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CD70 expression determines the therapeutic efficacy of expanded human regulatory T cells.


ABSTRACT: Regulatory T cells (Tregs) are critical mediators of immune homeostasis. The co-stimulatory molecule CD27 is a marker of highly suppressive Tregs, although the role of the CD27-CD70 receptor-ligand interaction in Tregs is not clear. Here we show that after prolonged in vitro stimulation, a significant proportion of human Tregs gain stable CD70 expression while losing CD27. The expression of CD70 in expanded Tregs is associated with a profound loss of regulatory function and an unusual ability to provide CD70-directed co-stimulation to TCR-activated conventional T cells. Genetic deletion of CD70 or its blockade prevents Tregs from delivering this co-stimulatory signal, thus maintaining their regulatory activity. High resolution targeted single-cell RNA sequencing of human peripheral blood confirms the presence of CD27-CD70+ Treg cells. These findings have important implications for Treg-based clinical studies where cells are expanded over extended periods in order to achieve sufficient treatment doses.

SUBMITTER: Arroyo Hornero R 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC7360768 | biostudies-literature | 2020 Jul

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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CD70 expression determines the therapeutic efficacy of expanded human regulatory T cells.

Arroyo Hornero Rebeca R   Georgiadis Christos C   Hua Peng P   Trzupek Dominik D   He Li-Zhen LZ   Qasim Waseem W   Todd John A JA   Ferreira Ricardo C RC   Wood Kathryn J KJ   Issa Fadi F   Hester Joanna J  

Communications biology 20200714 1


Regulatory T cells (Tregs) are critical mediators of immune homeostasis. The co-stimulatory molecule CD27 is a marker of highly suppressive Tregs, although the role of the CD27-CD70 receptor-ligand interaction in Tregs is not clear. Here we show that after prolonged in vitro stimulation, a significant proportion of human Tregs gain stable CD70 expression while losing CD27. The expression of CD70 in expanded Tregs is associated with a profound loss of regulatory function and an unusual ability to  ...[more]

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