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New understanding of cell stability with potential to improve immune cell therapies

New understanding of cell stability with potential to improve immune cell therapies

New understanding of cell stability with potential to improve immune cell therapies

Key points:

  • Ƶers have identified the origin of unstable regulatory T cells, with potential to improve the safety of immune cell therapies.
  • When using immune cells to treat disease, there is a risk that the cells switch from protective to destructive behaviour.
  • Studies in mice have allowed researchers to identify the cells most at risk of becoming harmful.
  • By purifying cells using markers of instability, or following a two-step purification process, the researchers are able to produce a robust set of protective cells.

Ƶ in mice, published today in Science Immunology by researchers at the Babraham Institute, UK and VIB-KU Leuven, Belgium, provides two solutions with potential to overcome a key clinical limitation of immune cell therapies. Regulatory T cells have potential in treating autoimmunity and inflammatory diseases yet they can switch from a protective to damaging function. By identifying the unstable regulatory T cells, and understanding how they can be purged from a cell population, the authors highlight a path forward for regulatory T cell transfer therapy.

Cell therapy is based on purifying cells from a patient, growing them up in cell culture to improve their properties, and then reinfusing them into the patient. Professor Adrian Liston, Immunology group leader at the Babraham Institute, explained their therapeutic potential: “The leading use of cell therapy is to improve T cells so that they can attack and kill a patient’s cancer, however the incredible versatility of the immune system means that, in principle, we could treat almost any immune disorder with the right cell type. Regulatory T cells are particularly promising, with their ability to shut down autoimmune disease, inflammatory disease and transplantation rejection. A key limitation in their clinical use, however, comes from the instability of regulatory T cells – we just can’t use them in cell therapy until we make ensure that they stay protective”.

T cells come in a large variety of types, each with unique functions in our immune system. “While most T cells are inflammatory, ready to attack pathogens or infected cells, regulatory T cells are potent anti-inflammatory mediators”, Professor Susan Schlenner, University of Leuven, explains. “Unfortunately this cell type is not entirely stable, and sometimes regulatory T cells convert into inflammatory cells, called effector T cells. Crucially, the converted cells inherit both inflammatory behaviour and the ability to identify our own cells, and so pose a significant risk of damage to the system they are meant to protect.”

The first key finding of this research shows that once regulatory T cells switch to becoming inflammatory, they are resistant to returning to their useful former state. Therefore, scientists need to find a way to remove the risky cells from any therapeutic cell populations, leaving behind the stable regulatory T cells.

By comparing stable and unstable cells the researchers identified molecular markers that indicate which cells are at risk of switching from regulatory to inflammatory. These markers can be used to purify cell populations before they are used as a treatment.

In addition to this method of cell purification, the researchers found that exposing regulatory T cells to a destabilising environment purges the unstable cells from the mixture. Under these conditions, the unstable cells are triggered to convert into inflammatory cells, allowing the researchers to purify the stable cells that are left. “The work needs to be translated into human cell therapies, but it suggests that we might be best off treating the cells mean”, says Professor Adrian Liston. “Currently, cell culture conditions for cell therapy aim to keep all the cells in optimal conditions, which may actually be masking the unstable cells. By treating the cultures rougher, we may be able to identify and eliminate the unstable cells and create a safer mix of cells for therapeutic transfer.”

Dr Steffie Junius, lead author on the paper who undertook the research as a PhD student at the University of Leuven, commented: “The next stage in the research is to take the lessons learned in mice and translate them into optimal protocols for patients. I hope that our research contributes to the improved design and allows the development of effective regulatory T cell therapy."

Establishing a thorough process to improve cell population stability in mice helps to lay the groundwork for improved immune cell therapies in humans, although the methods described in this work would require validation in humans before they were used in cell therapy trials. Dr Timothy Newton, CEO of Reflection Therapeutics, a Babraham Ƶ Campus-based company designing cell therapies against neuro-inflammation, who was not involved in this study, commented on the translational potential of the study: "This research makes a significant impact on regulatory T cell therapeutic development by characterising unstable subsets of regulatory T cells that are likely to lose their desirable therapeutic qualities and become pro-inflammatory. The successful identification of these cells is of great importance when designing manufacturing strategies required to turn potential T cell therapeutics into practical treatments for patients of a wide range of inflammatory disorders."

Notes to Editors

Publication reference

Junius, S. et al. , Science Immunology

Press contact

Honor Pollard, Communications Officer, honor.pollard@babraham.ac.uk

Image description: An artistic representation of an immune cell used in cellular therapy and a pipette droplet. The work in this study used advanced single cell technologies to determine the pathway of conversion from regulatory T cells to effector T cells. Shutterstock image by CI Photos, ID: 591898709.

Affiliated authors (in author order):

Oliver Burton, senior research scientist, Liston lab

Václav Gergelits, postdoctoral researcher, Liston lab

Kailash Singh, honorary fellow, Liston lab

Adrian Liston, senior group leader, Immunology research programme

Ƶ funding

This work was supported by Janssen Pharmaceutica N.V as the primary funder, with additional support from the Ƶ Foundation Flanders (Fonds voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek, the KU Leuven tenure track starting grant (to Professor Susan Schlenner, University of Leuven), the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Ƶ Council through Institute Strategic Program Grant funding and Core Capability Grant funding to the Babraham Institute, and ERC Consolidator funding to Adrian Liston.

Additional/related resources:

News, 9 June 2021 Meet Adrian Liston, international immunologist

News, 13 November 2020 Dissecting the immune characteristics of severe COVID-19 responses News, 22 July 2020 New role for white blood cells in the developing brain

Animal research statement:

As a publicly funded research institute, the Babraham Institute is committed to engagement and transparency in all aspects of its research. The research presented here was conducted at the University of Leuven and the Babraham Institute and all experiment involving animals were approved by local ethical review. Animal work at the Babraham Institute involved mice kept in a high health status unit (pathogen free) within the Institute’s Biological Support Unit. The mice received regulatory T cells by injection before being humanely killed at a later stage. Tissues were taken from the mice and used to isolate different classes of immune cell for further analysis.

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About the Babraham Institute

The Babraham Institute undertakes world-class life sciences research to generate new knowledge of biological mechanisms underpinning ageing, development and the maintenance of health. Our research focuses on cellular signalling, gene regulation and the impact of epigenetic regulation at different stages of life. By determining how the body reacts to dietary and environmental stimuli and manages microbial and viral interactions, we aim to improve wellbeing and support healthier ageing. The Institute is strategically funded by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Ƶ Council (BBSRC), part of UK Ƶ and Innovation, through Institute Strategic Programme Grants and an Institute Core Capability Grant and also receives funding from other UK research councils, charitable foundations, the EU and medical charities.

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BBSRC invests in world-class bioscience research and training on behalf of the UK public. Our aim is to further scientific knowledge, to promote economic growth, wealth and job creation and to improve quality of life in the UK and beyond.

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About VIB

Basic research in life sciences is VIB’s raison d’être. VIB is an independent research institute where some 1,500 top scientists from Belgium and abroad conduct pioneering basic research. As such, they are pushing the boundaries of what we know about molecular mechanisms and how they rule living organisms such as human beings, animals, plants and microorganisms. Based on a close partnership with five Flemish universities – Ghent University, KU Leuven, University of Antwerp, Vrije Universiteit Brussel and Hasselt University – and supported by a solid funding program, VIB unites the expertise of all its collaborators and research groups in a single institute. VIB’s technology transfer activities translate research results into concrete benefits for society such as new diagnostics and therapies and agricultural innovations. These applications are often developed by young start-ups from VIB or through collaborations with other companies. This also leads to additional employment and bridges the gap between scientific research and entrepreneurship. VIB also engages actively in the public debate on biotechnology by developing and disseminating a wide range of science-based information. More info can be found on www.vib.be.