As a chronic autoinflammatory condition, ulcerative colitis is often managed via systemic immunosuppressants. Here we show, in three mouse models of established ulcerative colitis, that a subcutaneously injected colon-specific immunosuppressive niche consisting of colon epithelial cells, decellularized colon extracellular matrix and nanofibres functionalized with programmed death-ligand 1, CD86, a peptide mimic of transforming growth factor-beta 1, and the immunosuppressive small-molecule leflunomide, induced intestinal immunotolerance and reduced inflammation in the animals' lower gastrointestinal tract. The bioengineered colon-specific niche triggered autoreactive T cell anergy and polarized pro-inflammatory macrophages via multiple immunosuppressive pathways, and prevented the infiltration of immune cells into the colon's lamina propria, promoting the recovery of epithelial damage. The bioengineered niche also prevented colitis-associated colorectal cancer and eliminated immune-related colitis triggered by kinase inhibitors and immune checkpoint blockade.
An injectable subcutaneous colon-specific immune niche for the treatment of ulcerative colitis.
Reference
Au, Kin Man, Wilson, Justin E, Ting, Jenny P-Y, Wang, Andrew Z. An injectable subcutaneous colon-specific immune niche for the treatment of ulcerative colitis. Nat Biomed Eng. Published online January 1, 2023. doi:10.1038/s41551-023-01136-9
Abstract