Supraphysiological FOXP3 expression in human CAR-Tregs results in improved stability, efficacy, and safety of CAR-Treg products for clinical application

The forkhead family transcription factor (FOXP3) is an essential regulator for the development of regulatory T cells (Tregs) and orchestrates both suppressive function and Treg lineage identity. Stable expression of FOXP3 enables Tregs to maintain immune homeostasis and prevent autoimmunity. However...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of autoimmunity 2023-07, Vol.138, p.103057-103057, Article 103057
Hauptverfasser: Henschel, Pierre, Landwehr-Kenzel, Sybille, Engels, Niklas, Schienke, Andrea, Kremer, Jakob, Riet, Tobias, Redel, Nella, Iordanidis, Konstantinos, Saetzler, Valerie, John, Katharina, Heider, Miriam, Hardtke-Wolenski, Matthias, Wedemeyer, Heiner, Jaeckel, Elmar, Noyan, Fatih
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The forkhead family transcription factor (FOXP3) is an essential regulator for the development of regulatory T cells (Tregs) and orchestrates both suppressive function and Treg lineage identity. Stable expression of FOXP3 enables Tregs to maintain immune homeostasis and prevent autoimmunity. However, under pro-inflammatory conditions, FOXP3 expression in Tregs can become unstable, leading to loss of suppressive function and conversion into pathogenic T effector cells. Therefore, the success of adoptive cell therapy with chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) Tregs is highly dependent on the stability of FOXP3 expression to ensure the safety of the cell product. To warrant the stable expression of FOXP3 in CAR-Treg products, we have developed an HLA-A2-specific CAR vector that co-expresses FOXP3. The transduction of isolated human Tregs with the FOXP3-CAR led to an increase in the safety and efficacy of the CAR-Treg product. In a hostile microenvironment, under pro-inflammatory and IL-2-deficient conditions, FOXP3-CAR-Tregs showed a stable expression of FOXP3 compared to Control-CAR-Tregs. Furthermore, additional exogenous expression of FOXP3 did not induce phenotypic alterations and dysfunctions such as cell exhaustion, loss of functional Treg characteristics or abnormal cytokine secretion. In a humanized mouse model, FOXP3-CAR-Tregs displayed an excellent ability to prevent allograft rejection. Furthermore, FOXP3-CAR-Tregs revealed coherent Treg niche-filling capabilities. Overexpression of FOXP3 in CAR-Tregs has thereby the potential to increase the efficacy and reliability of cellular products, promoting their clinical use in organ transplantation and autoimmune diseases. •Modification of CAR vectors with an additional FOXP3 is an essential approach for clinical use.•Additional FOXP3 in CAR-Tregs does not cause cellular dysfunction.•CAR-Tregs with additional FOXP3 show neither an exhausted phenotype nor reduced Treg fitness.•Additional FOXP3 does not affect regulation of immune responses or niche filling capabilities in humanized mice.•Additional FOXP3 leads to stability under proinflammatory conditions and survival advantage under IL-2-deprivated conditions.
ISSN:0896-8411
1095-9157
DOI:10.1016/j.jaut.2023.103057