In 2025, three scientists received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for solving one of immunology's most elegant puzzles: how the body learns not to attack itself. Their discovery of regulatory T-cells and the FOXP3 gene revealed the molecular machinery that keeps the immune system in check—a breakthrough that could reshape treatment for millions living with autoimmune diseases like type 1 diabetes, multiple sclerosis, and lupus.
What Is Immune Tolerance and Why Does It Matter
Immune tolerance is the body's ability to distinguish friend from foe. Think of it as a security system that must recognize the difference between an intruder and a resident. When this system fails, the immune response turns inward—attacking pancreatic cells in type 1 diabetes, nerve coatings in multiple sclerosis, or connective tissue in lupus.
For decades, scientists knew the immune system could malfunction, but the mechanism behind self-recognition remained unclear. The 2025 Nobel laureates uncovered the cellular "peacekeepers" that prevent this friendly fire.
Who Won the 2025 Nobel Prize in Medicine
The prize was awarded to Shimon Sakaguchi, Mary E. Brunkow, and Fred Ramsdell for their discoveries concerning peripheral immune tolerance—the process by which the immune system maintains restraint outside the thymus, where immune cells mature.
Shimon Sakaguchi: Discovering the Peacekeepers
In the 1990s, Sakaguchi identified a specialized subset of T-lymphocytes called regulatory T-cells, or Tregs. These cells act like quality control inspectors on a production line—they don't build anything themselves, but they stop defective products from causing damage.
Tregs patrol the body, suppressing immune responses that target healthy tissue while allowing normal defenses against infection to proceed. His work demonstrated that removing these cells from mice triggered widespread autoimmune disease. Restoring them reversed the damage.
Mary Brunkow and Fred Ramsdell: The Genetic Blueprint
In the early 2000s, Brunkow and Ramsdell identified the FOXP3 gene—the instruction manual for producing regulatory T-cells. Mutations in FOXP3 cause a severe autoimmune syndrome called IPEX, where infants develop diabetes, inflammatory bowel disease, and skin conditions within months of birth.
Their discovery revealed that FOXP3 acts as a master switch, turning on the genes that give Tregs their suppressive power. Without functional FOXP3, the body cannot manufacture enough peacekeepers, and the immune system runs unchecked.
How Regulatory T-Cells Work
Tregs operate through multiple mechanisms, all designed to dampen immune activation. They release inhibitory molecules that calm nearby immune cells, consume signaling proteins that would otherwise fuel inflammation, and directly contact other immune cells to deliver "stand down" signals.
Imagine a thermostat that senses when the furnace is running too hot and adjusts the temperature before damage occurs. Tregs don't shut down the entire immune system—they fine-tune it, preventing overreaction while preserving the ability to fight real threats.
This precision is what makes Treg-based therapies so promising. Unlike broad immunosuppressants that leave patients vulnerable to infection, Treg treatments aim to restore balance without compromising overall immunity.
Which Diseases Could Be Transformed
The Nobel discoveries have opened pathways toward treating conditions that were once managed only with lifelong immunosuppression.
Type 1 Diabetes
In type 1 diabetes, the immune system destroys insulin-producing beta cells in the pancreas. Researchers are testing whether infusions of engineered Tregs can protect remaining beta cells or even allow transplanted cells to survive. Quell Therapeutics is partnering with AstraZeneca on Treg programs specifically for type 1 diabetes, with investigational new drug activity underway as of 2025.
Multiple Sclerosis
Multiple sclerosis occurs when immune cells attack the myelin sheath insulating nerve fibers. Early research suggests Tregs could halt this attack, preserving nerve function and slowing disease progression.
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
Lupus involves immune attacks on multiple organs—skin, joints, kidneys, and heart. Treg therapy could address the root cause rather than merely suppressing symptoms with steroids and other broad immunosuppressants.
Where Clinical Trials Stand Today
As of November 2025, no Treg cell therapy has received FDA approval for autoimmune disease in the United States. However, multiple approaches are advancing through clinical development.
Quell Therapeutics' QEL-001, an engineered CAR-Treg therapy, has progressed into the efficacy cohort of the LIBERATE Phase 1/2 trial for liver transplant patients. RegCell announced plans to move into first-in-human trials in 2025 for autoimmune hepatitis using an epigenetic reprogramming Treg platform, following the company's transition of its U.S. headquarters.
Beyond direct cell infusions, researchers are exploring alternative strategies. Rezpegaldesleukin, an IL-2 variant that stimulates the body's own Tregs, has shown encouraging midstage results for atopic dermatitis and is being tested in other autoimmune conditions. Multiple companies and academic groups are working on polyclonal Treg infusions, CAR-Treg designs, iPSC-derived Tregs, and Treg reprogramming approaches.
What This Means for Patients
The Nobel recognition validates decades of research, but clinical availability remains years away for most conditions. Current trials focus on safety and proof-of-concept—demonstrating that Treg therapies can work in humans without causing harm.
This is not an immediate cure, but it represents a fundamental shift in how autoimmune disease could be treated. Instead of suppressing the entire immune system with steroids or biologics, future therapies may restore the body's natural regulatory mechanisms.
For now, patients should continue standard treatments while staying informed about trial opportunities. The path from Nobel Prize to clinic is measured in years, not months—but the direction is clear, and the science is sound.
The 2025 Nobel Prize honors not just a discovery, but a new way of thinking about immunity: not as a system that needs to be shut down, but as one that can be taught to recognize what belongs.


