Jeffery Hannah C, Braitch Manjit Kaur, Brown Solomon, Oo Ye Htun
NIHR Biomedical Research Unit in Liver Diseases, Centre for Liver Research, Institute of Immunology and Immunotherapy, University of Birmingham , Birmingham , UK.
NIHR Biomedical Research Unit in Liver Diseases, Centre for Liver Research, Institute of Immunology and Immunotherapy, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK; Liver and Hepatobiliary Unit, University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Birmingham, UK.
Front Immunol. 2016 Sep 6;7:334. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2016.00334. eCollection 2016.
The increasing demand for liver transplantation and the decline in donor organs has highlighted the need for alternative novel therapies to prevent chronic active hepatitis, which eventually leads to liver cirrhosis and liver cancer. Liver histology of chronic hepatitis is composed of both effector and regulatory lymphocytes. The human liver contains different subsets of effector lymphocytes that are kept in check by a subpopulation of T cells known as Regulatory T cells (Treg). The balance of effector and regulatory lymphocytes generally determines the outcome of hepatic inflammation: resolution, fulminant hepatitis, or chronic active hepatitis. Thus, maintaining and adjusting this balance is crucial in immunological manipulation of liver diseases. One of the options to restore this balance is to enrich Treg in the liver disease patients. Advances in the knowledge of Treg biology and development of clinical grade isolation reagents, cell sorting equipment, and good manufacturing practice facilities have paved the way to apply Treg cells as a potential therapy to restore peripheral self-tolerance in autoimmune liver diseases (AILD), chronic rejection, and posttransplantation. Past and on-going studies have applied Treg in type-1 diabetes mellitus, systemic lupus erythematosus, graft versus host diseases, and solid organ transplantations. There have not been any new therapies for the AILD for more than three decades; thus, the clinical potential for the application of autologous Treg cell therapy to treat autoimmune liver disease is an attractive and novel option. However, it is fundamental to understand the deep immunology, genetic profiles, biology, homing behavior, and microenvironment of Treg before applying the cells to the patients.
肝移植需求的不断增加以及供体器官的减少凸显了开发替代性新疗法以预防慢性活动性肝炎的必要性,慢性活动性肝炎最终会导致肝硬化和肝癌。慢性肝炎的肝脏组织学由效应淋巴细胞和调节性淋巴细胞组成。人类肝脏含有不同亚群的效应淋巴细胞,这些淋巴细胞受到一种称为调节性T细胞(Treg)的T细胞亚群的控制。效应淋巴细胞和调节性淋巴细胞的平衡通常决定了肝脏炎症的结局:炎症消退、暴发性肝炎或慢性活动性肝炎。因此,维持和调整这种平衡对于肝脏疾病的免疫调控至关重要。恢复这种平衡的一种选择是在肝病患者中富集Treg。Treg生物学知识的进步以及临床级分离试剂、细胞分选设备和良好生产规范设施的发展,为将Treg细胞作为一种潜在疗法应用于恢复自身免疫性肝病(AILD)、慢性排斥反应和移植后的外周自身耐受性铺平了道路。过去和正在进行的研究已将Treg应用于1型糖尿病、系统性红斑狼疮、移植物抗宿主病和实体器官移植。三十多年来,AILD一直没有新的治疗方法;因此,应用自体Treg细胞疗法治疗自身免疫性肝病的临床潜力是一个有吸引力的新选择。然而,在将这些细胞应用于患者之前,了解Treg的深层免疫学、基因谱、生物学、归巢行为和微环境至关重要。