FasL microgels induce immune acceptance of islet allografts in nonhuman primates
Islet transplantation to treat insulin-dependent diabetes is greatly limited by the need for maintenance immunosuppression. We report a strategy through which cotransplantation of allogeneic islets and streptavidin (SA)–FasL–presenting microgels to the omentum under transient rapamycin monotherapy r...
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Zusammenfassung: | Islet transplantation to treat insulin-dependent diabetes is greatly
limited by the need for maintenance immunosuppression. We report a
strategy through which cotransplantation of allogeneic islets and
streptavidin (SA)–FasL–presenting microgels to the omentum under transient
rapamycin monotherapy resulted in robust glycemic control, sustained
C-peptide levels, and graft survival in diabetic nonhuman primates for
>6 months. Surgical extraction of the graft resulted in prompt
hyperglycemia. In contrast, animals receiving microgels without SA-FasL
under the same rapamycin regimen rejected islet grafts acutely. Graft
survival was associated with increased number of FoxP3 + cells in the
graft site with no significant changes in T cell systemic frequencies or
responses to donor and third-party antigens, indicating localized
tolerance. Recipients of SA-FasL microgels exhibited normal liver and
kidney metabolic function, demonstrating safety. This localized
immunomodulatory strategy succeeded with unmodified islets and does not
require long-term immunosuppression, showing translational potential in β
cell replacement for treating type 1 diabetes. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.83bk3j9tg |