Abstract
ABSTRACTDue to its stimulatory potential for immunomodulatory CD4+regulatory T (Treg) cells, low-dose interleukin-2 (IL-2) immunotherapy has recently gained considerable attention for treatment of various autoimmune diseases. Although early-stage clinical trials have correlated expansion of circulating Treg cells with clinical response to IL-2 treatment, detailed mechanistic data on responding Treg cell subsets are lacking. In this investigator-initiated phase-2 clinical trial of low-dose IL-2 immunotherapy in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) patients, we performed an in-depth study of circulating and cutaneous Treg cell subsets by imaging mass cytometry, high-parameter spectral flow cytometry, bulk and single-cell RNA sequencing with cellular indexing, and targeted serum proteomics. Low-dose IL-2 stimulated circulating Treg cells with skin-homing properties that appeared in the skin of SLE patients in close interaction with endothelial cells, suggestive of a gatekeeper function. Analysis of surface proteins and transcriptomes detected different IL-2-driven Treg cell programs, including highly proliferative CD38+HLA-DR+, activated gut-homing CD38+, and skin-homing HLA-DR+Treg cells. These data identify distinct and functionally characteristic Treg cell subsets in human blood and skin, including the Treg cell subsets most responsive to IL-2 immunotherapy, thus providing unprecedented insight into Treg cell biology during IL-2 treatment.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
2 articles.
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