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A novel immunomodulatory approach to overcome innate and adaptive immune barriers to islet transplantation

$377,529R56FY2016AINIH

University Of Louisville, Louisville KY

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Abstract

? DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Type I diabetes is a chronic autoimmune disease initiated and perpetuated by T cells responding to autoantigens expressed by insulin producing pancreatic beta cells. T1D affects 3 million children and adults in the US with healthcare costs exceeding $14.9 billion annually. Currently, there is no cure for type 1 diabetes. Transplantation of allogeneic islets is a reliable method of achieving durable glucose homeostasis and preventing the devastating complications of type 1 diabetes. However, there are four major barriers to allogeneic islet transplantation; i) ineffective engraftment, ii) rejection, iii) advere effects of immunosuppression used to control rejection, and iv) shortage of cadaveric donor islets. Therefore, there is a significant need for strategies that overcome these limitations of iset transplantation for a broader clinical practice. This R01 application is in response to NIH/NIAID PAS-15-055 RFA and aims to develop an innovative and highly translational immunomodulatory protocol that overcomes these obstacles and achieves indefinite islet graft survival in the absence of chronic use of immunosuppression. Infusion of islets into the liver via portal vein, the only route of transplantation in clinical use, instantly exposes the graft to bloo and initiates an immediate blood-mediated inflammatory reaction (IBMIR). IBMIR is mediated by thrombotic and inflammatory reactions and is responsible for the destruction of 50-80% islets immediate post-transplantation. The remaining islets are then subject to rejection by the slower, but potent adaptive immune responses. Significant early islet loss requires transplantation from 2-3 donors per recipients, which further contribute to the shortage of cadaveric donors. The goal of this proposal is to develop powerful, yet focused therapies to simultaneously target the immediate inflammatory reactions and adaptive immune response to prevent early and late graft loss. This will be accomplished by generating novel recombinant proteins with robust inhibitory functions on prothrombotic, proinflammatory, and adaptive immune reactions. These proteins will be engineered on pancreatic islets before transplantation for localized modulation of thrombotic and inflammatory responses to enhance engraftment and achieve indefinite graft survival without the chronic use of debilitating immunosuppression that is currently standard. This concept will be tested in three different allogeneic islet transplantation settings for efficay and mechanisms; chemically diabetic BALB/c-to-C57BL/6 mice, spontaneously diabetic C57BL/6-to-NOD mice, and human islets into humanized mice. These models will generate critical data relevant to the human setting. Furthermore, proof-of-efficacy and the elucidation of the immune mechanisms regulating effective outcomes will expedite further refinement of this immunomodulatory concept and its eventual translation to nonhuman primates as a prelude to clinical trials for the treatment of type 1 diabetes.

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