作者
Lidia Yshii,Emanuela Pasciuto,Pascal Bielefeld,Loriana Mascali,Pierre Lemaître,Marika Marino,James Dooley,Lubna Kouser,Stijn Verschoren,Vasiliki Lagou,Hannelore Kemps,Pascal Gervois,Antina de Boer,Oliver T. Burton,Jérôme Wahis,Jens Verhaert,Samar Tareen,Carlos P. Roca,K. N. Singh,Carly E. Whyte,Axelle Kerstens,Zsuzsanna Callaerts-Végh,Suresh Poovathingal,Teresa Prezzemolo,Keimpe Wierda,Amy Dashwood,Junhua Xie,Elien Van Wonterghem,Eline Creemers,Meryem Aloulou,Willy Gsell,Oihane Abiega,Sebastian Munck,Roosmarijn E. Vandenbroucke,Annelies Bronckaers,Robin Lemmens,Bart De Strooper,Ludo Van Den Bosch,Uwe Himmelreich,Carlos P. Fitzsimons,Matthew G. Holt,Adrian Liston
摘要
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.