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GPA33: A Marker to Identify Stable Human Regulatory T Cells
Author(s) -
Rianne Opstelten,
Sander de Kivit,
Ma C. Slot,
Maartje van den Biggelaar,
Dorota IwaszkiewiczGrześ,
Mateusz Gliwiński,
Andrew M. Scott,
Bianca Blom,
Piotr Trzonkowski,
Jannie Borst,
Eloy Cuadrado,
Derk Amsen
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
the journal of immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.737
H-Index - 372
eISSN - 1550-6606
pISSN - 0022-1767
DOI - 10.4049/jimmunol.1901250
Subject(s) - biology , foxp3 , immunology , proinflammatory cytokine , effector , cell therapy , adoptive cell transfer , enhancer , microbiology and biotechnology , transcription factor , t cell , immune system , gene , inflammation , stem cell , genetics
FOXP3-expressing regulatory T (Treg) cells safeguard immunological tolerance. Treg cells can be generated during thymic development (called thymic Treg [tTreg] cells) or derived from mature conventional CD4 + T cells that underwent TGF-β-mediated conversion in the periphery (called peripheral Treg [pTreg] cells). Murine studies have shown that tTreg cells exhibit strong lineage fidelity, whereas pTreg cells can revert into conventional CD4 + T cells. Their stronger lineage commitment makes tTreg cells the safest cells to use in adoptive cell therapy, increasingly used to treat autoimmune and inflammatory disorders. Markers to distinguish human tTreg cells from pTreg cells have, however, not been found. Based on combined proteomic and transcriptomic approaches, we report that the Ig superfamily protein GPA33 is expressed on a subset of human Treg cells. GPA33 is acquired late during tTreg cell development but is not expressed on TGF-β-induced Treg cells. GPA33 identifies Treg cells in human blood that lack the ability to produce effector cytokines (IL-2, IFN-γ, IL-17), regardless of differentiation stage. GPA33 high Treg cells universally express the transcription factor Helios that preferentially marks tTreg cells and can robustly and stably be expanded in vitro even without rapamycin. Expanded GPA33 high Treg cells are suppressive, unable to produce proinflammatory cytokines, and exhibit the epigenetic modifications of the FOXP3 gene enhancer CNS2, necessary for indelible expression of this critical transcription factor. Our findings thus suggest that GPA33 identifies human tTreg cells and provide a strategy to isolate such cells for safer and more efficacious adoptive cell therapy.

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