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Background: Following protein replacement therapy, one-third of severe hemophilia A patients develop antibodies to factor VIII (FVIII), which also hinders the efficacy of gene therapy. Regulatory T cells (Tregs) have a naturally suppressive function that potentially reduces the immune response to FVIII therapy. Furthermore, antigen-specific Tregs are functionally much more potent than polyclonal cells. Adoptive transfer of antigen-specific Tregs can effectively suppress anti-FVIII antibody responses.

Objective: Develop a clinically feasible protocol to enrich and expand Tregs specific to FVIII for suppressing anti-FVIII immune responses.

Methods: Regulatory T cells are isolated from FVIII-sensitized mice, sorted on CD25 markers, and expanded specifically with FVIII, antigen-presenting cells, and interleukin 2 (IL 2). Subsequently, Tregs are further cultured with anti-CD3/anti-CD28 beads, anti-Crry antibodies, and IL 2 to achieve 10-fold to 20-fold expansion. Expanded Tregs are characterized and tested for their suppressive activity in vitro and in vivo.

Results: In vitro FVIII-specific suppressive assays indicate that FVIII specifically expanded Tregs are more suppressive than non-specifically expanded and naive Tregs. Adoptive transfer of expanded Tregs into HemA mice showed that FVIII-specifically expanded Tregs are significantly more potent in suppressing anti-FVIII immune responses in FVIII plasmid-treated HemA mice. Moreover, the FVIII-specific immune tolerance is maintained after a secondary challenge with FVIII plasmid.

Conclusions: Our results demonstrate that the FVIII-specific sensitization and expansion protocol yields more potent Tregs to suppress anti-FVIII antibody responses and induce long-term tolerance to FVIII, increasing the potential for adoptive Treg cell therapy to modulate anti-FVIII immune responses.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6994379PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jth.14659DOI Listing

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