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1.
Reduced-intensity stem cell transplantation (RIST) has opened a new era for hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). It was developed based on the knowledge that graft-versus-tumor (GVT) effect is the main anti-tumor effect in allogeneic HSCT. Because RIST is associated with less morbidity and mortality, it can be applied to many patients who could not undergo conventional HSCT. Experiences in the last decade clarified many issues related to RIST. For example, graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) in RIST may differ in character compared to conventional HSCT. Also, it is now known that intensity of conditioning is important in disease control, and the optimal regimens may be different for each disease or for each disease status. There are still many unsolved questions, and large prospective randomized trials are necessary to resolve these.  相似文献   

2.
Non-myeloablative allogeneic haematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) is rarely achievable clinically, except where donor cells have selective advantages. Murine non-myeloablative conditioning regimens have limited clinical success, partly through use of clinically unachievable cell doses or strain combinations permitting allograft acceptance using immunosuppression alone. We found that reducing busulfan conditioning in murine syngeneic HSCT, increases bone marrow (BM):blood SDF-1 ratio and total donor cells homing to BM, but reduces the proportion of donor cells engrafting. Despite this, syngeneic engraftment is achievable with non-myeloablative busulfan (25 mg/kg) and higher cell doses induce increased chimerism. Therefore we investigated regimens promoting initial donor cell engraftment in the major histocompatibility complex barrier mismatched CBA to C57BL/6 allo-transplant model. This requires full myeloablation and immunosuppression with non-depleting anti-CD4/CD8 blocking antibodies to achieve engraftment of low cell doses, and rejects with reduced intensity conditioning (≤75 mg/kg busulfan). We compared increased antibody treatment, G-CSF, niche disruption and high cell dose, using reduced intensity busulfan and CD4/8 blockade in this model. Most treatments increased initial donor engraftment, but only addition of co-stimulatory blockade permitted long-term engraftment with reduced intensity or non-myeloablative conditioning, suggesting that signal 1 and 2 T-cell blockade is more important than early BM niche engraftment for transplant success.  相似文献   

3.
Artemis is a mammalian protein, the absence of which results in SCID in Athabascan-speaking Native Americans (SCIDA). This novel protein has been implicated in DNA double-strand break repair and V(D)J recombination. We have cloned the Artemis murine counterpart, mArt, and generated a mouse with a targeted disruption of mArt. Artemis-deficient mice show a similar T-B- NK+ immunodeficiency phenotype, and carry a profound impairment in coding joint rearrangement, while retaining intact signal ends and close to normal signal joint formation. mArt-/- embryonic fibroblasts show increased sensitivity to ionizing radiation. Hemopoietic stem cell (HSC) transplantation using 500-5000 enriched congenic, but not allogeneic mismatched HSC corrected the T cell and partially corrected the B cell defect. Large numbers (40,000) of allogeneic mismatched HSC or pretreatment with 300 cGy of radiation overcame graft resistance, resulting in limited B cell engraftment. Our results suggest that the V(D)J and DNA repair defects seen in this mArt-/- mouse model are comparable to those in humans with Artemis deficiency, and that the recovery of immunity following HSC transplantation favors T rather than B cell reconstitution, consistent with what is seen in children with this form of SCID.  相似文献   

4.
Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) has been widely used for the treatment of hematologi-cal malignancies and congenital deficiencies. In recent years, non-myeloablative and reduced-intensity condi-tioning regimens have significantly expanded t…  相似文献   

5.
The sensitivity of myeloma cells to high dose chemotherapy has led to the use of allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) as a therapeutic modality in this disease. In addition to providing more effective chemotherapy, the transplantation of allogeneic stem cells also initiates the development of an allogeneic immune response directed against residual myeloma cells. Direct evidence for a graft vs. myeloma (GVM) effect is provided by the ability of donor lymphocyte infusion (DLI) to induce significant responses in 30-50% of patients with myeloma who have relapsed after allogeneic HSCT. Nevertheless, allogeneic stem cell transplantation is also associated with a high incidence of transplant related toxicities, including regimen-related toxicities, graft vs. host disease (GVHD) and opportunistic infections. DLI has been shown to enhance immune reconstitution after allogeneic HSCT in addition to inducing a GVM response. Current efforts are directed at reducing the toxicities associated with allogeneic HSCT, identification of the target antigens of GVM and the development of new strategies to selectively enhance the immune response to myeloma cells.  相似文献   

6.
Chitteti BR  Liu Y  Srour EF 《PloS one》2011,6(3):e17498
It is well established that in adults, long-term repopulating hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) are mitotically quiescent cells that reside in specialized bone marrow (BM) niches that maintain the dormancy of HSC. Our laboratory demonstrated that the engraftment potential of human HSC (CD34(+) cells) from BM and mobilized peripheral blood (MPB) is restricted to cells in the G0 phase of cell cycle but that in the case of umbilical cord blood (UCB) -derived CD34(+) cells, cell cycle status is not a determining factor in the ability of these cells to engraft and sustain hematopoiesis. We used this distinct in vivo behavior of CD34(+) cells from these tissues to identify genes associated with the engraftment potential of human HSC. CD34(+) cells from BM, MPB, and UCB were fractionated into G0 and G1 phases of cell cycle and subjected in parallel to microarray and proteomic analyses. A total of 484 target genes were identified to be associated with engraftment potential of HSC. System biology modeling indicated that the top four signaling pathways associated with these genes are Integrin signaling, p53 signaling, cytotoxic T lymphocyte-mediated apoptosis, and Myc mediated apoptosis signaling. Our data suggest that a continuum of functions of hematopoietic cells directly associated with cell cycle progression may play a major role in governing the engraftment potential of stem cells. While proteomic analysis identified a total of 646 proteins in analyzed samples, a very limited overlap between genomic and proteomic data was observed. These data provide a new insight into the genetic control of engraftment of human HSC from distinct tissues and suggest that mitotic quiescence may not be the requisite characteristic of engrafting stem cells, but instead may be the physiologic status conducive to the expression of genetic elements favoring engraftment.  相似文献   

7.
Background aimsTransplantation of allogeneic hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) within the framework of hematologic oncology or inherited diseases may be associated with complications such as engraftment failure and long-term pancytopenia. HSC engraftment can be improved, for example by co-transplantation with mesenchymal stem cells (MSC). Recently, a new multipotent MSC line from umbilical cord blood, unrestricted somatic stem cells (USSC), has been described. It was demonstrated that USSC significantly support proliferation of HSC in an in vitro feeder layer assay.MethodsA NOD/SCID mouse model was used to assess the effect of USSC on co-transplanted CD34+ cells and look for the fate of transplanted USSC. The migration potential of USSC was studied in a Boyden chamber migration assay and in vivo. Quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) for CXCR4, CD44, LFA1, CD62L, VLA4, RAC2, VLA5A and RAC1 were performed. NMR1 nu/nu mice were used for a tumorigenicity test.ResultsAfter 4 weeks, homing of human cells (CD45+) to the bone marrow of NOD/SCID mice was significantly increased in mice co-transplanted with CD34+ cells and USSC (median 30.9%, range 7–50%) compared with the CD34+ cell-only control group (median 5.9%, range 3–10%; P = 0.004). Homing of USSC could not be shown in the bone marrow. A cell–cell contact was not required for the graft enhancing effect of USSC. An in vivo tumorigenicity assay showed no tumorigenic potential of USSC.ConclusionsThis pre-clinical study clearly shows that USSC have an enhancing effect on engraftment of human CD34+ cells. USSC are a safe graft adjunct.  相似文献   

8.
E D Zanjani  F R Mackintosh  M R Harrison 《Blood cells》1991,17(2):349-63; discussion 364-6
Bone marrow transplantation to reconstitute defective hematopoietic cell lines in children with congenital defects is limited by donor availability, graft rejection, and graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). These problems can be eliminated by transplanting normal preimmune fetal hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) into an unrelated preimmune fetal recipient. We show here that injections of allogeneic fetal stem cells into preimmune fetal lambs and monkeys result in long-term stable hematopoietic chimerism. HSCs harvested from the livers of preimmune fetal sheep and monkeys when injected into the peritoneal cavity of young unrelated fetal sheep and monkey recipients results in stable, long-term postnatal hematopoietic chimerism involving lymphoid, erythroid, and myeloid cells of donor origin. Donor cell engraftment was achieved without the use of cytoablative procedures and without the development of GVHD.  相似文献   

9.
Joo YD  Lee WS  Won HJ  Lee SM  Choi JH  Lee SM  Han KH  Park SG  Choi IW  Seo SK 《Cytokine》2011,54(1):36-42
Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) mobilized peripheral blood stem cells (PBSCs) are more frequently used as the cellular source in allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) than bone marrow stem cells (BMSCs) because they promote more rapid engraftment and immune reconstitution. However, the underlying mechanism for this is not fully understood. Here, we investigated the role of Toll-like receptor 2 (TLR2) on PBSCs in promoting rapid engraftment after allogeneic HSCT. We found that PBSCs highly expressed TLR2 in comparison to BMSCs, and TLR2 was directly induced by G-CSF signaling. Treatment with the TLR2 ligand, Pam(3)CSK(4) (PAM), more efficiently induced myeloid differentiation of PBSCs than BMSCs. Similarly, endogenous TLR2 ligands from the serum of recipients of allogeneic transplantation more rapidly stimulated myeloid differentiation of PBSCs compared with BMSCs. PAM treatment of TLR2(-/-) syngeneic recipient mice transplanted with PBSCs resulted in significantly elevated numbers of PBSC-derived myeloid cells and spleen colony formation compared with controls. Our results demonstrate that TLR2 signaling in PBSCs correlates with their ability to rapidly differentiate into myeloid cells, resulting in improved engraftment. Thus, TLR2 may be a novel target for increasing the efficiency of allogeneic HSCT by overcoming engraftment failure or delayed engraftment.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Non-myeloablative regimens for host conditioning have been widely used in clinical hematopoietic stem cell transplantation due to their reduced toxicity on the recipients. But a milder conditioning regimen may require a higher engrafting ability of donor stem cells in competing with endogenous stem cells. Thus, new strategies for enhancing the competitiveness of donor stem cells in non-myeloablative recipients would have important implications for current clinical stem cell transplantation. It is known that the absence of p18 INK4C (p18) gene can enhance the self-renewal potential of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). We applied the approach of competitive bone marrow transplantation to evaluate the impact of p18 gene deletion on long-term engraftment of HSCs in sublethally irradiated hosts. We found that p18 −/− HSCs had a significant advantage over wild-type HSCs during long-term engraftment in the mouse recipients that received a sub-lethal irradiation (5-Gy). The engraftment efficiency of p18 −/− HSCs in the sub-lethally irradiated recipients was similar to that in the lethally irradiated (10-Gy) recipients. Our current study demonstrates that enhanced engraftment of donor HSCs in the absence of p18 does not strictly depend on the dose of irradiation used for host conditioning. Therefore, p18 might serve as a potential drug target for increasing the efficacy of stem cell transplant in the patients that are preconditioned with either a myeloablative or non-myeloablative regimen.  相似文献   

12.
The lack of understanding of the interplay between hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) and the immune system has severely hampered the stem cell research and practice of transplantation. Major problems for allogeneic transplantation include low levels of donor engraftment and high risks of graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). Transplantation of purified allogeneic HSCs diminishes the risk of GVHD but results in decreased engraftment. Here we show that ex?vivo expanded mouse HSCs efficiently overcame the major histocompatibility complex barrier and repopulated allogeneic-recipient mice. An 8-day expansion culture led to a 40-fold increase of the allograft ability of HSCs. Both increased numbers of HSCs and culture-induced elevation of expression of the immune inhibitor CD274 (B7-H1 or PD-L1) on the surface of HSCs contributed to the enhancement. Our study indicates the great potential of utilizing ex?vivo expanded HSCs for allogeneic transplantation and suggests that the immune privilege of HSCs can be modulated.  相似文献   

13.
A major challenge in allogeneic bone marrow (BM) transplantation is overcoming engraftment resistance to avoid the clinical problem of graft rejection. Identifying gene pathways that regulate BM engraftment may reveal molecular targets for overcoming engraftment barriers. Previously, we developed a mouse model of BM transplantation that utilizes recipient conditioning with non-myeloablative total body irradiation (TBI). We defined TBI doses that lead to graft rejection, that conversely are permissive for engraftment, and mouse strain variation with regards to the permissive TBI dose. We now report gene expression analysis, using Agilent Mouse 8x60K microarrays, in spleens of mice conditioned with varied TBI doses for correlation to the expected engraftment phenotype. The spleens of mice given engrafting doses of TBI, compared with non-engrafting TBI doses, demonstrated substantially broader gene expression changes, significant at the multiple testing-corrected P <0.05 level and with fold change ≥2. Functional analysis revealed significant enrichment for a down-regulated canonical pathway involving B-cell development. Genes enriched in this pathway suggest that suppressing donor antigen processing and presentation may be pivotal effects conferred by TBI to enable engraftment. Regardless of TBI dose and recipient mouse strain, pervasive genomic changes related to inflammation was observed and reflected by significant enrichment for canonical pathways and association with upstream regulators. These gene expression changes suggest that macrophage and complement pathways may be targeted to overcome engraftment barriers. These exploratory results highlight gene pathways that may be important in mediating BM engraftment resistance.  相似文献   

14.
The molecular events that regulate engraftment and mobilization of hematopoietic stem cells and progenitors (HSC/Ps) are still incompletely defined. We have examined the role of the Rho GTPases Rac1 and Rac2 in HSC engraftment and mobilization. Rac1, but not the hematopoietic-specific Rac2, is required for the engraftment phase of hematopoietic reconstitution, because Rac1(-/-) HSCs did not rescue in vivo hematopoiesis after transplantation, but deletion of Rac1 after engraftment did not impair steady-state hematopoiesis. Rac1(-/-) HSC/Ps showed impaired spatial localization to the endosteum but near-normal homing to the medullary cavity in vivo. Interaction with the bone marrow microenvironment in vitro was markedly altered. Whereas post-engraftment deletion of Rac1 alone did not impair hematopoiesis, deficiency of both Rac1 and Rac2 led to massive mobilization of HSCs from the marrow associated with ineffective hematopoiesis and intense selection for Rac-expressing HSCs. This mobilization was reversible by re-expression of Rac1. In addition, a rationally designed, reversible small-molecule inhibitor of Rac activation led to transient mobilization of engraftable HSC/Ps. Rac proteins thus differentially regulate engraftment and mobilization phenotypes, suggesting that these biological processes and steady-state hematopoiesis are biochemically separable and that Rac proteins may be important molecular targets for stem cell modification.  相似文献   

15.
Non-myeloablative regimens for host conditioning have been widely used in clinical hematopoietic stem cell transplantation due to their reduced toxicity on the recipients. But a milder conditioning regimen may require a higher engrafting ability of donor stem cells in competing with endogenous stem cells. Thus, new strategies for enhancing the competitiveness of donor stem cells in non-myeloablative recipients would have important implications for current clinical stem cell transplantation. It is known that the absence of p18 INK4C (p18) gene can enhance the self-renewal potential of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). We applied the approach of competitive bone marrow transplantation to evaluate the impact of p18 gene deletion on long-term engraftment of HSCs in sublethally irradiated hosts. We found that p18 −/− HSCs had a significant advantage over wild-type HSCs during long-term engraftment in the mouse recipients that received a sub-lethal irradiation (5-Gy). The engraftment efficiency of p18 −/− HSCs in the sub-lethally irradiated recipients was similar to that in the lethally irradiated (10-Gy) recipients. Our current study demonstrates that enhanced engraftment of donor HSCs in the absence of p18 does not strictly depend on the dose of irradiation used for host conditioning. Therefore, p18 might serve as a potential drug target for increasing the efficacy of stem cell transplant in the patients that are preconditioned with either a myeloablative or non-myeloablative regimen.  相似文献   

16.
Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT) has been increasingly used for the treatment of both neoplastic and non-neoplastic disorders. However, serious obstacles currently limit the efficacy and thus more extensive use of BMT. These obstacles include: graft-versus-host disease (GVHD), relapse from the original tumor, and susceptibility of patients to opportunistic infections due to the immunosuppressive effects of the conditioning regimen.Overcoming these obstacles is complicated by dual outcome of existing regimens; attempts to reduce GVHD by depleting T cells from the graft, result in increased rates of tumor relapse and failure of engraftment. On the other hand, efforts to increase graft-versus-tumor (GVT) effects of the transplant also promote GVHD. In this review, the use of natural killer (NK) cells to overcome some of these obstacles of allogeneic BMT is evaluated. Adoptive immunotherapy using NK cells after allogeneic BMT has several potential advantages. First, NK cells can promote hematopoiesis and therefore engraftment by production of hematopoietic growth factors. Second, NK cells have been shown to prevent the incidence and severity of GVHD. This has been shown to be at least partially due to TGF-beta, an immunosuppressive cytokine. Third, NK cells have been shown to augment numerous anti-tumor effects in animals after BMT suggesting a vital role of NK cells in mediating GVT effects. Finally, NK cells have been demonstrated to affect B cell recovery and function in mice. Therefore, understanding the mechanisms of beneficial effects of NK cells after BMT may lead to significant increases in the efficacy of this procedure.  相似文献   

17.
A significant number of nonmalignant, progressive childhood disorders respond to bone marrow transplantation (BMT). Toxic myeloablative pretreatment regimens, graft failure, and graft-vs-host disease complicate the utility of BMT for neonatal treatment. We recently demonstrated high-dose BMT in neonatal animals enables chimeric engraftment without toxic myeloablation. Reagents that block T cell costimulation (anti-CD40L mAb and/or CTLA-4Ig) establish tolerant allogeneic engraftment in adult recipients. Donor lymphocyte infusion (DLI) re-establishes failing grafts and treats malignant relapse via a graft-vs-leukemia response. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that combining these approaches would allow tolerant allogeneic engraftment devoid of myeloablation in neonatal normal and mutant mice with lysosomal storage disease. Tolerant chimeric allogeneic engraftment was achieved before DLI only in the presence of both anti-CD40L mAb and CTLA-4Ig. DLI amplified allografts to full donor engraftment long-term. DLI-treated mice either maintained long-term tolerance or developed late-onset chronic graft-vs-host disease. This combinatorial approach provides a nontoxic method to establish tolerant allogeneic engraftment for treatment of progressive childhood diseases.  相似文献   

18.
Allogeneic bone marrow or blood stem call transplantation (BMT) represents an important therapeutic tool for the treatment of otherwise incurable malignant and non-malignant diseases. Until recently, autologous and allogeneic bone marrow and mobilized blood stem cell transplantations were used primarily to replace malignant, genetically abnormal or deficient immunohematopoietic compartments, and therefore highly toxic myeloablative regimens were considered to be mandatory for the effective eradication of all undesirable host-derived hematopoietic elements. Our preclinical and ongoing clinical studies have indicated that much more effective eradication of the host immunohematopoietic system cells can be achieved by adoptive allogeneic cell therapy with donor lymphocyte infusion following BMT. Thus, eradication of blood cancer cells, especially in patients with chronic myeloid leukemia and, less frequently, in patients with other hematologic malignancies, can frequently be accomplished despite the complete resistance of such tumor cells to maximally tolerated doses of chemoradiotherapy. Our cumulative experience has suggested that graft-vs.-leukemia (GVL) effects might be a useful tool for the eradication of otherwise resistant tumor cells of host origin. Based on the cumulative clinical experience and experimental data in animal models of human diseases, it appears that the induction of host-vs.-graft tolerance as an initial step may allow the durable engraftment of donor immunocompetent lymphocytes, which may be used for the induction of effective biologic warfare against host-type immunohematopoietic cells that need to be replaced, including malignant, genetically abnormal or self-reactive cells. Based on the aforementioned rationale, we speculated that the therapeutic benefit of BMT may be improved by using safer conditioning as part of the transplant procedure, with the goal being to induce host-vs.-graft tolerance to enable subsequent induction of GVL, possibly graft-vs.-tumor or even graft-vs.-autoimmunity effects, rather than attempting to eliminate host cells with hazardous myeloablative chemoradiotherapy. This hypothesis suggested that effective BMT procedures could be accomplished without lethal conditioning of the host, using new well-tolerated non-myeloablative regimens, thus possibly minimizing immediate and late side-effects related to the myeloablative procedures until recently considered to be mandatory for the conditioning of BMT recipients. Recent clinical data presented in this review suggest that effective BMT procedures may be accomplished with well-tolerated non-myeloablative stem cell transplantation (NST) regimens, with no major toxicity. Thus, new NST approaches may offer the feasibility of safer BMT procedures for a large spectrum of clinical indications in children and elderly individuals, without lower or upper age limits, while minimizing procedure-related toxicity and mortality. Taken together, our data suggest that high-dose chemotherapy and radiation therapy may be successfully replaced by a more effective biologic tool, alloreactive donor lymphocytes, thus setting the stage for innovative therapeutic procedures for safer and more effective treatment of patients in need of BMT.  相似文献   

19.
Ex vivo expansion of umbilical cord blood   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The efficacy of cord blood (CB) transplantation is limited by the low cell dose available. Low cell doses at transplant are correlated with delayed engraftment, prolonged neutropenia and thrombocytopenia and elevated risk of graft failure. To potentially improve the efficacy of CB transplantation, approaches have been taken to increase the cell dose available. One approach is the transplantation of multiple cord units, another the use of ex vivo expansion. Evidence for a functional and phenotypic heterogeneity exists within the HSC population and one concern associated with ex vivo expansion is that the expansion of lower 'quality' hematopoietic progenitor cells (HPC) occurs at the expense of higher 'quality' HPC, thereby impacting the reserve of the graft. There is evidence that this is a valid concern while other evidence suggests that higher quality HPC are preserved and not exhausted. Currently, ex vivo expansion processes include: (1) liquid expansion: CD34+ or CD133+ cells are selected and cultured in medium containing factors targeting the proliferation and self-renewal of primitive hematopoietic progenitors; (2) co-culture expansion: unmanipulated CB cells are cultured with stromal components of the hematopoietic microenvironment, specifically mesenchymal stem cells (MSC), in medium containing growth factors; and (3) continuous perfusion: CB HPC are cultured with growth factors in 'bioreactors' rather than in static cultures. These approaches are discussed. Ultimately, the goal of ex vivo expansion is to increase the available dose of the CB cells responsible for successful engraftment, thereby reducing the time to engraftment and reducing the risk of graft failure.  相似文献   

20.
In high-risk acute leukemia patients, a 10-fold increase in the dose of extensively T-cell-depleted hematopoietic stem cells ensures sustained full-donor engraftment of one-haplotype-mismatched transplants without graft-vs.-host disease. Since our first successful pilot study, which exploited the principle of a megadose stem cell transplant, our efforts have concentrated on developing new conditioning regimens, optimizing graft processing and improving the post-transplant immunologic recovery. The results so far achieved in more than 100 high-risk acute leukemia patients show that haploidentical transplantation is now a clinical reality. Because virtually all patients in need of a hematopoietic stem cell transplant have a full-haplotype-mismatched family donor, a T-cell-depleted mismatched transplant can be offered with curative intent, thus extending allogeneic transplantation procedures to virtually all candidates.  相似文献   

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