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Regulatory T cells promote alloengraftment in a model of late-gestation in utero hematopoietic cell transplantation

  • John S. Riley
  • , Lauren E. McClain
  • , John D. Stratigis
  • , Barbara E. Coons
  • , Nicholas J. Ahn
  • , Haiying Li
  • , Stavros P. Loukogeorgakis
  • , Camila G. Fachin
  • , Andre I.B.S. Dias
  • , Alan W. Flake
  • , William H. Peranteau
  • University of Pennsylvania

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

16 Scopus citations

Abstract

In utero hematopoietic cell transplantation (IUHCT) has the potential to cure congenital hematologic disorders including sickle cell disease. However, the window of opportunity for IUHCT closes with the acquisition of T-cell immunity, beginning at approximately 14 weeks gestation, posing significant technical challenges and excluding from treatment fetuses evaluated after the first trimester. Here we report that regulatory T cells can promote alloengraftment and preserve allograft tolerance after the acquisition of T-cell immunity in a mouse model of late-gestation IUHCT. We show that allografts enriched with regulatory T cells harvested from either IUHCT-tolerant or naive mice engraft at 20 days post coitum (DPC) with equal frequency to unenriched allografts transplanted at 14 DPC. Long-term, multilineage donor cell chimerism was achieved in the absence of graft-versus-host disease or mortality. Decreased alloreactivity among recipient T cells was observed consistent with donor-specific tolerance. These findings suggest that donor graft enrichment with regulatory T cells could be used to successfully perform IUHCT later in gestation.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1102-1114
Number of pages13
JournalBlood Advances
Volume4
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 24 2020

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