Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

GNTI-122: an autologous antigen-specific engineered Treg cell therapy for type 1 diabetes

2024; American Society for Clinical Investigation; Volume: 9; Issue: 6 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1172/jci.insight.171844

ISSN

2379-3708

Autores

Gene I. Uenishi, Marko Repic, Jennifer Yam, Ashley E. Landuyt, Priya Saikumar Lakshmi, Tingxi Guo, Payam Zarin, Martina Sassone‐Corsi, Adam Chicoine, Hunter Kellogg, Martina S. Hunt, Travis Drow, Ritika Tewari, Peter J. Cook, Soo Jung Yang, Karen Cerosaletti, Darius Schweinoch, Benjamin Guiastrennec, Eddie A. James, Chandra Patel, Tiffany F. Chen, Jane H. Buckner, David J. Rawlings, Thomas J. Wickham, Karen T. Mueller,

Tópico(s)

T-cell and B-cell Immunology

Resumo

Tregs have the potential to establish long-term immune tolerance in patients recently diagnosed with type 1 diabetes (T1D) by preserving β cell function. Adoptive transfer of autologous thymic Tregs, although safe, exhibited limited efficacy in previous T1D clinical trials, likely reflecting a lack of tissue specificity, limited IL-2 signaling support, and in vivo plasticity of Tregs. Here, we report a cell engineering strategy using bulk CD4+ T cells to generate a Treg cell therapy (GNTI-122) that stably expresses FOXP3, targets the pancreas and draining lymph nodes, and incorporates a chemically inducible signaling complex (CISC). GNTI-122 cells maintained an expression profile consistent with Treg phenotype and function. Activation of CISC using rapamycin mediated concentration-dependent STAT5 phosphorylation and, in concert with T cell receptor engagement, promoted cell proliferation. In response to the cognate antigen, GNTI-122 exhibited direct and bystander suppression of polyclonal, islet-specific effector T cells from patients with T1D. In an adoptive transfer mouse model of T1D, a mouse engineered-Treg analog of GNTI-122 trafficked to the pancreas, decreased the severity of insulitis, and prevented progression to diabetes. Taken together, these findings demonstrate in vitro and in vivo activity and support further development of GNTI-122 as a potential treatment for T1D.

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