Abstract
Human regulatory macrophages (Mreg) have shown early clinical promise as a cell-based adjunct immunosuppressive therapy in solid organ transplantation. It is hypothesised that recipient CD4+ T cell responses are actively regulated through direct allorecognition of donor-derived Mregs. Here we show that human Mregs convert allogeneic CD4+ T cells to IL-10-producing, TIGIT+ FoxP3+-induced regulatory T cells that non-specifically suppress bystander T cells and inhibit dendritic cell maturation. Differentiation of Mreg-induced Tregs relies on multiple non-redundant mechanisms that are not exclusive to interaction of Mregs and T cells, including signals mediated by indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase, TGF-β, retinoic acid, Notch and progestagen-associated endometrial protein. Preoperative administration of donor-derived Mregs to living-donor kidney transplant recipients results in an acute increase in circulating TIGIT+ Tregs. These results suggest a feed-forward mechanism by which Mreg treatment promotes allograft acceptance through rapid induction of direct-pathway Tregs.
Similar content being viewed by others
Introduction
Adoptive transfer of immunoregulatory cells as a means of establishing transplantation tolerance is a common experimental technique, but its clinical application is only now receiving serious attention1. Several classes of immunoregulatory cells are currently being developed as adjunct immunosuppressive agents for use in solid organ transplantation, including different sorts of regulatory T cells (Treg)2 and suppressive myeloid cells3. The human regulatory macrophage (Mreg) is a promising candidate cell type that is already far advanced in its development as a cell-based medicinal product4. Mregs are currently being investigated in the ONEmreg12 trial, a phase-I/II study of Mreg therapy as a means of safely minimising maintenance immunosuppression in kidney transplant recipients (clinicaltrials.gov: NCT02085629).
Human Mregs reflect a unique state of macrophage differentiation, distinguished from macrophages in other activation states by their mode of derivation, cell-surface phenotype, stable DHRS9 expression5 and potent suppressor function. Human Mregs develop from macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF; CSF1)-stimulated CD14+ peripheral blood monocytes6 cultured with high concentrations of human serum7 through a time-dependent process8 that requires contact with a plastic surface, ligation of FcγRIII (CD16) by serum immunoglobulin9 and exposure to other serum factors. Human Mregs prevent mitogen-stimulated allogeneic T cell proliferation in vitro through interferon (IFN)-γ-induced indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) activity, as well as mediating a contact-dependent deletion of activated allogeneic T cells10. From a technological perspective, the simplicity of Mreg production and their stable suppressive activity are qualities that lend themselves well to a cell-based therapeutic product for use as an immunosuppressive, anti-inflammatory or tissue-reparative therapy11.
Preclinical experiments in a heterotopic mouse heart transplant model demonstrated that intravenous (i.v.) injection of donor-strain Mregs conferred long-term transplant acceptance to non-immunosuppressed, fully allogeneic recipients12. Importantly, this allograft-protective effect was not simply due to alloantigen exposure but depended upon Mregs expressing inducible nitric oxide synthase. Following i.v. injection into mice, allogeneic Mregs rapidly accumulated in lung, liver and spleen, but not in lymph nodes, where a proportion of transferred Mregs persisted for up to 4 weeks. Importantly, these experiments showed that living Mregs exerted a graft-protective effect that endured beyond their lifespan, which was likely mediated by recipient T cells. Although mouse and human Mregs suppress allogeneic T cell proliferation and effector functions in vitro, it remains controversial whether they can control recipient alloimmune responses in vivo through direct interaction of transferred cells with recipient T cells.
Here we explore the possibility that adoptive transfer of donor-derived Mregs to an allogeneic recipient prior to solid organ transplantation induces recipient Tregs through direct interactions between donor and recipient cells. It is hypothesised that transient Mreg-induced Treg responses might engender more stable regulatory responses through a feed-forward mechanism sustained by recipient antigen-presenting cells and Tregs. This study investigates phenotypic and functional changes wrought by human Mregs upon allogeneic CD4+ T cells in coculture in order to identify markers that might allow us to infer direct interactions between donor-derived Mregs and recipient T cells in Mreg-treated patients. In coculture and humanised mouse experiments, a fraction of CD4+ T cells converts to interleukin (IL)-10-expressing-induced Tregs (iTregs) through an activation-dependent process reliant upon CD28, IDO, retinoic acid, transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β), canonical Notch signalling and progestagen-associated endometrial protein (PAEP). After i.v. administration of donor-derived Mregs, increased TIGIT+ Treg frequencies are observed in the peripheral blood of prospective kidney transplant recipients. Taken together, these findings suggest TIGIT+ iTreg elicited by allogeneic Mreg therapy could play a mechanistically important role in its tolerogenic effects.
Results
Steady-state characteristics of human Mregs
Human Mregs arose from purified CD14+ peripheral blood monocytes cultured in medium supplemented with human AB serum and M-CSF (CSF1) for 6 days prior to stimulation with IFN-γ for 18–24 h. Mregs adopted a distinctive tessellating, epithelioid morphology to form almost confluent monolayers (Fig. 1a). Individual cells were large and densely granular with a prominent central body and thin cytoplasmic skirt that spread symmetrically over the surface of the culture vessel. Ultrastructural examination confirmed the impression of flattened cells adhering very closely to the underlying plastic surface (Fig. 1b). Membranous processes extended from the perimeter and upper surface of Mregs, and their nuclei appeared active with abundant fine chromatin—features typical of activated human macrophages. Over a 9-h time course, Mregs exhibited a higher rate and absolute capacity for phagocytosis of fixed, fluorescently labelled Escherichia coli than classically (IFN-γ + lipopolysaccharide; LPS) activated macrophages (Fig. 1c).
Human Mregs expressed generic markers of human macrophages, including CD11b, CD33 and human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-DR (Fig. 1d). Unlike other monocyte-derived macrophages, Mregs expressed relatively low levels of CD14 and cell-surface CD16. Similar to CD14low non-classical monocytes, Mregs expressed CX3CR1. Mregs uniformly expressed CD11c and XCR1, but they lacked CLEC9a and CD141 expression, so Mregs are not cDC1-like cells. Mregs expressed CD172a (SIRPα) but not CD1a or CD1c; therefore, Mregs are not cDC2-like cells. In common with pDC, human Mregs expressed CD123 (IL-3R) and CD304 (NRP1). Mregs expressed typical markers of tissue-resident macrophage subsets, including CD64, CD163, CD169, CD204 (MSR), CD206 (MMR), CD209, CD301 (MGL1), LYVE-1, Factor XIIIa and MER. A variety of inhibitory receptors were expressed by Mregs, including members of the LILR (ILT) family and TREM2. Intracellular staining for IDO revealed homogeneous expression by Mregs. A survey of extra- and intracellular expression of costimulatory and co-inhibitory ligands revealed human Mregs were CD80−/low CD86+ CD273+ CD274+ CD275− CD279+ CD270+ CD112+ CD155+ Galectin-9+ CD48+ CD252+ CD70− GITRL+ CD153+ CD258+ CD160− CD178− CD40+ CD253− (Supplementary Figure 1). Given their mode of derivation, morphology and cell-surface phenotype, human Mregs are best classified as a subset of monocyte-derived macrophages13.
Mreg-mediated enrichment of IL-10-producing FoxP3+ T cells
The consequences of exposing CD3+ T cells to allogeneic Mregs in vitro were investigated in coculture experiments (Fig. 2a). To gauge their capacity for bystander suppression, Mreg-cocultured T cells were re-isolated and mixed with autologous carboxyfluorescein succinimidyl ester (CFSE)-labelled responder T cells (Fig. 2b). At suppressor:responder ratios of >1:5, responder T cell proliferation stimulated with plate-bound anti-CD3 was inhibited by Mreg-cocultured T cells, whereas T cells cultured in the absence of Mregs were not suppressive. To test whether Mreg-cocultured T cells inhibited monocyte-derived dendritic cell (mo-DC) maturation, Mreg-cocultured allogeneic CD4+ T cells were flow-sorted and added at a 2:1 ratio to immature mo-DCs. These mo-DCs were then stimulated with tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNFα) over 2 days before assessing their maturation state. Mreg-cocultured T cells partially inhibited the upregulation of CD80 and CD83 (Fig. 2c). Mreg-cocultured allogeneic CD4+ T cells were enriched for a CD25+FoxP3+ subset (Fig. 2d and Supplementary Figure 2). An equivalent population did not emerge from T cell cultures after stimulation with plate-bound anti-CD3 for 5 days in the absence of Mregs. Twenty-four-hour secretion of IL-10 by anti-CD3-stimulated CD4+ T cells re-isolated from allogeneic Mreg cocultures was significantly greater than IL-10 production under control conditions (Fig. 2e). FoxP3+ Tregs were primarily responsible for this IL-10 secretion (Fig. 2f). Together, these findings show that Mregs enriched cocultured T cells for IL-10-producing FoxP3+ Tregs. This experimental system serves as the basis for subsequent in vitro experiments.
The emergence of FoxP3+ T cells after Mreg coculture could be explained by proliferation or passive enrichment of FoxP3+ Tregs present at the start of coculture, or by conversion from FoxP3− T cells. To distinguish between these possibilities, Mregs were cocultured with either unfractionated CD3+ T cells or negatively isolated naive CD4+ T cells, which typically contained fewer than 2.1 ± 0.9% FoxP3+ T cells. Despite naive T cell preparations containing fewer FoxP3+ Tregs prior to Mreg coculture, generation of FoxP3+ T cells from naive allogeneic CD4+ T cells was significantly more effective than from unfractionated T cells (Fig. 2g). Enrichment of FoxP3+ T cells within 5 days was observed when T cells were cocultured with Mregs, but not following coculture with control IFN-γ-stimulated macrophages (IFN-γ Mφ) from the same monocyte donors (Fig. 2h and Supplementary Figure 3). No enrichment of FoxP3+ T cells was observed when T cells were cultured in the absence of Mregs, either with or without polyclonal stimulation using anti-CD3/CD28 beads. Hence, enrichment of FoxP3+ T cells appeared to be a specialised function of Mregs, as opposed to a general consequence of T cell activation. Helios was expressed by a minority (5.0 ± 0.68%; n = 6) of FoxP3+ T cells suggesting that Mreg-enriched FoxP3+ T cells do not principally derive from nTregs. Consistent with this interpretation, Treg-specific demethylated region (TSDR) demethylation in Mreg-cocultured T cells was only 1.35 ± 1.03% (Fig. 2i). Therefore, Mreg coculture leads to induction of FoxP3 expression in previously FoxP3– CD4+ T cells.
To assess the allospecificity of Mreg-cocultured T cell-mediated T cell-suppression, the following experiment was performed (Fig. 3a). Paired cultures of Mregs and mo-DCs were generated over 7 days from three unrelated donors: Mregs were then cocultured with allogeneic CD3+ T cells from a further two unrelated donors for 3 days leading to an enrichment of FoxP3+ T cells (25.9 ± 4.2%, n = 6 pairs). In parallel, mo-DCs were matured with TNFα. Subsequently, the capacity of CD3+ T cells re-isolated from Mreg cocultures to suppress allogeneic DC-driven proliferation of responder T cells (which were autologous to Mreg-cocultured T cells) was tested. Explicitly, re-isolated CD3+ T cells (not purified FoxP3+ T cells) were used as the suppressor population in these experiments; therefore, Mreg-induced FoxP3+ T cells represented only 8.1 ± 1.5% of all T cells initially present. Mreg-cocultured T cells suppressed both CD4+ and CD8+ responder T cells equally strongly when stimulator DCs were autologous or allogeneic to Mregs used in the initial coculture phase (Fig. 3b). That is to say, Mreg-cocultured T cells did not behave as allospecific suppressors in this experimental system. Nevertheless, it should be noted that FoxP3+ CD4+ T cells from Mreg cocultures are already activated and secrete IL-10 without further stimulation. Accordingly, these results show that freshly re-isolated Mreg-cocultured T cells mediate short-term, non-specific ‘bystander’ suppression, but they do not prove that initial activation of naive CD4+ T cells by Mregs is not allospecific or that Mreg-induced FoxP3+ CD4+ T cells would not suppress in an allo-restricted fashion in vivo.
Phenotype of Mreg-cocultured CD4+ CD25+ FoxP3+ T cells
It is well-established that activation of conventional human CD4+ T cells induces transient expression of FoxP3 and other Treg markers; moreover, such activated effector cells can suppress proliferation of responder T cells in vitro through competitive or cytotoxic mechanisms that may not reflect their true regulatory activity. Therefore, we first sought to discriminate Mreg-induced FoxP3+ T cells from activated effector T cell subsets. An extensive survey was made of markers expressed by FoxP3+ and FoxP3− CD25+ T cells from Mreg cocultures (Fig. 4a and Supplementary Figure 4A). FoxP3+ CD25+ T cells expressed higher levels of CD39, CD137 (4-1BB), intracellular CD152 (CTLA4), CD357 (GITR) and GARP than their FoxP3− counterparts (Fig. 4a, b). Conversely, FoxP3− CD25+ T cells expressed higher levels of CD6, CD127 (IL7RA) and KLRG1 than FoxP3+ T cells. Following Mreg exposure, FoxP3+ T cells expressed markers of T cell activation, which led us to ask whether they represented a subset of exhausted T cells or a type of differentiated memory T cell. Exhaustion and senescence of CD4+ T cells is associated with a CD27low CD28low CD57+ KLRG1+ CD223+ CD279+ phenotype; however, Mreg-enriched FoxP3+ T cells were CD27high CD28high CD57− KLRG1−/low CD223−/low and CD279+ (Fig. 4a) so do not appear to be exhausted or senescent T cells. Human CD4+ TEMRA cells are typically described as CD27low CD28low CD45RA+ CD62L− CD122+ T cells; therefore, CD27high CD28high CD45RA+/− CD62L+ CD122− Mreg-enriched FoxP3+ T cells are not CD4+ TEMRA (Fig. 4a and Supplementary Figure 4B). Accordingly, the properties of human Mreg-induced FoxP3+ T cells are most consistent with them being described as iTregs, as opposed to activated effector T cells, memory T cells or exhausted T cells. For brevity, ‘Mreg-induced iTreg’ is henceforth shortened to ‘miTreg’.
Normally, FoxP3 expression by in vitro-generated iTregs without demethylated TSDR can be easily extinguished by strong polyclonal activation14. To assess their phenotypic stability and proliferative potential, miTregs were isolated from allogeneic cocultures and then re-cultured. Because GARP was not detectably expressed in FoxP3− T cells, but was expressed at a low level by most miTregs, it could be used as a surrogate marker for purification of viable cells (Supplementary Figure 4C). Exponential growth was observed when flow-sorted GARP+ miTregs were re-stimulated in culture using anti-CD3/CD28 beads plus exogenous IL-2 over a 3-week period (Fig. 4c). During this expansion, FoxP3 expression decayed from 69.6 ± 14.2 to 36.6 ± 5.2% (Fig. 4d). Although the proportion of FoxP3+ T cells declined as a consequence of re-stimulation, miTregs certainly did not disappear and their absolute number increased by >250-fold in all cases. No relevant increase in TSDR demethylation was detected during the re-stimulation phase (Fig. 4e) indicating that miTregs did not re-differentiate into nTreg-like cells and that miTregs were not supplanted by contaminating nTregs. Taken together, these results indicate miTregs represent a semi-stable state of T cell activation and are not mere transitory forms.
Various methods for in vitro generation of human FoxP3+ iTregs have been described15, including activation of naive CD4+ T cells in the presence of IL-2 and TGF-β, or activation under tryptophan-free conditions; however, such iTregs are phenotypically and functionally different from naturally occurring FoxP3+ Helios− Tregs, which are often called peripheral (p)Tregs to emphasise this distinction16. To better understand how miTregs are related to other human iTregs17,18, pTregs, nTregs and non-Tregs, we assessed expression of 29 Treg-associated markers in nine comparator T cell populations by flow cytometry (Fig. 4f and Supplementary Figure 5). Background-subtracted mean fluorescence intensity was calculated for each marker for every cell type from six independent donors: these data were then reduced by principal component (PC) analysis. PC1 distinguished miTregs from other in vitro-derived iTregs, whereas PC2 and PC3 discriminated miTregs from activated T cells, fresh nTreg and expanded nTreg. In this analysis, miTregs were most similar to naive T cells and pTregs. Because miTregs exhibited many differences to other in vitro naive CD4+ iTregs, we infer that distinct mechanisms must contribute to their differentiation.
Multiple non-redundant mechanisms of miTreg generation
Enrichment of miTregs appears to be a specialised function of Mregs because IFN-γ Mφ do not have the same effect (Fig. 2h). Transwell separation of allogeneic Mregs and T cells in coculture demonstrated the need for direct physical interaction for Mreg-driven iTreg development (Fig. 5a). Inhibition of T cell receptor (TCR) signalling with tacrolimus significantly reduced miTreg induction (Fig. 5b). Blocking B7-mediated signalling with anti-CD86 or CTLA4-Ig showed that miTreg generation depended upon CD28 costimulation (Fig. 5c). Neutralisation of IL-2 or IL-2Rα reduced miTreg generation (Fig. 5d) and rapamycin also inhibited miTreg development at relatively high concentrations (Fig. 5e). Despite this role for IL-2 signalling, miTreg enrichment did not depend upon proliferation (Fig. 5f). Mycophenolic acid partly blocked miTreg development at concentrations above 100 nM (Fig. 5g), whereas 10 nM dexamethasone strongly suppressed miTregs (Fig. 5h). Because Mreg-mediated suppression of T cell proliferation is IDO-dependent, the effect of blocking IDO activity with 1-methyltryptophan (1-MT) was examined: 1 mM 1-l-MT significantly reduced miTreg development, whereas 1-d-MT had no effect (Fig. 5i). One mechanism by which IDO promotes Treg differentiation is degradation of tryptophan to kynurenines, which act as ligands for the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR)19. No differential expression of AHR was detected between miTregs and non-Tregs (Fig. 5j). A pan-retinoic acid receptor antagonist (AGN 193109) effectively suppressed miTreg generation (Fig. 5k). Blocking Notch signalling with dibenzazepine, which acts as a γ-secretase inhibitor, impaired miTreg generation (Fig. 5l). Constitutive secretion of IL-10 by human Mregs was minimal and LPS-stimulated Mregs released significantly less IL-10 than classically activated macrophages (Fig. 5m). Neutralisation of IL-10, IL-10Rα or IL-10Rβ had no effect on miTreg development (Fig. 5n). Mregs constitutively produced more TGF-β1 than resting macrophages, IFN-γ Mφ or classically activated macrophages (Fig. 5o) and production was further enhanced by LPS stimulation. Neutralising TGF-β1 led to a consistent reduction in miTregs (Fig. 5p) and blocking antibody against TGF-βRII completely abrogated miTreg generation (Fig. 5q). Conversely, miTreg generation was enhanced by neutralising antibody against latency-associated peptide (Fig. 5q) or addition of exogenous TGF-β1 (Fig. 5r). Dose-dependent suppression of miTreg development was observed with two inhibitors of TGF-βRI signalling (Fig. 5s, t). From these experiments, it is evident that Mreg-mediated generation of iTregs involves multiple receptor-mediated and soluble factor-mediated interactions that are not unique to Mregs.
T cell activation, IDO activity, retinoic acid receptor ligation and TGF-β signalling were already known to promote in vitro differentiation of human iTregs; however, these factors alone do not account for the unique phenotype of miTregs (Fig. 4f). Therefore, we asked whether any Mreg-specific mechanisms contribute to miTreg differentiation. Transcriptional profiling studies comparing human Mregs to macrophages in other activation states identified genes highly and selectively upregulated in Mregs, including PAEP (alias PP14 or glycodelin) (Fig. 5u). In Mreg coculture experiments, antibody blockade of PAEP led to a significant reduction in miTreg generation (Fig. 5v). This example suggests that other undiscovered mechanisms might contribute to miTreg differentiation.
Transcriptional profiling of Mreg-cocultured T cells
To find novel pathways involved in miTreg development, whole-genome gene expression-profiling studies were conducted (Fig. 6). Mreg-cocultured and IFN-γ Mφ-cocultured CD4+ T cells were more similar to one another than to either fresh CD4+ T cells or CD4+ T cells cultured alone; however, substantial differences between Mreg- and IFN-γ Mφ-cocultured CD4+ T cells were returned by discriminatory gene analysis (Supplementary Data 1). Treg-associated genes were among those upregulated in Mreg-cocultured T cells compared to IFN-γ Mφ-cocultured T cells—notably, FOXP3, IL2RA, EBI3 and LRRC32 (GARP). FOXP3 expression was upregulated by Mreg coculture, whereas key transcriptional regulators of Th1, Th2 and Th17 cell differentiation (ie. TBET, GATA3 and RORC) were not differentially affected.
One objective of this work was to identify markers and pharmacodynamic effects that could be used to infer direct interaction of donor-derived Mregs with recipient T cells after administration of Mregs to patients. To this end, we next examined genes that were highly and significantly upregulated by Mreg coculture (Fig. 7a). The 10 most discriminatory reporters included 5 genes encoding proteins with known function (CYS1, OXCT2, RET, GNG4 and EBI3), one cell-surface receptor (butyrophilin-like protein 8; BTNL8), two predicted proteins of unknown function (SEC14L6 and C11orf96) and one lincRNA (represented by reporters A_19_P00316371 and A_19_P00810403). Of these upregulated genes, BTNL8 stood out as a possible marker of miTregs with likely functional relevance.
Upregulation of BTNL8 mRNA after Mreg coculture was corroborated by quantitative PCR (qPCR) using primers that amplified both the BTN-like and B7-like variants of BTNL8 (Fig. 7b). Using isoform-specific primer sets and sequencing of amplicons, it was determined that Mreg-cocultured T cells preferentially expressed the B7-like, ~37-kD variant of BTNL8. Expression of BTNL8 mRNA was not detected in freshly isolated, human peripheral blood Tregs or conventional CD4+ T cells (Fig. 7c). However, BTNL8 was highly expressed by peripheral blood Tregs after polyclonal stimulation and to a lesser extent in activated non-Tregs. Western blotting using goat α-BTNL8 pAb (Supplementary Figure 6) revealed stronger expression of the 37-kD isoform of BTNL8 in Mreg-cocultured T cells compared to IFN-γ Mφ-cocultured T cells (Fig. 7d). Expression of BTNL8 mRNA was greater in GARP+ miTregs compared to GARP− non-Tregs (Fig. 7e). BTNL8 protein was detected in miTregs by flow cytometry after intracellular staining with rabbit α-BTNL8 pAb (Fig. 7f, g). By this method, stronger expression of BTNL8 was found in miTregs than in CD25+ FoxP3− or CD25− non-Tregs (Fig. 7h). Addition of 10 μg ml−1 BTNL8-Fc fusion protein to allogeneic cocultures of Mregs and naive CD4+ T cells led to a small, but consistent increase in miTreg generation (Fig. 7i). Likewise, addition of 20 μg ml−1 anti-BTNL8 monoclonal antibody led to an increase in miTreg generation (Fig. 7j). Taken together, these results indicate that the 37-kD isoform of BTNL8 is more highly expressed in activated Treg than resting Treg or non-Treg, which raises the possibility that BTNL8 engagement promotes conversion of naive T cells to miTregs.
Reconstitution experiments were performed in NOD-scid-gamma (NSG) mice to ascertain whether in vivo administration of Mregs drives BTNL8 expression in allogeneic human T cells (Fig. 7j). All animals were given an i.v. injection of 5 × 106 naive human T cells and were then randomised to receive a second i.v. injection of 5 × 106 allogeneic Mregs or vehicle only. Human T cells were recovered from spleen on day 5 after treatment by positive bead selection of CD3+ cells and end-point PCR was performed to assess BTNL8 expression. BTNL8 was detected in two of three Mreg-treated recipients, but not in untreated recipients. We conclude that BTLN8 may be a valuable marker of human peripherally induced Tregs and could potentially be used for monitoring miTregs in patients.
Mreg-induced Tregs express TIGIT
Having identified BTNL8 as a possible marker of miTregs, we asked whether other BTN and BTNL family members were differentially regulated in these cells. No significant differences in expression of other BTN or BTNL family members were observed between Mreg-cocultured CD4+ T cells and controls (Supplementary Figure 7A). The microarray data set was then screened more broadly for differential expression of other IgSF co-inhibitory receptors. T cell immunoreceptor with Ig and ITIM domains (TIGIT) mRNA was more highly expressed in Mreg-cocultured T cells compared to control conditions (Supplementary Figure 7B). A greater proportion of miTregs expressed cell-surface TIGIT than non-Tregs (Fig. 8a). IL-10 production by Mreg-cocultured T cells was essentially restricted to TIGIT+ T cells (Fig. 8b). Mreg-mediated induction of TIGIT in CD4+ T cells was significantly more effective than TIGIT induction by other monocyte-derived macrophages and DCs (Fig. 8c). Expression of TIGIT by naive T cells was induced by Mreg coculture but not by anti-CD3/CD28 stimulation (Fig. 8d) so we next asked whether miTregs are predominantly TIGIT+ because they derive from pre-exisiting TIGIT+ non-Tregs. Prior to coculture with Mregs, naive CD4+ T cells were separated into TIGIT+ and TIGIT− fractions by magnetic bead selection: TIGIT+ T cells gave rise to significantly more miTregs than either unfractionated naive T cells or TIGIT− T cells (Fig. 8e). A greater proportion of low-tryptophan-induced iTregs expressed TIGIT compared to naive CD4+ T cells, TGF-β-induced iTregs or TGF-β plus all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA)-induced iTregs (Fig. 8f); therefore, we hypothesised that TIGIT induction by Mregs might be partly explained by IDO activity. Addition of 1-l-MT to cocultures, but not 1-d-MT, significantly reduced TIGIT+ T cell frequency (Fig. 8g). Mregs expressed both CD112 (PVRL2) and CD155 (PVR), which are ligands of TIGIT (Fig. 8h). These findings show that Mregs induce TIGIT expression in allogeneic T cells through an IDO-dependent mechanism, as well as providing TIGIT ligands, which might explain the high level of IL-10 production by miTregs.
To investigate whether allogeneic mouse Mregs induced TIGIT expression in CD4+ T cells in vivo, mouse Mregs were generated from C3H mice and administered by i.v. injection to BALB/c recipients at a dose of 5 × 106 cells per animal. Five days after treatment, splenic CD4+ T cells were isolated by magnetic bead separation and reverse transcription (RT)-qPCR for Tigit and Il10 mRNA was performed. Mice treated with allogeneic Mregs expressed significantly higher levels of both transcripts (Fig. 8i). A reconstitution experiment was then performed in NSG mice to test whether human Mregs could induce TIGIT and IL-10 expression by allogeneic human T cells in vivo (Fig. 8j). Human CD25+ FoxP3+ Treg frequencies were higher in Mreg-treated mice than vehicle-only controls, although proportions of TIGIT+ CD4+ T cells were similar (Fig. 8k). Serum levels of human IL-10 were significantly higher in Mreg-treated recipients compared to controls (Fig. 8l). These data indicate that allogeneic Mregs were capable of inducing TIGIT+ Tregs in this human-into-mouse model, which presumably involved direct allorecognition of Mregs by T cells.
Acute increase of TIGIT+ Tregs after Mreg treatment
As early as 2008, prospective living-donor kidney transplant recipients were given crude Mreg preparations in the expectation of reducing long-term dependence on immunosuppressive drug treatment10. These first-in-man cases demonstrated the clinical feasibility of Mreg treatment in kidney transplantation, yielded important safety information and provided hints of a beneficial immunological effect. Following significant technical refinements, a good manufacturing practice-compliant production process for manufacturing an Mreg-containing cell product, which is known as ‘Mreg_UKR’, was established (Fig. 9a)11. Mreg_UKR is under investigation as a means to safely minimise maintenance immunosuppression after kidney transplantation in the ONEmreg12 trial. This phase-I/II study provides an opportunity to study the influence of allogeneic Mreg treatment upon recipient T cell responses. According to protocol, ONEmreg12 trial participants are treated with donor-derived Mregs on day 7 prior to transplantation (Fig. 9b). In the peri-operative phase, patients received standard-of-care, triple immunosuppressive therapy, except basiliximab (anti-IL-2Rα) induction therapy is omitted.
Altogether Treg frequencies were monitored in five allogeneic donor–recipient pairs before Mreg infusion and 1 day prior to living-donor kidney transplantation, including two patients recruited to ONEmreg12 and three participants of earlier clinical trials10. All five patient pairs were mismatched at one or more HLA-A, -B or -DR locus. In four out of five patients, an increase in peripheral blood CD4+ CD25+ CD127int Treg frequency was observed (Fig. 9c). A single patient enrolled in the ONEmreg12 trial presented an opportunity to assess peripheral blood frequencies of TIGIT+ Tregs at close intervals during the week after Mreg infusion. This high-granularity sampling revealed an increase in Treg frequency during the first 18 h after Mreg infusion, which peaked by the third day (Fig. 9d). Notably, this increase was primarily due to an increase in TIGIT+ Treg frequency (Fig. 9e). This first description of TIGIT+ Treg induction after Mreg treatment must be confirmed in more patients; however, it is promisingly consistent with our preclinical experiments.
Long-term enrichment of TIGIT+ Tregs after Mreg therapy
Serial TCR spectratyping was performed in one patient (CA) after treatment with Mregs10. This led to identification of an oligoclonal or monoclonal expansion of TCRVβ13.1-expressing T cells that first emerged after Mreg treatment and persisted until at least 168 days post transplant (Fig. 10a). The kinetics of this T cell expansion suggested a donor alloantigen-specific response. CA was followed-up at ~7 years post transplantation, when graft function was stable and no rejection episodes had occurred under very low-dose tacrolimus monotherapy (3 mg Advagraf every second day) with trough levels of <2 ng ml−1. Expansion of TCRVβ13.1+ T cells was still detectable at the time of follow-up and, more surprisingly, we found the TCRVβ13.1+ CD4+ T cell compartment was enriched for TIGIT+ FoxP3+ Tregs. These data are interpreted as evidence of a donor-specific expansion and long-term persistence of TIGIT+ TCRVβ13.1+ Tregs.
Discussion
Cell-based tolerance-promoting therapies are a radical departure from conventional immunosuppressive treatment of solid organ transplant recipients1. As with any drug treatment, understanding the pharmacological character of cell-based therapies is vital for predicting effectiveness and anticipating adverse reactions20. In this study, Mregs converted a high proportion of directly cocultured, allogeneic CD4+ T cells into IL-10-secreting miTregs. These miTregs were not simply activated T cells, exhausted T cells21 or TEMRA. miTregs did not derive from nTreg because they arose in Treg-depleted naive CD4+ T cell cultures and TSDR demethylation was minimal22. Administration of mouse Mregs to allogeneic recipients increased Tigit and Il10 mRNA expression by splenic CD4+ T cells in vivo. In a human-into-mouse reconstitution model, human Mregs also converted allogeneic CD4+ T cells to IL-10-producing iTregs. These preclinical observations led to the discovery that Mreg treatment of prospective kidney transplant recipients elicited TIGIT+ Treg responses. Overall, our study supports the idea that miTreg could play a mechanistic role in the clinical effects of Mreg therapy.
miTreg development involves multiple, non-redundant interactions that are not necessarily specific to Mregs, but together confer Mregs with specialised regulatory function. We found a prominent role for IDO in miTreg differentiation and TIGIT expression, but this does not sufficiently explain the iTreg-inducing capacity of Mregs. In our system, miTreg differentiation required T cell activation and was influenced by TGF-β, RA, PAEP and BTNL8 signalling. Looking for further mechanisms, we annotated reporters upregulated in Mreg-cocultured CD4+ T cells according to Gene Ontology pathways (Supplementary Data 2). This revealed enrichment of genes associated with Notch signalling23. Using a γ-secretase inhibitor, the involvement of canonical Notch signalling was confirmed. Beyond these verified mechanisms, expression-profiling data suggest possible involvement of vitamin D, arginase and negative costimulatory pathways in miTreg development, stabilisation or survival. Hence, the regulatory activity of Mregs cannot be explained by a single, Mreg-specific mechanism: it reflects the net effect of many pathways, some of which may be common to other myeloid APCs. It has not escaped our attention that Mreg:T cell coculture could be used as a functional screening assay to discover novel mechanisms of iTreg development or identify drugs that influence iTreg differentiation24.
PAEP, which is also known as glycodelin, is a 28-kDa glycoprotein produced by secretory and decidualised endometrium in women and by seminal vesicle epithelium in men. PAEP plays critical roles in placental development and establishment of fetomaternal tolerance in early pregnancy25. Specifically, PAEP controls the number and effector functions of decidual T cells, favouring a Th2-type environment through selective apoptosis of Th1 cells26. Within the haematopoietic system, PAEP is expressed by erythroid precursors, but not by mature erythrocytes, thrombocytes, mononuclear phagocytes or lymphocytes27. PAEP secretion is presently the only known mechanism of miTreg induction exclusive to Mregs.
This study discovered the B7-like isoform of BTNL8 as potentially useful marker of activated miTregs. BTNL8 is an intriguing receptor from a basic immunological perspective28. The butyrophilin (BTN) and butyrophilin-like (BTNL) proteins are B7-related receptors that serve as negative regulators of innate and adaptive immune responses29. The human genome encodes four BTNL genes (BTNL2, -3, -8 and -9) of which only BTNL2 and BTNL9 have orthologues in mice30. Ig-fusion proteins of mouse Btnl1, Btnl2 and Btnl9 exert T cell-suppressive properties in vitro through unknown counter-receptors31,32,33; however, functional characterisation of human BTNL family members is sparse. BTNL8 is a type-I membrane protein with an extracellular region comprising an IgV and IgC domain28. Various isoforms of BTNL8 have been reported, including a 57-kD protein incorporating an intracellular B30.2 domain, which is lacking from the 37-kD isoform. Expression of both variants in enterocytes34, neutrophils and eosinophils35 has been reported, but not T cells, B cells, natural killer (NK) cells or monocytes30,36. Here the 37-kD isoform of BTNL8 was highly upregulated in Mreg-cocultured CD4+ T cells, especially the GARP-selected miTreg-enriched fraction. Recently, a human BTNL8-Fc fusion protein was shown to bind an unknown receptor on resting T cells that co-stimulated anti-CD3-induced activation35. In our experiments, BTNL8-Fc and α-BTNL8 antibody increased miTreg generation. We hypothesise that miTregs stimulate bystander naive T cells through BTNL8, thereby amplifying iTreg generation.
TIGIT is a co-inhibitory receptor of the CD28 family37 that is expressed by NK cells38, activated T cells, memory T cells39, follicular T helper cells40 and Treg subsets41,42,43. Mregs strongly induced TIGIT+ T cells through a partly IDO-dependent mechanism. The TIGIT gene is a direct target of FoxP3, which accounts for TIGIT expression in nTregs, but does not explain how TIGIT expression could precede FoxP3 induction in Mreg-cocultured T cells. TIGIT competes against the costimulatory receptor CD226 (DNAM-1)44 for ligation by CD155 or CD11245. After Mreg coculture, the proportion of CD226+ TIGIT+ iTregs was higher than CD226− TIGIT+ iTregs, but the functional significance of this is unknown. Engagement of TIGIT on conventional T cells delivers an ITIM-mediated signal that blocks T cell proliferation and effector functions46 by downregulating components of the TCR signalling cascade47. At the same time, TIGIT upregulates anti-apoptotic molecules and receptors for IL-2, IL-7 and IL-15, thereby promoting survival of functionally anergised T cells. In nTregs, TIGIT engagement upregulates IL-10 production and Fgl2 secretion, which preferentially suppresses Th1 and Th17 responses48. IL-10 expression by Mreg-cocultured T cells closely correlated with TIGIT expression. CD155 ligation by TIGIT delivers tolerising signals to APC49, which might contribute to the stability of Mreg regulatory function50. Increased TIGIT+ Treg frequency in Mreg-treated patients speaks to the likely importance of TIGIT for the clinical effects of Mreg therapy.
In theory, donor-derived Mregs might influence antigen-specific recipient T cell responses in two main ways, which are not mutually exclusive51: first, Mregs might give up alloantigen52 to recipient APC, which then modify recipient T cell responses3; second, infused Mregs might interact directly with recipient T cells to anergise or delete antigen-specific effector T cells53 or induce Tregs54. The tolerogenic properties of i.v. alloantigen are well-known55,56 and it seems probable that reprocessing of Mreg-derived antigens by recipient APC (via indirect or semi-direct pathways) contributes to the therapeutic benefit of Mreg treatment. The suggestion that Mregs might also interact directly with recipient T cells to suppress or regulate their reactivity57 is controversial because others have shown that recipient cDC are indispensible for the tolerising effect of donor-derived immature DC treatment in some systems58. Notably, Wang et al. used CD11c-DTR bone marrow chimeras to show that pre-transplant administration of Vit.D3-treated, ‘maturation-resistant’ DC (MRDC) did not prolong allograft survival after deletion of recipient DC59. In this model, donor-strain MRDCs were quickly eliminated by NK cells, leading to their uptake by recipient DCs as apoptotic remnants. Alloantigen-loaded recipient DCs then controlled alloreactive T cell responses through abortive activation.
It is clear that all myeloid APC are not equally susceptible to rejection through innate and adaptive mechanisms60,61. Tolerance of solid organ transplants is often associated with long-term persistence of donor-derived mononuclear phagocytes in lymphoid and non-lymphoid tissues of the recipient57,62,63,64,65,66,67. Whether these residual DCs and macrophages contribute to allograft tolerance or are a mere epiphenomenon is not resolved; however, their engraftment implies escape from rejection. Earlier cell-tracking experiments in immunocompetent mice showed survival of allogenic and isogeneic Mregs in non-immunosuppressed recipients was very similar12, so it seems rejection did not limit the lifespan of Mregs. Likewise, in humans, HLA-haploidentical Mregs administered by central i.v. infusion remained viable over at least 30 h10. Because a detectable fraction of ex vivo-generated allogeneic Mregs migrates to, and survives for days or weeks, at sites where interaction with recipient T cells could conceivably occur then there is no a priori reason why donor-derived Mregs could not initiate direct-pathway recipient iTreg responses.
Even a transient expansion of allospecific iTregs could bias recipient T cell responses in favour of allograft acceptance. We imagine that miTregs could contribute to long-term acceptance of allografts in two ways. First, direct iTregs could facilitate indirect nTreg responses, perhaps by modifying recipient DC68,69 to initiate a feed-forward loop of ‘infectious tolerance’70. Notably, immature mo-DCs exposed to Mreg-cocultured T cells were relatively refractory to maturation with TNFα. The capacity of these ‘tolerised’ DC to support a second wave of Tregs is currently being investigated. A second possibility is that miTregs survive long term and continue to exert a suppressive activity. This hypothesis is supported by the surprising discovery of persistently elevated of Vβ13.1+ TIGIT+ Treg numbers in patient CA. Recent reports indicate that peripherally induced FoxP3+ Tregs can be stabilised in phenotype and function by TSDR region demethylation. We are currently exploring whether TSDR demethylation in miTregs can occur in vitro or in vivo.
As a translational therapy, understanding the possible interactions of therapeutically applied Mregs with recipient T cells is crucial. The new mechanistic insights presented in this article provide a pharmacological rationale for applying Mreg_UKR therapy in allogeneic solid organ transplantation and other T cell-mediated diseases.
Methods
Generation of human monocyte-derived cells
Human Mregs and other monocyte-derived cell types were generated from CD14+ monocytes according to previously described methods7. Step-by-step protocols are available through Protocol Exchange71. Human Mregs and IFN-γ Mφ were generated from peripheral blood leucocytes obtained as a by-product of thrombocyte collection from healthy donors. CD14+ monocytes were then isolated from Ficoll-prepared peripheral blood mononuclear cells by positive selection with anti-CD14 microbeads (Miltenyi, Bergisch-Gladbach) and were plated in six-well Cell+ plates (Sarstedt, Nümbrecht) at 106 cells per well in RPMI-1640 (Lonza, Cologne) supplemented with 10% heat-inactivated, male-only human AB serum (Lonza), 2 mM Glutamax (Invitrogen, Karlsruhe), 100 U ml−1 penicillin (Lonza), 100 μg ml−1 streptomycin (Lonza), and recombinant human M-CSF (rhM-CSF; R&D Systems, Wiesbaden-Nordenstadt) at 25 ng ml−1 carried on 0.1% human albumin (CSL-Behring, Hattersheim-am-Main). On day 6 of culture, cells were stimulated for a further 18–24 h with 25 ng ml−1 rhIFNγ (Chemicon, Billerica, MA). IFN-γ Mφ were generated by cultivating CD14+ monocytes under identical conditions to Mregs except that human serum was replaced with 10% heat-inactivated foetal calf serum (Biochrom, Berlin). Step-by-step protocols for generating other human monocyte-derived macrophages and mo-DCs are available through Protocol Exchange71. Phagocytosis of pHrodo Red-labelled, fixed E. coli by Mregs and classically activated macrophages was quantified at intervals over a 9-h period according to the manufacturer’s instructions (ThermoFisher Scientific, CA).
Coculture of human Mregs or IFN-γ Mφ with T cells
On day 7 of culture, Mreg and IFN-γ Mφ medium was exchanged with serum-free X-VIVO 10 medium (Lonza) supplemented with 2 mM Glutamax and 25 ng ml−1 rhM-CSF. Magnetic bead-sorted CD3+ T cells (CD3 Microbeads, Miltenyi) or naive CD4+ T cells (Naive CD4+ T Cell Isolation Kit II, Miltenyi) were added to macrophages at specified suppression:responder ratios for 5 days. Cocultures were performed either in six-well Cell+ plates at 106 Mreg in 3 ml per well or in sterile, lidded flow cytometry tubes (Falcon, Amsterdam) at 2 × 105 Mreg in 1 ml per tube. Inserts with 0.4 μm pores were used for transwell experiments (Greiner-BioOne, Frickenhausen). Pharmacological inhibitors were added to cocultures as indicated (Supplementary Table 1).
In vitro-derived human iTregs and expanded human nTregs
Following protocols adapted from the literature, three alternative preparations of in vitro-derived human iTregs were differentiated from bead-sorted human CD4+ naive T cells (Naive CD4+ T Cell Isolation Kit II, Miltenyi) grown in round-bottomed 96-well plates at 1.2 × 105 cells per well. ‘Low-tryptophan iTregs’ were generated over 5 days in tryptophan-free medium (PAN-Biotech, Aidenbach, Germany) supplemented with 10% dialysed heat-inactivated human AB serum, 100 U ml−1 penicillin, 100 µg ml−1 streptomycin, 4 µM tryptophan (Sigma-Aldrich) and 300 IU IL-2 ml −1 (Miltenyi)18. On day 0, 100 µl cultures were stimulated with CD3/CD28 MACSi-beads (Miltenyi) and 10 µM each of l-kyneurinine, quinolic acid/2,3 pyridinedicarboxilyc acid, anthranilic acid, 3-hydroxy-anthranilic acid and 3-hydroxy-dl-kyneurinine (Sigma-Aldrich). On day 2, 100 µl supplemented medium containing 20 µM each of the same mixture of kynurenines was added per well. ‘TGF-β-induced iTregs’ were generated in X-Vivo 10 medium (Lonza) supplemented with 2 mM GlutaMax, 300 IU IL-2 ml −1 and 5 ng ml−1 TGF-β1 (R&D Systems)17. On day 0, 100 µl cultures were stimulated with CD3/CD28 MACSi-beads. On day 2, 100 µl supplemented medium was added to each well. ‘ATRA + TGF-β-induced iTregs’ were cultured as TGF-β-induced iTregs except that medium was also supplemented with 10 nM ATRA (Sigma-Aldrich)17. Expanded human nTregs were generated from bead-sorted CD4+ CD25+ T cells (CD4+CD25+ Regulatory T Cell Isolation Kit, Miltenyi) cultured in X-Vivo 10 medium supplemented with 2 mM GlutaMax and 300 IU IL-2 ml −1. On day 0, 100 µl cultures were stimulated with CD3/CD28 MACSi-beads. On day 2, 100 µl supplemented medium was added to each well. ‘Activated CD4+ T cells’ were generated from bead-sorted naive CD4+ T cells cultured in X-Vivo 10 medium supplemented with 2 mM GlutaMax and 300 IU IL-2 ml −1. On day 0, 100 µl cultures were stimulated with CD3/CD28 MACSi-beads. On day 2, 100 µl supplemented medium was added to each well.
Flow cytometry
Detailed, step-by-step protocols for flow cytometry-based analyses are available through Protocol Exchange72. Briefly, surface staining was performed at 4 °C in DPBS/1% BSA/0.02% NaN3/10% FcR-block (Miltenyi) for 30 min. FoxP3 Fixation-and-Permeabilization buffers (eBioscience, Frankfurt) were used for intracellular staining. Antibodies are listed in Supplementary Table 2. Dead cells were excluded with Fixable Viability Dye eFluor506 or 7-AAD (eBioscience). Data were collected with a Canto-II cytometer (BD Biosciences) running Diva version 6.1.3 (BD) or Navios cytometer (Beckman Coulter, Krefeld, Germany). Clinical data were collected with a qualified Navios cytometer running Beckman Coulter clinical software version 1.3. Analyses were performed with Flowo (v7.6.5) or Kaluza 1.1 (Beckman Coulter).
Western blotting and immunoprecipitation
Protein G-Plus sepharose (Sigma-Aldrich) was used to immunoprecipitate BTNL8. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and immunoblotting were performed according to conventional methods. Uncropped western blotting images were included in Supplementary Figure 8.
TSDR methylation analysis
CD4+ T cells were positively isolated by magnetic-activated cell sorting. Genomic DNA was extracted with the QIAamp DNA blood mini-kit and bisulfite-treated (EpiTect, Qiagen) before real-time PCR quantification of Foxp3 TSDR.
Quantitative reverse transcription-PCR
SuperScript-III (Invitrogen) was used for reverse transcription. Quantitative reverse transcription-PCR was performed with a LightCycler™ real-time PCR system using the FastStart DNA Master SYBR Green I kit (Roche-Diagnostics, Penzberg) and Quantitect primers (Qiagen) listed in Supplementary Table 3. Gene expression was normalised against expression of RPL13A and GAPDH. PCR specificity was confirmed by amplicon sequencing (MWG-Biotech, Ebersberg).
Microarrays
Highly purified populations of CD4+ or CD8+ T cells were isolated using a FACS-Aria flow-sorter (BD Biosciences). Total RNA was extracted using an RNeasy-Plus Mini-Kit (Qiagen, Hilden). Assessment of RNA quality, labelling and hybridisation to 8 × 60K Agilent Whole-Human-Genome-Oligo-Microarrays was performed according to published methods12. Fluorescence signals from hybridised microarrays were detected using Agilent’s Microarray Scanner System (G2505C, Agilent-Technologies, Palo Alto). The Agilent Feature Extraction Software 10.7.3.1 was used to extract the microarray image files. Background-corrected intensity values were quantile-normalised and log2-transformed. Only reporters with at least three valid signal intensity values in at least one sample group were considered. For visualisation in heatmap format, the log2 intensity values were median-centred for each reporter. One-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) was performed using GeneSpring-GX v.11.5.1 (Agilent).
Statistics
Significance tests and curve-fitting were performed with GraphPad or SPSS® software. As indicated, Mann–Whitney, Kruksal–Wallis, t-tests (two-tailed, equal variances; paired where appropriate) or one-way ANOVA was used for tests of significance. Marker expression was estimated in flow cytometry experiments by calculating background (isotype)-subtracted geometric mean fluorescence intensities. Values ≤ 0 were set to 1. Data were log10-transformed and expression of each marker was standardised. PC analysis with oblique rotation (oblimin) was performed in SPSS® version 25.
Animal experiments
Animal experiments were performed with the approval of the Regierung der Oberpfalz in accordance with the German Animal Welfare Act, approval 54-2332.1-23/10 and approval 54-2532.1-10/12. Mouse Mregs were generated from 8- to 12-week-old C3H mice and administered to 8- to 12-week-old BALB/c recipients according to previously published methods12. NSG (NOD.Cg-Prkdcscid Il2rgtm1Wjl/SzJ) mice were bred in-house and were used at 8–12 weeks of age. For administration to mice, human and mouse Mregs were resuspended in 1 ml DPBS containing 62 U heparin and then delivered by slow injection into the tail vein. Animals were randomly allocated to treatment or control groups by a blinded operator.
Study approval
Mreg_UKR products were administered to consenting kidney transplant recipients who were participating in the ONEmreg12 trial (clinicaltrials.gov: NCT02085629) authorised by the Paul Ehrlich Institute (EudraCT-Nr. 2013-000999-15) and the Ethics Committee of University Hospital Regensburg (14-111-0016). ONEmreg12 is a non-commercial, investigator-initiated, monocentre, single-arm, phase-II trial operating within the framework of ONE Study cell therapy trials (www.onestudy.org). Collection of mononuclear cell apheresates by the Department of Transfusion Medicine at University Hospital Regensburg was authorised by the Regierung der Oberbayern under license DE_BY_04_MIA_2013_0177/53.2-ZAB-2677.1_204. Production of Mreg_UKR by a contract manufacturing organisation was authorised by the Regierung der Oberbayern under license DE_BY_04_MIA_2013_0187/53.2-2677.1_A_220-0. This article includes results from three patients treated according to a modification of the TAIC-II Study protocol (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT00223067), including two patients whose cases were previously reported elsewhere.
Data availability
The gene expression data presented in this article have been submitted to the National Center for Biotechnology Information/Gene Expression Omnibus as data set GSE49369. All other relevant data are available from the authors without restriction.
References
Hutchinson, J. A. & Geissler, E. K. Now or never? The case for cell-based immunosuppression in kidney transplantation. Kidney Int. 87, 1116–1124 (2015).
Trzonkowski, P. et al. Hurdles in therapy with regulatory T cells. Sci. Transl. Med. 7, 304ps18 (2015).
Riquelme, P., Geissler, E. K. & Hutchinson, J. A. Alternative approaches to myeloid suppressor cell therapy in transplantation: comparing regulatory macrophages to tolerogenic DCs and MDSCs. Transplant. Res. 1, 17 (2012).
Broichhausen, C., Riquelme, P., Geissler, E. K. & Hutchinson, J. A. Regulatory macrophages as therapeutic targets and therapeutic agents in solid organ transplantation. Curr. Opin. Organ Transplant. 17, 332–342 (2012).
Riquelme, P. et al. DHRS9 is a stable marker of human regulatory macrophages. Transplantation 101, 2731–2738 (2017).
Conde, P. et al. DC-SIGN(+) macrophages control the induction of transplantation tolerance. Immunity 42, 1143–1158 (2015).
Hutchinson, J. A., Riquelme, P., Geissler, E. K. & Fandrich, F. Human regulatory macrophages. Methods Mol. Biol. 677, 181–192 (2011).
Ribechini, E. et al. Novel GM-CSF signals via IFN-gammaR/IRF-1 and AKT/mTOR license monocytes for suppressor function. Blood Adv. 1, 947–960 (2017).
Hutchinson, J. A. et al. Evidence that treatment with DHRS9+regulatory macrophages induced by FcγRIII ligation and IFN-γ stimulation promotes renal allograft tolerance in patients. Transplantation 90, 184 (2010).
Hutchinson, J. A. et al. Cutting edge: immunological consequences and trafficking of human regulatory macrophages administered to renal transplant recipients. J. Immunol. 187, 2072–2078 (2011).
Hutchinson, J. A., Ahrens, N. & Geissler, E. K. MITAP-compliant characterization of human regulatory macrophages. Transpl. Int. 30, 765–775 (2017).
Riquelme, P. et al. IFN-gamma-induced iNOS expression in mouse regulatory macrophages prolongs allograft survival in fully immunocompetent recipients. Mol. Ther. 21, 409–422 (2013).
Ochando, J. et al. The mononuclear phagocyte system in organ transplantation. Am. J. Transplant. 16, 1053–1069 (2016).
Baron, U. et al. DNA demethylation in the human FOXP3 locus discriminates regulatory T cells from activated FOXP3(+) conventional T cells. Eur. J. Immunol. 37, 2378–2389 (2007).
Bilate, A. M. & Lafaille, J. J. Induced CD4+Foxp3+regulatory T cells in immune tolerance. Annu. Rev. Immunol. 30, 733–758 (2012).
Abbas, A. K. et al. Regulatory T cells: recommendations to simplify the nomenclature. Nat. Immunol. 14, 307–308 (2013).
Schmidt, A., Eriksson, M., Shang, M. M., Weyd, H. & Tegner, J. Comparative analysis of protocols to induce human CD4+Foxp3+regulatory T Cells by combinations of IL-2, TGF-beta, retinoic acid, rapamycin and butyrate. PLoS ONE 11, e0148474 (2016).
Hippen, K. L. et al. In vitro induction of human regulatory T cells using conditions of low tryptophan plus kynurenines. Am. J. Transplant. 17, 3098–3113 (2017).
Mezrich, J. D. et al. An interaction between kynurenine and the aryl hydrocarbon receptor can generate regulatory T cells. J. Immunol. 185, 3190–3198 (2010).
Hutchinson, J. A. et al. Clinical management of patients receiving cell-based immunoregulatory therapy. Transfusion 54, 2336–2343 (2014).
Crawford, A. et al. Molecular and transcriptional basis of CD4(+) T cell dysfunction during chronic infection. Immunity 40, 289–302 (2014).
Huehn, J., Polansky, J. K. & Hamann, A. Epigenetic control of FOXP3 expression: the key to a stable regulatory T cell lineage? Nat. Rev. Immunol. 9, 83–89 (2009).
Charbonnier, L. M., Wang, S., Georgiev, P., Sefik, E. & Chatila, T. A. Control of peripheral tolerance by regulatory T cell-intrinsic Notch signaling. Nat. Immunol. 16, 1162–1173 (2015).
Hutchinson, J. A., Riquelme, P., & Geissler, E. K. New drug screening assay using regulatory macrophages. European Patent 17206021.2-1111 (2017).
Lee, C. L. et al. The pleiotropic effect of glycodelin-A in early pregnancy. Am. J. Reprod. Immunol. 75, 290–297 (2016).
Lee, C. L. et al. Differential actions of glycodelin-A on Th-1 and Th-2 cells: a paracrine mechanism that could produce the Th-2 dominant environment during pregnancy. Hum. Reprod. 26, 517–526 (2011).
Kamarainen, M., Riittinen, L., Seppala, M., Palotie, A. & Andersson, L. C. Progesterone-associated endometrial protein—a constitutive marker of human erythroid precursors. Blood 84, 467–473 (1994).
beler-Dorner, L., Swamy, M., Williams, G., Hayday, A. C. & Bas, A. Butyrophilins: an emerging family of immune regulators. Trends Immunol. 33, 34–41 (2012).
Rhodes, D. A., Reith, W. & Trowsdale, J. Regulation of Immunity by Butyrophilins. Annu. Rev. Immunol. 34, 151–172 (2016).
Aigner, J. et al. A common 56-kilobase deletion in a primate-specific segmental duplication creates a novel butyrophilin-like protein. BMC Genet. 14, 61 (2013).
Nguyen, T., Liu, X. K., Zhang, Y. & Dong, C. BTNL2, a butyrophilin-like molecule that functions to inhibit T cell activation. J. Immunol. 176, 7354–7360 (2006).
Swanson, R. M. et al. Butyrophilin-like 2 modulates B7 costimulation to induce Foxp3 expression and regulatory T cell development in mature T cells. J. Immunol. 190, 2027–2035 (2013).
Yamazaki, T. et al. A butyrophilin family member critically inhibits T cell activation. J. Immunol. 185, 5907–5914 (2010).
Di Marco, B. R. et al. Epithelia use butyrophilin-like molecules to shape organ-specific gammadelta T cell compartments. Cell 167, 203–218 (2016).
Chapoval, A. I. et al. BTNL8, a butyrophilin-like molecule that costimulates the primary immune response. Mol. Immunol. 56, 819–828 (2013).
Arnett, H. A., Escobar, S. S. & Viney, J. L. Regulation of costimulation in the era of butyrophilins. Cytokine 46, 370–375 (2009).
Anderson, A. C., Joller, N. & Kuchroo, V. K. Lag-3, Tim-3, and TIGIT: co-inhibitory receptors with specialized functions in immune regulation. Immunity 44, 989–1004 (2016).
Stanietsky, N. et al. The interaction of TIGIT with PVR and PVRL2 inhibits human NK cell cytotoxicity. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 106, 17858–17863 (2009).
Burchill, M. A., Golden-Mason, L., Wind-Rotolo, M. & Rosen, H. R. Memory re-differentiation and reduced lymphocyte activation in chronic HCV-infected patients receiving direct-acting antivirals. J. Viral Hepat. 22, 983–991 (2015).
Wu, H. et al. Follicular regulatory T cells repress cytokine production by follicular helper T cells and optimize IgG responses in mice. Eur. J. Immunol. 46, 1152–1161 (2016).
Kurtulus, S. et al. TIGIT predominantly regulates the immune response via regulatory T cells. J. Clin. Invest. 125, 4053–4062 (2015).
Fuhrman, C. A. et al. Divergent phenotypes of human regulatory T cells expressing the receptors TIGIT and CD226. J. Immunol. 195, 145–155 (2015).
Bin, D. K. et al. Coexpression of TIGIT and FCRL3 identifies Helios + human memory regulatory T cells. J. Immunol. 194, 3687–3696 (2015).
Pauken, K.E. & Wherry, E.J. TIGIT and CD226: Tipping the balance between costimulatory and coinhibitory molecules to augment the cancer immunotherapy toolkit. Cancer Cell. 26, 785–787 (2014).
Stengel, K. F. et al. Structure of TIGIT immunoreceptor bound to poliovirus receptor reveals a cell-cell adhesion and signaling mechanism that requires cis-trans receptor clustering. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 109, 5399–5404 (2012).
Levin, S. D. et al. Vstm3 is a member of the CD28 family and an important modulator of T cell function. Eur. J. Immunol. 41, 902–915 (2011).
Joller, N. et al. Cutting edge: TIGIT has T cell-intrinsic inhibitory functions. J. Immunol. 186, 1338–1342 (2011).
Joller, N. et al. Treg cells expressing the coinhibitory molecule TIGIT selectively inhibit proinflammatory Th1 and Th17 cell responses. Immunity 40, 569–581 (2014).
Yu, X. et al. The surface protein TIGIT suppresses T cell activation by promoting the generation of mature immunoregulatory dendritic cells. Nat. Immunol. 10, 48–57 (2009).
Chen, X. et al. TIGIT negatively regulates inflammation by altering macrophage phenotype. Immunobiology 221, 48–55 (2016).
Morelli, A. E. & Thomson, A. W. Tolerogenic dendritic cells and the quest for transplant tolerance. Nat. Rev. Immunol. 7, 610–621 (2007).
Robbins, P. D. & Morelli, A. E. Regulation of immune responses by extracellular vesicles. Nat. Rev. Immunol. 14, 195–208 (2014).
Nijagal, A. et al. Direct and indirect antigen presentation lead to deletion of donor-specific T cells after in utero hematopoietic cell transplantation in mice. Blood 121, 4595–4602 (2013).
Raker, V. K., Domogalla, M. P. & Steinbrink, K. Tolerogenic dendritic cells for regulatory T cell induction in man. Front. Immunol. 6, 569 (2015).
Morelli, A. E. & Larregina, A. T. Concise review: mechanisms behind apoptotic cell-based therapies against transplant rejection and graft versus host disease. Stem Cells 34, 1142–1150 (2016).
McCarthy, D. P., Bryant, J., Galvin, J. P., Miller, S. D. & Luo, X. Tempering allorecognition to induce transplant tolerance with chemically modified apoptotic donor cells. Am. J. Transplant. 15, 1475–1483 (2015).
Azhipa, O. et al. Comparative analysis of the fate of donor dendritic cells and B cells and their influence on alloreactive T cell responses under tacrolimus immunosuppression. Clin. Immunol. 114, 199–209 (2005).
Divito, S. J. et al. Endogenous dendritic cells mediate the effects of intravenously injected therapeutic immunosuppressive dendritic cells in transplantation. Blood 116, 2694–2705 (2010).
Wang, Z. et al. Dendritic cell therapies in transplantation revisited: deletion of recipient DCs deters the effect of therapeutic DCs. Am. J. Transplant. 12, 1398–1408 (2012).
Bellora, F. et al. The interaction of human natural killer cells with either unpolarized or polarized macrophages results in different functional outcomes. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 107, 21659–21664 (2010).
Smith, L. E. et al. Sensitivity of dendritic cells to NK-mediated lysis depends on the inflammatory environment and is modulated by CD54/CD226-driven interactions. J. Leukoc. Biol. 100, 781–789 (2016).
Thomson, A. W. et al. Identification of donor-derived dendritic cell progenitors in bone marrow of spontaneously tolerant liver allograft recipients. Transplantation 60, 1555–1559 (1995).
Rugeles, M. T. et al. Evidence for the presence of multilineage chimerism and progenitors of donor dendritic cells in the peripheral blood of bone marrow-augmented organ transplant recipients. Transplantation 64, 735–741 (1997).
Fandrich, F. et al. Preimplantation-stage stem cells induce long-term allogeneic graft acceptance without supplementary host conditioning. Nat. Med 8, 171–178 (2002).
Collin, M. P. et al. The fate of human Langerhans cells in hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. J. Exp. Med. 203, 27–33 (2006).
Kanitakis, J., Petruzzo, P. & Dubernard, J. M. Turnover of epidermal Langerhans’ cells. N. Engl. J. Med. 351, 2661–2662 (2004).
Nayak, D. K. et al. Long-term persistence of donor alveolar macrophages in human lung transplant recipients that influences donor-specific immune responses. Am. J. Transplant. 16, 2300–2311 (2016).
Inoue, T. et al. Host Foxp3 + CD4 + regulatory T cells act as a negative regulator of dendritic cells in the peritransplantation period. J. Immunol. 196, 469–483 (2016).
Cobbold, S. P. et al. Infectious tolerance via the consumption of essential amino acids and mTOR signaling. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 106, 12055–12060 (2009).
Qin, S. et al. “Infectious” transplantation tolerance. Science 259, 974–977 (1993).
Riquelme, P. & Hutchinson, J. A. Standard protocols for generation of monocyte-derived cell types. Protocol Exchange https://doi.org/10.1038/protex.2018.065 (2018).
Riquelme, P. & Hutchinson, J. A. Standard protocols for flow cytometry for monocytes, macrophages, DC and T cells. Protocol Exchange https://doi.org/10.1038/protex.2018.064 (2018).
Acknowledgements
The authors gratefully acknowledge the support of the European Union 7th Framework Programme through The ONE Study initiative (award 260687). This work was also partly funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (awards HU 1838/1-1 and HU 1838/2-1), the EU-funded Reprogramming the Immune System for Establishment of Tolerance (RISET) network, the Action to Focus and Accelerate Cell-based Tolerance-inducing Therapies (A FACTT) consortium funded by the European Union Horizon 2020 programme and the Regensburg Center for Interventional Immunology. L.W. received an intramural (ReForM-A) award from UKR. The authors are exceptionally grateful to Carsten Boeger for his crucial involvement in the ONEmreg12 trial. The authors thank Josef Schröder for ultrastructural imaging of Mregs. The authors thank Petra Hoffmann for enabling our flow-sorting experiments. The authors are indebted to Joachim Schweimer and Anke Hofmann for their outstanding technical support. The authors are grateful to Ian V. Hutchinson for proof-reading the final version of our manuscript.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
J.A.H. conceived the project, designed and executed experiments, managed Mreg administration to patients, analysed data and wrote the manuscript; P.R. designed and executed experiments, analysed data and contributed to preparation of the manuscript; F.B., J.H., A.K., L.W. and S.T. performed experiments; N.A., I.G., D.Z. and B.B. were responsible for care of Mreg-treated patients; R.S. provided expert statistical advice; A.K.W. supported humanised mouse experiments; F.F., M.B.L., B.S., H.J.S., J.O. and E.K.G. provided critical feedback and approved the manuscript.
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Competing interests
J.A.H. and E.K.G. are the named inventors on European Patent Office (EPO) filing 16159985.6-1402 dated 11.03.2016, ‘Immunoregulatory cells and methods for their production’. J.A.H., P.R. and E.K.G. are the named inventors on EPO filing 17206021.2-1111, ‘New drug screening assay using regulatory macrophages’, dated 07.12.2017. The remaining authors declare no competing interests. Trizell GmbH holds commercial rights to clinical application of Mreg_UKR as a therapeutic cell-based product.
Additional information
Publisher's note: Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Electronic supplementary material
Rights and permissions
Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
About this article
Cite this article
Riquelme, P., Haarer, J., Kammler, A. et al. TIGIT+ iTregs elicited by human regulatory macrophages control T cell immunity. Nat Commun 9, 2858 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-05167-8
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-05167-8
This article is cited by
-
Acute graft-versus-host disease
Nature Reviews Disease Primers (2023)
-
Immune profile of patients with peritoneal carcinomatosis selected for CRS-HIPEC therapy
Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy (2023)
-
Immune-checkpoint expression in antigen-presenting cells (APCs) of cytomegaloviruses infection after transplantation: as a diagnostic biomarker
Archives of Microbiology (2023)
-
Liver ischaemia–reperfusion injury: a new understanding of the role of innate immunity
Nature Reviews Gastroenterology & Hepatology (2022)
-
Immune regulation in renal inflammation
Cell and Tissue Research (2021)
Comments
By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms and Community Guidelines. If you find something abusive or that does not comply with our terms or guidelines please flag it as inappropriate.