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Local administration of regulatory T cells promotes tissue healing

Lookup NU author(s): Dr Xiao WangORCiD

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-ND).


Abstract

© The Author(s) 2024.Regulatory T cells (Tregs) are crucial immune cells for tissue repair and regeneration. However, their potential as a cell-based regenerative therapy is not yet fully understood. Here, we show that local delivery of exogenous Tregs into injured mouse bone, muscle, and skin greatly enhances tissue healing. Mechanistically, exogenous Tregs rapidly adopt an injury-specific phenotype in response to the damaged tissue microenvironment, upregulating genes involved in immunomodulation and tissue healing. We demonstrate that exogenous Tregs exert their regenerative effect by directly and indirectly modulating monocytes/macrophages (Mo/MΦ) in injured tissues, promoting their switch to an anti-inflammatory and pro-healing state via factors such as interleukin (IL)-10. Validating the key role of IL-10 in exogenous Treg-mediated repair and regeneration, the pro-healing capacity of these cells is lost when Il10 is knocked out. Additionally, exogenous Tregs reduce neutrophil and cytotoxic T cell accumulation and IFN-γ production in damaged tissues, further dampening the pro-inflammatory Mo/MΦ phenotype. Highlighting the potential of this approach, we demonstrate that allogeneic and human Tregs also promote tissue healing. Together, this study establishes exogenous Tregs as a possible universal cell-based therapy for regenerative medicine and provides key mechanistic insights that could be harnessed to develop immune cell-based therapies to enhance tissue healing.


Publication metadata

Author(s): Nayer B, Tan JL, Alshoubaki YK, Lu Y-Z, Legrand JMD, Lau S, Hu N, Park AJ, Wang X-N, Amann-Zalcenstein D, Hickey PF, Wilson T, Kuhn GA, Muller R, Vasanthakumar A, Akira S, Martino MM

Publication type: Article

Publication status: Published

Journal: Nature Communications

Year: 2024

Volume: 15

Issue: 1

Online publication date: 09/09/2024

Acceptance date: 05/08/2024

Date deposited: 16/09/2024

ISSN (electronic): 2041-1723

Publisher: Nature Research

URL: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-51353-2

DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-51353-2

Data Access Statement: All data associated with this study are present in the main text or the Supplementary Materials. RNA sequencing data generated for this study have been deposited in NCBI’s Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) database under accession code GSE228871 for bulk RNA-seq of endogenous Tregs, GSE230173 for mini-bulk RNA-seq of monocytes/macrophages from Treg-treated mice, GSE230177 for mini-bulk RNA-seq of recovered exogenous Tregs and GSE268828 for bulk RNA-seq of macrophages from Treg-depleted mice. Source data are provided with this paper


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Funding

Funder referenceFunder name
National Health and Medical Research Council (APP1140229 and APP1176213)

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