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Astrocyte-targeted gene delivery of interleukin 2 specifically increases brain-resident regulatory T cell numbers and protects against pathological neuroinflammation.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Yshii, Lidia 
Bielefeld, Pascal 
Mascali, Loriana 
Lemaitre, Pierre 

Abstract

The ability of immune-modulating biologics to prevent and reverse pathology has transformed recent clinical practice. Full utility in the neuroinflammation space, however, requires identification of both effective targets for local immune modulation and a delivery system capable of crossing the blood-brain barrier. The recent identification and characterization of a small population of regulatory T (Treg) cells resident in the brain presents one such potential therapeutic target. Here, we identified brain interleukin 2 (IL-2) levels as a limiting factor for brain-resident Treg cells. We developed a gene-delivery approach for astrocytes, with a small-molecule on-switch to allow temporal control, and enhanced production in reactive astrocytes to spatially direct delivery to inflammatory sites. Mice with brain-specific IL-2 delivery were protected in traumatic brain injury, stroke and multiple sclerosis models, without impacting the peripheral immune system. These results validate brain-specific IL-2 gene delivery as effective protection against neuroinflammation, and provide a versatile platform for delivery of diverse biologics to neuroinflammatory patients.

Description

Keywords

Animals, Astrocytes, Biological Products, Brain, Humans, Interleukin-2, Interleukins, Mice, Neuroinflammatory Diseases, T-Lymphocytes, Regulatory

Journal Title

Nat Immunol

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1529-2908
1529-2916

Volume Title

23

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Sponsorship
European Research Council (899863)