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Regulatory T-cells are a special population of T-cells that suppress immunity. They have two important functions: Turning off immune reactions following a successful defense against infectious organisms, and preventing immune cells from attacking the body's own tissues, which are identified by distinctive "self-antigen" markers.
In the past five years or so, scientists have used new tools to study Tregs and consider ways they could be harnessed for therapy in transplantation and autoimmune disease. In 2008, Davies and Guinan reported low-levels of graft-vs-host disease in a small number of mismatched transplants using co-stimulatory blockade, which not only neutralized the T-cells that cause the harmful graft-vs-host response, but also led to rapid reconstitution of the patients' bone marrow.
The researchers then designed experiments to learn more molecular details about how the blockade strategy had reduced graft-vs-host complications. Based on few reports in the literature, "We wondered whether Tregs were playing an additional role," said Davies.
Davies analyzed frozen blood samples taken from 5 patients and donors at various intervals after the transplants. The analysis showed that during the first three months, the level of Tregs in the patients rapidly rose to very high levels, which helped explain why the recipients experienced only mild graft-vs-host symptoms. The Tregs, they confirmed, were generated from the donated T-cells - not remnants of the recipient's immune system.
"We found there was something about co-stimulatory blockade that caused this rapid expansion of Tregs," said Davies, adding that further studies are exploring this question.
Importantly, the researchers noted, the Tregs acted in a highly specific fashion: They turned off only the donor T-cells that would have triggered the immune attack on the recipient's tissues - other T-cells that help the patients fight off infections were spared. This specificity appears to have developed in the recipient's body, where the Tregs were "educated" to respond only to a harmful T-cell reaction.
As a result, said Guinan, this technique "creates a good balance of effects - inactivating the T-cells that cause graft-vs-host disease (GVHD), revving up the Tregs to turn off any incipient GVHD, while bringing about a rapid reconstitution of the recipient's immune system."
The scientists expect the new findings to influence the design of further clinical tests of the co-stimulatory blockade technique. And, they say, it opens a window on other potential applications of co-stimulatory blockade, which is already being used clinically to treat rheumatoid arthritis (an autoimmune disease) and is being tested in mismatched kidney transplants.
Guinan is Associate Director of the Center for Clinical and Translational Research at Dana-Farber, and associate professor of pediatrics at HMS.
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