Islet transplantation is a promising therapy for type 1 diabetes. However, chronic immunosuppression to control rejection of allogeneic islets induces morbidities and impairs islet function. T-effector cells are responsible for islet allograft rejection and express Fas death receptor following activation, becoming sensitive to Fas-mediated apoptosis. Here, we report that localized immunomodulation using microgels presenting an apoptotic form of Fas ligand (SA-FasL) results in prolonged survival of allogeneic islet grafts in diabetic mice. A short course of rapamycin treatment boosted the immunomodulatory efficacy of SA-FasL-microgels, resulting in acceptance and function of allografts over 200 days. Survivors generated normal systemic responses to donor antigens, implying immune privilege of the graft, and had increased CD4+CD25+FoxP3+ T-regulatory cells in the graft and draining lymph nodes. Deletion of T-regulatory cells resulted in acute rejection of established islet allografts. This localized immunomodulatory biomaterial-enabled approach may provide an alternative to chronic immunosuppression for clinical islet transplantation.
Allogeneic islet transplantation is an important therapeutic approach for the treatment of T1D. Clinical application of this approach, however, is severely curtailed by allograft rejection primarily initiated by pathogenic T effector cells regardless of chronic use of immunosuppression. Given the role of Fas-mediated signaling in regulating T effector cell responses, we tested if pancreatic islets can be engineered ex vivo to display on their surface an apoptotic form of FasL protein chimeric with streptavidin (SA-FasL), and whether such engineered islets induce tolerance in allogeneic hosts. Islets were modified with biotin following efficient engineering with SA-FasL protein that persisted on the surface of islets for over a week in vitro. SA-FasL-engineered islet grafts established euglycemia in chemically diabetic syngeneic mice indefinitely, demonstrating functionality and lack of acute toxicity. Most importantly, the transplantation of SA-FasL-engineered BALB/c islet grafts in conjunction with a short course of rapamycin treatment resulted in robust localized tolerance in 100% C57BL/6 recipients. Tolerance was initiated and maintained by CD4+CD25+FoxP3+ T regulatory (Treg) cells as their depletion early during tolerance induction or late after established tolerance resulted in prompt graft rejection. Furthermore, Treg cells sorted from graft-draining lymph nodes, but not spleen, of long-term graft recipients prevented the rejection of unmodified allogeneic islets in an adoptive transfer model, further confirming the Treg role in established tolerance. Engineering islets ex vivo in a rapid and efficient manner to display on their surface immunomodulatory proteins represents a novel, safe, and clinically applicable approach with important implications for the treatment of T1D.
Proteins created from recurrent fusion genes like CBFB-MYH11 are prevalent in acute myeloid leukemia (AML), often necessary for leukemogenesis, persistent throughout the disease course, and highly leukemia specific, making them attractive neoantigen targets for immunotherapy. A nonameric peptide derived from a prevalent CBFB-MYH11 fusion protein was found to be immunogenic in HLA-B*40:01 + donors. High-avidity CD8 + T cell clones isolated from healthy donors killed CBFB-MYH11 + HLA-B*40:01 + AML cell lines and primary human AML samples in vitro. CBFB-MYH11-specific T cells also controlled CBFB-MYH11 + HLA-B*40:01 + AML in vivo in a patient-derived murine xenograft model. High-avidity CBFB-MYH11 epitope-specific T cell receptors (TCRs) transduced into CD8 + T cells conferred antileukemic activity in vitro. Our data indicate that the CBFB-MYH11 fusion neoantigen is naturally presented on AML blasts and enables T cell recognition and killing of AML. We provide proof of principle for immunologically targeting AML-initiating fusions and demonstrate that targeting neoantigens has clinical relevance even in low-mutational frequency cancers like fusion-driven AML. This work also represents a first critical step toward the development of TCR T cell immunotherapy targeting fusion gene-driven AML.
Intraportal allogeneic islet transplantation has been demonstrated as a potential therapy for type 1 diabetes (T1D). The placement of islets into the liver and chronic immunosuppression to control rejection are two major limitations of islet transplantation. We hypothesize that localized immunomodulation with a novel form of FasL chimeric with streptavidin, SA-FasL, can provide protection and long-term function of islets at an extrahepatic site in the absence of chronic immunosuppression. Allogeneic islets modified with biotin and engineered to transiently display SA-FasL on their surface showed sustained survival following transplantation on microporous scaffolds into the peritoneal fat in combination with a short course (15 days) of rapamycin treatment. The challenges with modifying islets for clinical translation motivated the modification of scaffolds with SA-FasL as an off-the-shelf product. Poly(lactide-co-glycolide) (PLG) was conjugated with biotin and fabricated into particles and subsequently formed into microporous scaffolds to allow for rapid and efficient conjugation with SA-FasL. Biotinylated particles and scaffolds efficiently bound SA-FasL and induced apoptosis in cells expressing Fas receptor (FasR). Scaffolds functionalized with SA-FasL were subsequently seeded with allogeneic islets
We have previously shown that pancreatic islets engineered to transiently display a modified form of FasL protein (SA‐FasL) on their surface survive indefinitely in allogeneic recipients without a need for chronic immunosuppression. Mechanisms that confer long‐term protection to allograft are yet to be elucidated. We herein demonstrated that immune protection evolves in two distinct phases; induction and maintenance. SA‐FasL‐engineered allogeneic islets survived indefinitely and conferred protection to a second set of donor‐matched, but not third‐party, unmanipulated islet grafts simultaneously transplanted under the contralateral kidney capsule. Protection at the induction phase involved a reduction in the frequency of proliferating alloreactive T cells in the graft‐draining lymph nodes, and required phagocytes and TGF‐β. At the maintenance phase, immune protection evolved into graft site‐restricted immune privilege as the destruction of long‐surviving SA‐FasL‐islet grafts by streptozotocin followed by the transplantation of a second set of unmanipulated islet grafts into the same site from the donor, but not third party, resulted in indefinite survival. The induced immune privilege required both CD4+CD25+Foxp3+ Treg cells and persistent presence of donor antigens. Engineering cell and tissue surfaces with SA‐FasL protein provides a practical, efficient, and safe means of localized immunomodulation with important implications for autoimmunity and transplantation.
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