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Anti-coreceptor therapy drives selective T cell egress by suppressing inflammation-dependent chemotactic cues
Aaron J. Martin, Matthew Clark, Gregory Gojanovich, Fatima Manzoor, Keith Miller, Douglas E. Kline, Y. Maurice Morillon, Bo Wang, Roland Tisch
Aaron J. Martin, Matthew Clark, Gregory Gojanovich, Fatima Manzoor, Keith Miller, Douglas E. Kline, Y. Maurice Morillon, Bo Wang, Roland Tisch
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Research Article Therapeutics

Anti-coreceptor therapy drives selective T cell egress by suppressing inflammation-dependent chemotactic cues

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Abstract

There continues to be a need for immunotherapies to treat type 1 diabetes in the clinic. We previously reported that nondepleting anti-CD4 and -CD8 Ab treatment effectively reverses diabetes in new-onset NOD mice. A key feature of the induction of remission is the egress of the majority of islet-resident T cells. How this occurs is undefined. Herein, the effects of coreceptor therapy on islet T cell retention were investigated. Bivalent Ab binding to CD4 and CD8 blocked TCR signaling and T cell cytokine production, while indirectly downregulating islet chemokine expression. These processes were required for T cell retention, as ectopic IFN-γ or CXCL10 inhibited Ab-mediated T cell purging. Importantly, treatment of humanized mice with nondepleting anti–human CD4 and CD8 Ab similarly reduced tissue-infiltrating human CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. These findings demonstrate that Ab binding of CD4 and CD8 interrupts a feed-forward circuit by suppressing T cell–produced cytokines needed for expression of chemotactic cues, leading to rapid T cell egress from the islets. Coreceptor therapy therefore offers a robust approach to suppress T cell–mediated pathology by purging T cells in an inflammation-dependent manner.

Authors

Aaron J. Martin, Matthew Clark, Gregory Gojanovich, Fatima Manzoor, Keith Miller, Douglas E. Kline, Y. Maurice Morillon, Bo Wang, Roland Tisch

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Figure 1

Islet T cell numbers are rapidly reduced by nondepleting YTS Abs.

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Islet T cell numbers are rapidly reduced by nondepleting YTS Abs.
Twelve...
Twelve-week-old NOD female mice received YTS177 and YTS105 or control 2A3. Representative dot plots of islet CD4+ and CD8+ (CD3+CD4–) T cells in 2A3-treated (A) or YTS-treated mice (B); single live CD45+ events were gated on (outlined in black). Numbers of CD4+ T cells and CD8+ T cells were calculated for islets (C) and spleen (D). *P < 0.01, n = 6, determined by ANOVA with Bonferroni’s multiple comparisons correction (C) and two-tailed Student’s t test (D). Data represent 3 replicate experiments. NS, not significant; Tx, treatment.

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