Foxp3+ Tregs are recruited to the retina to repair pathological angiogenesis

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Abstract

Neovascular retinopathies are major causes of vision loss; yet treatments to prevent the condition are inadequate. The role of regulatory T cells in neovascular retinopathy is unknown. Here we show that in retinopathy regulatory T cells are transiently increased in lymphoid organs and the retina, but decline when neovascularization is established. The decline is prevented following regulatory T cells expansion with an IL-2/anti-IL-2 mAb complex or the adoptive transfer of regulatory T cells. Further, both approaches reduce vasculopathy (vaso-obliteration, neovascularization, vascular leakage) and alter the activation of Tmem119+ retinal microglia. Our in vitro studies complement these findings, showing that retinal microglia co-cultured with regulatory T cells exhibit a reduction in co-stimulatory molecules and pro-inflammatory mediators that is attenuated by CTLA-4 blockade. Collectively, we demonstrate that regulatory T cells are recruited to the retina and, when expanded in number, repair the vasculature. Manipulation of regulatory T cell numbers is a previously unrecognized, and promising avenue for therapies to prevent blinding neovascular retinopathies.

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Deliyanti, D., Talia, D. M., Zhu, T., Maxwell, M. J., Agrotis, A., Jerome, J. R., … Wilkinson-Berka, J. L. (2017). Foxp3+ Tregs are recruited to the retina to repair pathological angiogenesis. Nature Communications, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-017-00751-w

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