Immune isolation-enabled nanoencapsulation of donor T cells: a promising strategy for mitigating GVHD and treating AML in preclinical models

AI Summary

This study explores the use of immune isolation-enabled nanoencapsulation of donor T cells as a promising strategy for managing graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) and treating acute myeloid leukemia (AML) in preclinical models. The researchers crafted nanocapsules to encapsulate T cells, which were then transplanted into AML mice. The encapsulated T cells demonstrated a reduction in GVHD symptoms while maintaining the graft-versus-leukemia (GVL) effect by inhibiting immune synapses with recipient cells and downregulating co-stimulatory signals. Despite transient cytotoxicity inhibition in the tumor microenvironment, the encapsulated T cells ultimately restored their antitumor activity, leading to promising outcomes for suppressing GVHD and effectively treating AML.

Background

In allogeneic-hematopoietic stem cell transplantation for acute myeloid leukemia (AML), donor T cells combat leukemia through the graft-versus-leukemia (GVL) effect, while they also pose a risk of triggering life-threatening graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) by interacting with recipient cells. The onset of GVHD hinges on the interplay between donor T cells and recipient antigen-presenting cells (APCs), sparking T-cell activation. However, effective methods to balance GVHD and GVL are lacking.

Methods

In our study, we crafted nanocapsules by layering polycationic aminated gelatin and polyanionic alginate onto the surface of T cells, examining potential alterations in their fundamental physiological functions. Subsequently, we established an AML mouse model and treated it with transplantation of bone marrow cells (BMCs) combined with encapsulated T cells to investigate the GVL and anti-GVHD effects of encapsulated T cells. In vitro co-culture was employed to probe the effects of encapsulation on immune synapses, co-stimulatory molecules, and tumor-killing pathways.

Results

Transplantation of BMCs combined with donor T cells selectively encapsulated onto AML mice significantly alleviates GVHD symptoms while preserving essential GVL effects. Encapsulated T cells exerted their immunomodulatory effects by impeding the formation of immune synapses with recipient APCs, thereby downregulating co-stimulatory signals such as CD28-CD80, ICOS-ICOSL, and CD40L-CD40. Recipient mice receiving encapsulated T-cell transplantation exhibited a marked increase in donor Ly-5.1-BMC cell numbers, accompanied by unaltered in vivo expression levels of perforin and granzyme B. While transient inhibition of donor T-cell cytotoxicity in the tumor microenvironment was observed in vitro following single-cell nanoencapsulation, subsequent restoration to normal antitumor activity ensued, attributed to selective permeability of encapsulated vesicle shells and material degradation. Moreover, the expression of apoptotic proteins and FAS-FAS ligand pathway at normal levels was still observed in leukemia tumor cells.

Conclusions

Encapsulated donor T cells effectively mitigate GVHD while preserving the GVL effect by minimizing co-stimulatory signaling with APCs through early immune isolation. Subsequent degradation of nanocapsules restores T-cell cytotoxic efficacy against AML cells, mediated by cytotoxic pathways. Using transplant-encapsulated T cells offers a promising strategy to suppress GVHD while preserving the GVL effect.

Leave a Reply