<i>Ex vivo</i> delivery of regulatory T-cells for control of alloimmune priming in the donor lung

Ei Miyamoto(University Health Network), Akihiro Takahagi(University Health Network), Akihiro Ohsumi(University Health Network), Tereza Martinu(University Health Network), David Hwang(University Health Network), K. Boonstra(University Health Network), Betty Joe(University Health Network), Juan Mauricio Umaña(University Health Network), Ke Fan Bei(University Health Network), Daniel Vosoughi(University Health Network), Mingyao Liu(University Health Network), Marcelo Cypel(University Health Network), Shaf Keshavjee(University Health Network), S. Juvet(University Health Network)
European Respiratory Journal
September 2, 2021
Cited by 21Open Access
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Abstract

Background Survival after lung transplantation (LTx) is hampered by uncontrolled inflammation and alloimmunity. Regulatory T-cells (Tregs) are being studied as a cellular therapy in solid organ transplantation. Whether these systemically administered Tregs can function at the appropriate location and time is an important concern. We hypothesised that in vitro -expanded recipient-derived Tregs can be delivered to donor lungs prior to LTx via ex vivo lung perfusion (EVLP), maintaining their immunomodulatory ability. Methods In a rat model, Wistar Kyoto (WKy) CD4 + CD25 high Tregs were expanded in vitro prior to EVLP. Expanded Tregs were administered to Fisher 344 (F344) donor lungs during EVLP; left lungs were transplanted into WKy recipients. Treg localisation and function post-transplant were assessed. In a proof-of-concept experiment, cryopreserved expanded human CD4 + CD25 + CD127 low Tregs were thawed and injected into discarded human lungs during EVLP. Results Rat Tregs entered the lung parenchyma and retained suppressive function. Expanded Tregs had no adverse effect on donor lung physiology during EVLP; lung water as measured by wet-to-dry weight ratio was reduced by Treg therapy. The administered cells remained in the graft at 3 days post-transplant where they reduced activation of intra-graft effector CD4 + T-cells; these effects were diminished by day 7. Human Tregs entered the lung parenchyma during EVLP where they expressed key immunoregulatory molecules (CTLA4 + , 4-1BB + , CD39 + and CD15s + ). Conclusions Pre-transplant Treg administration can inhibit alloimmunity within the lung allograft at early time points post-transplant. Our organ-directed approach has potential for clinical translation.


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