# Development of tolerogenic dendritic cell-based immunotherapies and restorative insulin approaches to alleviate type 1 diabetes

> **NIH NIH SC1** · HOWARD UNIVERSITY · 2021 · $377,500

## Abstract

SUMMARY
Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is characterized by an inability to achieve normoglycemia due to autoimmune events
mistakenly targeting destruction of insulin-producing beta-cells of the pancreas. The major challenge of T1D is
the two-fold onslaught whereby (1) chronic autoimmunity destroys beta-cells and (2) recovery is irreversibly
lost due to the repeated chronic autoreactive attacks. Although current treatments do temperately reduce
hyperglycemia, they can inadvertently lead to significant health complications (i.e. global immunosuppressive
drugs impair natural host immunity and deregulate physiological functions and allogenic transplants are met
with acute/chronic rejection). The long-term goals of the laboratory are to directly address these challenges of
effectively alleviating T1D by developing antigen-specific tolerance to restrain autoimmune-mediated events
coupled with insulin restorative strategies to alleviate hyperglycemia. The investigations have two principal
aims to tackle this challenge: (1) engineering MHC class II-modified tolerogenic dendritic cell immunotherapies
to specifically restrain autoreactive attacks in the beta-cell compartment without impairing natural host
immunity (to pathogens or transformed cells), and (2) development of donor-derived MHC class I-matched
beta-cells seeded in novel biomaterials to restore insulin production and normalize blood glucose levels. For
the first aim,
studies will reprogram DC towards tolerogenic states by knocking out key genes responsible for
governing immunity. The approach is combined with silencing of endogenous MHC class II and replacing that
with a transgene encoding a modified MHC class II that exclusively presents beta-cell autoantigen peptides
with high affinity. Results will lead to tolerogenic DC solely presenting MHC class II-restricted beta-cell
autoantigens upon adoptive transfer in vivo, leading to restrained autoreactive T cell responses without
impairing normal host adaptive immunity. Even with success in stopping repeated autoreactive T cell attacks,
tissue damage is often irreversible in mid- and late-stages of T1D. To address this challenge, the second aim
will develop a restorative approach using donor-derived MHC class I-matched beta-cells seeded on novel
biomaterials to restore insulin production in vivo. Donor-derived beta-cells will be genetically reprogrammed to
express MHC class I matched to the recipient's haplotype; the approach will highlight the value in use of donor
tissues for restorative applications. These insulin-producing donor-derived MHC class I-matched beta-cells will
then be seeded in a novel patented biomaterial prior to implantation in the non-obese diabetic mouse model.
Success of the approach will restrain diabetes progression by restoring normoglycemia through glucose-
dependent insulin production. Findings generated from these studies will support development of innovative
and novel translational and clinical-relevant therapeutic applicatio...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10189649
- **Project number:** 5SC1GM127207-04
- **Recipient organization:** HOWARD UNIVERSITY
- **Principal Investigator:** Michael W Lipscomb
- **Activity code:** SC1 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2021
- **Award amount:** $377,500
- **Award type:** 5
- **Project period:** 2018-07-01 → 2022-04-30

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10189649

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10189649, Development of tolerogenic dendritic cell-based immunotherapies and restorative insulin approaches to alleviate type 1 diabetes (5SC1GM127207-04). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-24 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10189649. Licensed CC0.

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