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Preprints

Toward Improving Immunotolerance for Stem Cell-Derived Islets

Zhou Q, Li H, Gerace D, Nikolskly I, Wang X, Kenty-Ryu J, Zhang J, Hinderhofer M, Robinson E, Melton DA.
Preprint from
bioRxiv
17 September 2022
PPR
PPR547003
Abstract
Transplanting human stem cell-derived islets (SC-islets) is a promising therapy for insulin-dependent diabetes. While functional SC-islets have been produced for clinical application, immune rejection by the host remains a challenge. Present attempts, including chronic immunosuppression and/or physical encapsulation, have some disadvantages. Here we explore a strategy to induce an immune-tolerant environment based on the immune privilege observed in the male gonad. Sperm appears after the maturation of the immune system and development of systemic self-tolerance and the testis protects these autoreactive germ cells by the physical structure of blood-testis-barrier (BTB) and active local immunosuppression. Human SC-islets transplanted into the mouse testis can be physically protected by the BTB and we find that the testis secretes cytokines that induce a population of regulatory T cells (T regs ) that express both CD4 and CD8. We identified cytokines secreted by testis and used a cocktail of IL-2, IL-10, and TGF-β for in vitro co-culture and in vivo transplantation demonstrating improved survival of SC-islets and the induction of T regs .

One Sentence Summary

Inducing local immunotolerance by suppressive cytokines for islet Transplantation.