1 Medical Research Council Centre for Transplantation, King's College London, London, United Kingdom. 2 National Institute for Health Research Biomedical Research Centre at Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust and King's College London, London, United Kingdom. 3 Department of Immunobiology, King's College London, London, United Kingdom. 4 Address correspondence to: Behdad Afzali M.D., Ph.D., MRC Centre for Transplantation, Immunoregulation Laboratory, 5th Floor, Bermondsey Wing, Guy's Hospital, London SE1 9RT, United Kingdom.
Transplantation. 2014 Aug 27;98(4):370-9. doi: 10.1097/TP.0000000000000243.
Clinical tolerance induction to permit minimization or cessation of immunosuppressive drugs is one of the key research goals in solid organ transplantation. The use of ex vivo expanded or manipulated immunologic cells, including CD4CD25FOXP3 regulatory T cells (Tregs), to achieve this aim is already a reality, with several trials currently recruiting patients. Tregs are a highly suppressive, nonredundant, population of regulatory cells that prevent the development of autoimmune diseases in mammals. Data from transplanted humans and animal models support the notion that Tregs can mediate both induction and adoptive transfer of transplantation tolerance. However, human Tregs are highly heterogeneous and include subpopulations with the potential to produce the proinflammatory cytokine interleukin-17, which has been linked to transplant rejection. Tregs are also small in number in the peripheral circulation, thus they require ex vivo expansion before infusion into man. Selection of the most appropriate Treg population for cell therapy is, therefore, a critical step in ensuring successful clinical outcomes. In this review, we discuss Treg subpopulations, their subdivision based on nonmutually exclusive criteria of origin, expression of immunologic markers and function, availability in the peripheral blood of patients awaiting transplantation, and their suitability for programs of cell-based therapy.
临床耐受诱导可使免疫抑制药物最小化或停止使用,这是实体器官移植的主要研究目标之一。使用体外扩增或操作的免疫细胞,包括 CD4CD25FOXP3 调节性 T 细胞(Tregs),已经实现了这一目标,目前有几个试验正在招募患者。Tregs 是一种高度抑制、非冗余的调节细胞群体,可防止哺乳动物自身免疫性疾病的发生。来自移植患者和动物模型的数据支持 Tregs 可以介导诱导和过继转移移植耐受的观点。然而,人类 Tregs 高度异质性,包括具有产生促炎细胞因子白细胞介素-17 潜力的亚群,白细胞介素-17 与移植排斥反应有关。Tregs 在周围循环中的数量也很少,因此在输注到人体内之前需要进行体外扩增。因此,选择最适合细胞治疗的 Treg 群体是确保临床结果成功的关键步骤。在这篇综述中,我们讨论了 Treg 亚群,根据起源、免疫标志物表达和功能的非互斥标准对其进行细分,以及它们在等待移植的患者外周血中的可用性,以及它们是否适合细胞治疗计划。