JOURNAL ARTICLE
RESEARCH SUPPORT, NON-U.S. GOV'T
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Donor-specific chimeric antigen receptor Tregs limit rejection in naive but not sensitized allograft recipients.

Cell therapy with autologous donor-specific regulatory T cells (Tregs) is a promising strategy to minimize immunosuppression in transplant recipients. Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) technology has recently been used successfully to generate donor-specific Tregs and overcome the limitations of enrichment protocols based on repetitive stimulations with alloantigens. However, the ability of CAR-Treg therapy to control alloreactivity in immunocompetent recipients is unknown. We first analyzed the effect of donor-specific CAR Tregs on alloreactivity in naive, immunocompetent mice receiving skin allografts. Tregs expressing an irrelevant or anti-HLA-A2-specific CAR were administered to Bl/6 mice at the time of transplanting an HLA-A2+ Bl/6 skin graft. Donor-specific CAR-Tregs, but not irrelevant-CAR Tregs, significantly delayed skin rejection and diminished donor-specific antibodies (DSAs) and frequencies of DSA-secreting B cells. Donor-specific CAR-Treg-treated mice also had a weaker recall DSA response, but normal responses to an irrelevant antigen, demonstrating antigen-specific suppression. When donor-specific CAR Tregs were tested in HLA-A2-sensitized mice, they were unable to delay allograft rejection or diminish DSAs. The finding that donor-specific CAR-Tregs restrain de novo but not memory alloreactivity has important implications for their use as an adoptive cell therapy in transplantation.

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