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Expansion of Human Tregs from Cryopreserved Umbilical Cord Blood for GMP-Compliant Autologous Adoptive Cell Transfer Therapy

Authors :
Ashley N. Bushdorf
Todd M. Brusko
Katherine S. Brown
Jeffrey A. Bluestone
Leeana D. Peters
Judit Cserny
Angela P. Lares
Howard R. Seay
Morey Kraus
Mark A. Atkinson
John R. Wingard
Kate Falcon Girard
Heather L. Brown
Amy L. Putnam
Kristi T. Balavage
Michael J. Haller
Emma Rosenau
Amanda L. Posgai
Source :
Molecular Therapy. Methods & Clinical Development, Molecular Therapy: Methods & Clinical Development, Vol 4, Iss C, Pp 178-191 (2017)
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
American Society of Gene & Cell Therapy, 2016.

Abstract

Umbilical cord blood is a traditional and convenient source of cells for hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. Thymic regulatory Tcells (Tregs) are also present in cord blood, and there is growing interest in the use of autologous Tregs to provide a low-risk, fully human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-matched cell product for treating autoimmune diseases, such as type 1 diabetes. Here, we describe a good manufacturing practice (GMP)-compatible Treg expansion protocol using fluorescence-activated cell sorting, resulting in a mean 2,092-fold expansion of Tregs over a 16-day culture for a median yield of 1.26× 109 Tregs from single-donor cryopreserved units. The resulting Tregs passed prior clinical trial release criteria for Treg purity and sterility, including additional rigorous assessments of FOXP3 and Helios expression and epigenetic analysis of the FOXP3 Treg-specific demethylated region (TSDR). Compared with expanded adult peripheral blood Tregs, expanded cord blood Tregs remained more naive, as assessed by continued expression of CD45RA, produced reduced IFN-γ following activation, and effectively inhibited responder Tcell proliferation. Immunosequencing of the Tcell receptor revealed a remarkably diverse receptor repertoire within cord blood Tregs that was maintained following invitro expansion. These data support the feasibility of generating GMP-compliant Tregs from cord blood for adoptive cell transfer therapies and highlight potential advantages in terms of safety, phenotypic stability, autoantigen specificity, and tissue distribution.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23290501
Volume :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular Therapy. Methods & Clinical Development
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....23c244191afbb08a5a577c85554dc76b