Allergy Clinical Trial
Official title:
Applying Systems Immunology to the Search for Personalized Biomarkers of Clinical Efficacy: Predicting the T Cell Activation Potential in Vivo From Resting T Cells of Patients
Study Objective: Allergies affect up to 20% of the population of developed countries and can
cause substantial individual disease burden. For some allergies, immunotherapeutic regimens
("hyposensitization") have been established, e.g. for insect venom allergies and pollen
allergies. This project aims at identifying the T cell activation potential in vivo from
resting T cells of patients undergoing immunotherapy (IT) via a systems biology approach. For
the participants, it involves blood draws and stool collection as well as gathering some
basic medical information. The participation takes one week for patients undergoing insect
venom IT and three months for patients undergoing pollen IT. A control group without a
clinical history of allergies is recruited. Blood and stool samples are collected in the same
time frames as in allergic patients.
This study is a cooperation project between the Centre Hospitalier de Luxembourg (CHL), the
Luxemburg Institute of Health (LIH), the University of Luxembourg and the Integrated Biobank
of Luxemburg (IBBL).
Summary of the study: Applying systems immunology to the search for personalized biomarkers
of clinical efficacy: Predicting the T cell activation potential in vivo from resting T cells
of patients.
Introduction Allergy affects more than 20% of the populations of most developed countries.
The major allergic diseases, allergic rhinitis, asthma, food allergies and urticaria, are
chronic, cause major disability, and are costly both to the individual and to the society
(World Allergy Organisation (WAO) white book 2013). Besides occupational allergies, the most
common allergies are caused by food, pollen, dust, mold, animal dander, insect sting,
medications…Allergic phenomena are due to an exacerbated response of the immune system to
antigens that are tolerated by non-allergic patients.
After exposure to antigens, naive CD4+ (cluster of differentiation 4) T cells can be
differentiated in different subsets of T helper (Th) cells (Th1, Th2, Th9, Th17, Th22, Tfh)
and induced suppressive regulatory T cells characterized by different cytokine expression
patterns, transcription factors and other surface markers, which will orchestrate adaptive
and innate immune responses to these stimuli. Th2 cells are central players in all the
various forms of Immunoglobulin E (IgE)-associated allergic diseases and are thus regarded as
the most dominant T cell subset sustaining the allergic response. Upon antigen uptake and
processing by antigen-presenting cells, CD4+ T cells are polarized towards a Th2 phenotype,
leading to the expression of Th2 cell-associated cytokines such as Interleukin (IL)-4, -5,
-9, -13, switching B cell response toward IgE production (sensitization or early phase).
Allergen-specific IgE bind to a high-affinity receptor (FcεRI) of innate immune cells
including basophils and mast cells, triggering the release of anaphylactogenic mediators
(cytokines, chemokines, histamine, heparin, serotonin and proteases) responsible for
inflammatory cell recruitment and allergic symptoms (effector or late phase). Identifying
networks of genes expressed in resting and activated Th2 cells from allergic patients would
help distinguish gene candidates predicting immune tolerance to allergens.
Allergies are diseases involving many cell subsets. The specific reactivities and
contributions to the clinical picture are closely interdependent and not fully deciphered
yet. The interplay between the different actors of the cellular immune system is further
complexified by the existence of the commensal intestinal flora, also called the microbiota.
Gut microbiota is partially under supervision of the immune system, and dysregulations or
changes in the composition of the microbiota, for example due to antibiotics uptake during
childhood and /or different eating habits, may impact adaptative and innate immune functions.
Characterization of the gut microbiota of human hosts undergoing immunotherapy might be of
high interest to delineate interactions between microbiota and adaptive immune system.
Despite substantial improvements in medications relieving daily allergy symptoms, a
percentage of patients still experience uncontrolled severe symptoms. For these patients,
strictly avoiding the allergen and keeping emergency medications within reach are the best
recommendations so far, and the burden of living with allergy ultimately results in
psychosocial, health, occupational and economic problems by impacting public health costs. In
these cases, the best and feasible solution to improve quality of life is to apply an
immunotherapeutic approach to induce allergen tolerance.
Allergen-specific immunotherapy (AIT) has been implemented for more than 100 years, and
achieves sustained unresponsiveness by administrating escalating doses of the causative
allergen until a maintenance dose is reached. Immunotherapeutic protocols spanning different
durations (from hours for ultra-rush protocols to weeks or months for conventional protocols)
are applied for the treatment of food, pollen, pet dander and insect sting allergy.
Desensitization takes place in sequential steps such as very early desensitization of mast
cells and basophils, skewing of T- and B-cell responses towards regulatory phenotype,
modulation of allergen-specific antibody isotypes and inhibition of migration and mediator
release of eosinophils, basophils and mast cells.
Questions remain however about the very early events taking place at initiation of
immunotherapy, as whether mechanisms are different in rush or conventional protocols.
Immunotherapy outcome may be related to events occurring in different cell subsets, and the
identification of predictive biomarkers for tolerance induction is still highly needed.
To that aim, systems biology will be applied. Systems biology aims at gathering informations
on complex biological systems (for example, transcriptomics data) and to apply computational
tools to better understand and predict whether and to which degrees these systems will react
to perturbations. Based on "omics" data, systems biology gives a bigger picture of cellular
events occurring during the course of AIT than approaches focusing on isolated gene
candidates or signaling pathways. This systemic approach allows the building and inference of
predictive gene expression networks that could not be determined using hypothesis-based
approaches.
Rationale of the research project:
Human individuals show great variance in both innate and adaptive immune responses following
immune stimuli. However, little is known about which and how molecular subnetworks
quantitatively control the immune response potential. Until now, no predictive biomarkers of
clinical efficacy of vaccinations or antigen-specific immunotherapies to allergy have been
established. The current proposal is a pilot study to identify candidates of interest, which
predictive value as biomarkers will be assessed in further studies involving larger groups of
patients and appropriate controls.
The investigators hypothesize that early molecular events of cell stimulation in successful
AIT correlate with a regulatory immune responsive signature of innate (Natural killer (NK)
cells, innate lymphoid cells) and adaptive (T and B cells) immune cells. In this regard,
characteristics of the resting (before AIT) Th2 cells of allergic patients and early changes
occurring in this population within the course of AIT could ultimately predict therapeutic
outcome.
The aim of this project is to develop a systems biology strategy to quantitatively predict
the response potential of activated Th2 (T-helper type 2) cells from resting Th2 cells of
allergic patients undergoing allergen desensitization treatment. The investigators plan to
analyze the transcriptome of their cells at different timepoints throughout the course of AIT
and to infer networks of gene expression that will allow us to determine key prognostic
factors for AIT responsiveness and immune tolerance induction. In parallel to Th2 cells, the
investigators will study the roles and subpopulations of NK cells, as the role of these
subsets in allergy is still largely unknown. Additionally, as the gut microbiota is known to
be associated and interacting with the immune system, the investigators will seize the
opportunity to collect microbiota samples of patients undergoing AIT to assess changes that
might occur during desensitization. The completion of this study will allow us i) to identify
potential biomarkers that might ultimately be used to predict therapy outcome or to refine
and adapt therapy to a patient's features ii) to monitor the changes occurring in NK cells
from patients exposed to desensitization procedures, iii) to study the gut microbiota of
allergic patients and explore potential microbiota predictive biomarkers (part of the study
performed at IBBL). This study stands as a proof-of-concept study to start a future larger
cohort, since the discovery of new biomarkers/features could open up new avenues to
understand other disorders linked to immune dysregulation and in which tolerance induction is
required, such as autoimmune diseases, transplant rejection and others.
Methodology:
Patients who will be enrolled in this study are allergic patients from the Immuno-Allergology
department of the CHL, who will anyway undergo routine antigen-specific immunotherapy for
medical reasons. These immunotherapeutic protocols are already established and used by
experienced specialists at the CHL and will not be modified for the purpose of this research
project. If patients eligible for AIT agree to participate in our research project, the
investigators will collect blood and stool samples during the course of treatment. Depending
on the allergy to be treated, there are two routine desensitization protocols: an ultra-rush
protocol is performed for insect sting desensitization, while a conventional protocol is used
for pollen desensitization. A control group without a clinical history of allergies is
recruited. Blood and stool samples are collected in the same time frames as in allergic
patients.
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