنجليزية

الملاحظات

Includes bibliographical references

رقم السجل

BIM-1068521