@article{RiquelmeHaarerKammleretal.2018, author = {Riquelme, Paloma and Haarer, Jan and Kammler, Anja and Walter, Lisa and Tomiuk, Stefan and Ahrens, Norbert and Wege, Anja K. and Goecze, Ivan and Zecher, Daniel and Banas, Bernhard and Spang, Rainer and F{\"a}ndrich, Fred and Lutz, Manfred B. and Sawitzki, Birgit and Schlitt, Hans J. and Ochando, Jordi and Geissler, Edward K. and Hutchinson, James A.}, title = {TIGIT\(^+\) iTregs elicited by human regulatory macrophages control T cell immunity}, series = {Nature Communications}, volume = {9}, journal = {Nature Communications}, number = {9}, doi = {10.1038/s41467-018-05167-8}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-226321}, pages = {2858, 1-18}, year = {2018}, abstract = {Human regulatory macrophages (Mreg) have shown early clinical promise as a cell-based adjunct immunosuppressive therapy in solid organ transplantation. It is hypothesised that recipient CD4(+) T cell responses are actively regulated through direct allorecognition of donor-derived Mregs. Here we show that human Mregs convert allogeneic CD4(+) T cells to IL-10-producing, TIGIT(+) FoxP3(+)-induced regulatory T cells that non-specifically suppress bystander T cells and inhibit dendritic cell maturation. Differentiation of Mreg-induced Tregs relies on multiple non-redundant mechanisms that are not exclusive to interaction of Mregs and T cells, including signals mediated by indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase, TGF-beta, retinoic acid, Notch and progestagen-associated endometrial protein. Preoperative administration of donor-derived Mregs to living-donor kidney transplant recipients results in an acute increase in circulating TIGIT(+) Tregs. These results suggest a feed-forward mechanism by which Mreg treatment promotes allograft acceptance through rapid induction of direct-pathway Tregs.}, language = {en} }