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. 2025 Sep;25(9):1858-1869.
doi: 10.1016/j.ajt.2025.05.023. Epub 2025 May 23.

Cell therapy with human interleukin 10-producing ILC2s enhances islet function and inhibits allograft rejection

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Cell therapy with human interleukin 10-producing ILC2s enhances islet function and inhibits allograft rejection

Sarah J Colpitts et al. Am J Transplant. 2025 Sep.

Abstract

Group 2 innate lymphoid cells (ILC2s) that produce interleukin (IL)-10 (IL-10+ILC2s) have demonstrated regulatory and tissue-protective properties in murine studies, but preclinical studies are lacking that explore the potential of human IL-10+ILC2s as a tolerance-promoting cell therapy for transplantation or autoimmunity. Here, we investigated whether human IL-10+ILC2s could enhance islet function and prevent allograft rejection in humanized mouse models of islet transplantation. In vitro, human IL-10+ILC2s did not display cytotoxicity toward allogeneic deceased-donor islets or stem cell-derived islet-like cells, and co-transplantation with IL-10+ILC2s significantly improved glucose control post-transplantation. Allogeneic IL10+ILC2s directly inhibited T cell-mediated cytotoxicity against islet-like cells in vitro and, in an antigen-specific transplant rejection model, prevented T cell-mediated rejection of deceased-donor islet grafts. Effects were greater with allogeneic IL-10+ILC2s, as autologous cells did not inhibit T cell interferon-γ production or cytotoxic activity in vitro and were not sufficient to prevent islet rejection in vivo. Collectively, these studies provide proof-of-principle that human IL-10+ILC2s have therapeutic potential for islet transplantation and type 1 diabetes and support their use as an allogeneic regulatory cell therapy.

Keywords: ILC2; cell therapy; immune tolerance; islet transplantation; type 1 diabetes (T1D).

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of competing interest The authors of this manuscript have conflicts of interest to disclose as described by American Journal of Transplantation. S.Q. Crome reports financial support was provided by Canadian Institutes of Health Research, Breakthrough T1D Canada, and Canada First Research Excellence Fund. M. Levings reports financial support was provided by Diabetes Canada. K.T.R, S.J.C.s, J.A.M., and S.Q.C. have filed provisional patents for human IL-10–producing ILC2 isolation and expansion methods (Provisional Patent Application: 63/353,823 and 63/469,234).