Faculty Opinions recommendation of Immunologic self-tolerance maintained by activated T cells expressing IL-2 receptor alpha-chains (CD25). Breakdown of a single mechanism of self-tolerance causes various autoimmune diseases.

Author(s):  
Hugh McDevitt
2006 ◽  
Vol 8 (26) ◽  
pp. 1-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nico M. Wulffraat ◽  
Ismé M. de Kleer ◽  
Berent Prakken

Cellular immune therapy for severe autoimmune diseases can now be considered when such patients are refractory to conventional treatment. The use of autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT) to treat human autoimmune diseases has been initiated following promising results in a variety of animal models. Anecdotal observations have been made of autoimmune disease remission in patients who have undergone allogeneic bone marrow transplantation as a result of coincidental haematological malignancies. The possibility of inducing immunological self-tolerance by ASCT is particularly attractive as a means for treating juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA). In this disease, ASCT restores self-tolerance both through a cell-intrinsic mechanism, involving the reprogramming of autoreactive T cells, and through a cell-extrinsic mechanism, involving a renewal of the immune balance between CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells and other T cells. This review describes the clinical results of ASCT performed for this disease and the possible underlying immunological mechanisms.


2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (19) ◽  
pp. 7015
Author(s):  
Peter J. Eggenhuizen ◽  
Boaz H. Ng ◽  
Joshua D. Ooi

Regulatory T cells (Tregs) are a small yet critical subset of CD4+ T cells, which have the role of maintaining immune homeostasis by, for example, regulating self-tolerance, tumor immunity, anti-microbial resistance, allergy and transplantation rejection. The suppressive mechanisms by which Tregs function are varied and pleiotropic. The ability of Tregs to maintain self-tolerance means they are critical for the control and prevention of autoimmune diseases. Irregularities in Treg function and number can result in loss of tolerance and autoimmune disease. Restoring immune homeostasis and tolerance through the promotion, activation or delivery of Tregs has emerged as a focus for therapies aimed at curing or controlling autoimmune diseases. Such therapies have focused on the Treg cell subset by using drugs to suppress T effector cells and promote Tregs. Other approaches have trialed inducing tolerance by administering the autoantigen via direct administration, by transient expression using a DNA vector, or by antigen-specific nanoparticles. More recently, cell-based therapies have been developed as an approach to directly or indirectly enhance Treg cell specificity, function and number. This can be achieved indirectly by transfer of tolerogenic dendritic cells, which have the potential to expand antigen-specific Treg cells. Treg cells can be directly administered to treat autoimmune disease by way of polyclonal Tregs or Tregs transduced with a receptor with high affinity for the target autoantigen, such as a high affinity T cell receptor (TCR) or a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR). This review will discuss the strategies being developed to redirect autoimmune responses to a state of immune tolerance, with the aim of the prevention or amelioration of autoimmune disease.


1987 ◽  
Vol 165 (1) ◽  
pp. 146-156 ◽  
Author(s):  
O Taguchi ◽  
Y Nishizuka

Autoimmune diseases appeared frequently in adults in the prostate and stomach of C3.129 mice after thymectomy on day 3 (Tx-3) without any additional treatment. Lesions of both organs could be completely prevented by a single i.p. injection of spleen cells from syngeneic adult mouse on day 4. For prevention of prostatis, the most effective cell source was normal males (4 X 10(6); normal females or Orx-0 males were less effective as the cell source, and higher doses of cells (4 X 10(7)) were needed. In contrast, spleen cells (4 X 10(6)) from these three donors had equivalent capacity for the prevention of gastritis. Similar autoimmune prostatis developed at very high frequency when spleen cells (4 X 10(6)) from normal females or Orx-0 males, but not from normal males, were injected i.p. into C3.129 nu/nu mice at 4 d. However, no sign of prostatis was found in nu/+ recipients. Injection of a larger dose (4 X 10(7)) from the same donors was not effective for induction of prostatis. Gastritis could not be induced in nu/nu mice by this procedure. Injection of spleen cells from Tx-3 males or females was effective for induction of both prostatis and gastritis in nu/nu recipients. It was also shown that a T cell population (Thy-1.2+, Ig-) had the capacity to prevent and to induce autoimmune diseases. These results together strongly suggest a role for active tissue-specific suppressor T cells in self tolerance, and elimination of such T cell populations causes autoimmunity.


Author(s):  
A.V. Churov ◽  
A.I. Siutkina ◽  
K.Y. Mamashov ◽  
E.K. Oleinik

Despite the considerable progress in the therapy of autoimmune pathologies, the existing methods are associated with the risk of serious adverse events. We think that regulatory T cells hold great promise for the therapy of disorders caused by a breakdown in immunological self-tolerance. This article aims at estimating the possible challenges facing Treg-based clinical approaches and offers solutions to the technical issues associated with the use of these cells in the therapy of autoimmune diseases.


2021 ◽  
Vol 218 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Shimon Sakaguchi

Regulatory T cells (Tregs) are indispensable for the establishment and maintenance of immunological self-tolerance. Their genetic anomalies or variations in function are causative of various monogenic and polygenic autoimmune diseases. Treg-based reestablishment of self-tolerance is envisioned to cure autoimmune diseases in the clinic.


2019 ◽  
Vol 339 ◽  
pp. 41-49 ◽  
Author(s):  
Prabhakaran Kumar ◽  
Shikha Saini ◽  
Saad Khan ◽  
Swarali Surendra Lele ◽  
Bellur S. Prabhakar

1996 ◽  
Vol 184 (2) ◽  
pp. 387-396 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Asano ◽  
M Toda ◽  
N Sakaguchi ◽  
S Sakaguchi

Neonatal thymectomy (NTx), especially around day 3 after birth, causes various organ-specific autoimmune diseases in mice. This report shows that: (a) T cells expressing the interleukin 2 receptor alpha chains (CD25) ontogenically begin to appear in the normal periphery immediately after day 3, rapidly increasing within 2 wk to nearly adult levels (approximately 10% of CD3+ cells, especially of CD4+ cells); (b) NTx on day 3 eliminates CD25+ T cells from the periphery for several days; inoculation immediately after NTx of CD25+ splenic T cells from syngeneic non-Tx adult mice prevents autoimmune development, whereas inoculation of CD25- T cells even at a larger dose does not; and furthermore, (c) similar autoimmune diseases can be produced in adult athymic nu/nu mice by inoculating either spleen cell suspensions from 3-d-old euthymic nu/+ mice or CD25+ cell-depleted spleen cell suspensions from older, even 1-yr-old, nu/+ mice. The CD25- populations from neonates or adults are also similar in the profile of cytokine formation. These results, taken together, indicate that one aspect of peripheral self-tolerance is maintained by CD25+ T cells that sustain potentially pathogenic self-reactive T cells in a CD25- dormant state; the thymic production of the former is developmentally programmed to begin on day 3 after birth in mice. Thus, NTx on day 3 can, at least transiently, eliminate/reduce the autoimmune-preventive CD25+ T cells, thereby leading to activation of the self-reactive T cells that have been produced before NTx.


1996 ◽  
Vol 183 (4) ◽  
pp. 1657-1662 ◽  
Author(s):  
W M Ridgway ◽  
M Fassò ◽  
A Lanctot ◽  
C Garvey ◽  
C G Fathman

Unresponsiveness to self is maintained through two mechanisms of immune regulation: thymic-negative selection and peripheral tolerance. Although thymic-negative selection is a major mechanism to eliminate self-reactive T cells, normal mice have readily detectable populations of T cells reactive to self-proteins but do not exhibit autoimmune responses. It has been postulated that autoimmune disease results from breakdown or loss of peripheral tolerance. We present data that demonstrate that peripheral tolerance or unresponsiveness to self can be broken in nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice. Immunization of NOD mice (but not of conventional mice) with self-peptides caused an immune response to self-peptide with resultant autoproliferation of peripheral lymphocytes. Autoproliferation of self-reactive T cells in NOD mice resulted from the recognition and proliferation of the activated T cells to endogenously processed and presented self-antigens. This loss of self-tolerance demonstrated in vitro may well be the basis of NOD autoimmune disease in vivo.


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