A rapid diagnostic test for human regulatory T-cell function to enable regulatory T-cell therapy

Author:

Canavan James B.1,Afzali Behdad1,Scottà Cristiano1,Fazekasova Henrieta1,Edozie Francis C.1,Macdonald Thomas T.2,Hernandez-Fuentes Maria P.1,Lombardi Giovanna1,Lord Graham M.1

Affiliation:

1. Medical Research Council Centre for Transplantation, King's College London and National Institute for Health Research Biomedical Research Centre at Guy's & St Thomas' National Health Service Foundation Trust and King's College London, London, United Kingdom; and

2. Blizard Institute, Bart's and the London School of Medicine, London, United Kingdom

Abstract

Abstract Regulatory T cells (CD4+CD25hiCD127loFOXP3+ T cells [Tregs]) are a population of lymphocytes involved in the maintenance of self-tolerance. Abnormalities in function or number of Tregs are a feature of autoimmune diseases in humans. The ability to expand functional Tregs ex vivo makes them ideal candidates for autologous cell therapy to treat human autoimmune diseases and to induce tolerance to transplants. Current tests of Treg function typically take up to 120 hours, a kinetic disadvantage as clinical trials of Tregs will be critically dependent on the availability of rapid diagnostic tests before infusion into humans. Here we evaluate a 7-hour flow cytometric assay for assessing Treg function, using suppression of the activation markers CD69 and CD154 on responder T cells (CD4+CD25− [Tresp]), compared with traditional assays involving inhibition of CFSE dilution and cytokine production. In both freshly isolated and ex vivo expanded Tregs, we describe excellent correlation with gold standard suppressor cell assays. We propose that the kinetic advantage of the new assay may place it as the preferred rapid diagnostic test for the evaluation of Treg function in forthcoming clinical trials of cell therapy, enabling the translation of the large body of preclinical data into potentially useful treatments for human diseases.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry

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