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Tolerance Induced by Antigen-Loaded PLG Nanoparticles Affects the Phenotype and Trafficking of Transgenic CD4 + and CD8 + T Cells.

Tobias NeefIgal IferganSara BeddowPablo Penaloza-MacMasterKathryn HaskinsLonnie D SheaJoseph R PodojilStephen D Miller
Published in: Cells (2021)
We have shown that PLG nanoparticles loaded with peptide antigen can reduce disease in animal models of autoimmunity and in a phase 1/2a clinical trial in celiac patients. Clarifying the mechanisms by which antigen-loaded nanoparticles establish tolerance is key to further adapting them to clinical use. The mechanisms underlying tolerance induction include the expansion of antigen-specific CD4 + regulatory T cells and sequestration of autoreactive cells in the spleen. In this study, we employed nanoparticles loaded with two model peptides, GP 33-41 (a CD8 T cell epitope derived from lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus) and OVA 323-339 (a CD4 T cell epitope derived from ovalbumin), to modulate the CD8 + and CD4 + T cells from two transgenic mouse strains, P14 and DO11.10, respectively. Firstly, it was found that the injection of P14 mice with particles bearing the MHC I-restricted GP 33-41 peptide resulted in the expansion of CD8 + T cells with a regulatory cell phenotype. This correlated with reduced CD4 + T cell viability in ex vivo co-cultures. Secondly, both nanoparticle types were able to sequester transgenic T cells in secondary lymphoid tissue. Flow cytometric analyses showed a reduction in the surface expression of chemokine receptors. Such an effect was more prominently observed in the CD4 + cells rather than the CD8 + cells.
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