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1.
The retroviral-mediated transfer of a suicide gene into donor T cells has been proposed as a method to control alloreactivity after hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) transplantation. Gene-modified cells (GMC) may be infused into the patient either at the time of transplantation, together with a T-cell depleted HSC graft, or after transplantation, as a donor lymphocyte infusion. Administration of a so-called pro-drug activating the "suicide" mechanism only after occurrence of GvHD should selectively destroy the alloreactive GMC in vivo, eventually leading to GvHD abrogation. Although phase I-II clinical trials provided vital proof of the principle of GvHD control by suicide-gene therapy, this approach is still suboptimal. Indeed, current gene transfer strategies rely on gamma-retroviral vectors that require extensive T-cell activation and expansion for efficient transduction. Both in vitro and in vivo studies have shown that the activation, cell expansion, transduction and selection steps lead to TCR repertoire alterations and impairment of crucial T-cell functions, such as alloreactivity and anti-EBV reactivity. Thus, improvements of the suicide-gene transfer processes are required in order to preserve T-cell function. This could be achieved by using CD3/CD28 co-stimulation and immunomagnetic selection of transduced cells. In future clinical trials, lentiviral vectors may prove to be a better alternative to gamma-retroviral-mediated gene transfer, by reducing the need for prolonged ex vivo culture.  相似文献   

2.
Purpose Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (AlloBMT) can be curative for patients with leukemia. The most important anti-leukemic effect may be mediated by the T-cells contained within the graft; however, the allogeneic T-cells may also give rise to graft-vs-host disease (GVHD). One way to control GVHD might be to transduce the donor T-cells with a drug-inducible suicide gene. If a retrovirus vector is to be used for this transduction, activation of the T-cells is required for integration of the transgene to occur. The activation protocol should ensure expansion of a broad repertoire of donor T-cells. Notably, T-cells specific for herpes virus family antigens are important for adoptive immunoprotection.Methods To define optimal activation conditions for retrovirus-mediated suicide gene transduction of donor T-cells, we examined the repertoire of CD8+ T-cells in general, and Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) specific T-cells in particular, following two different activation and expansion procedures.Results We found that repeated CD3/CD28 stimulation resulted in a high level of activation-induced T-cell death, affecting in vivo expanded clones, some of which were specific for EBV, in particular. In contrast, initial CD3/CD28 activation followed by proliferation in interleukin-2 lead to expansion of EBV-specific clones over and above the expansion observed for CD8+ T-cells in general.Conclusion These results should impact on protocols for ex vivo activation of T-cells prior to suicide gene transduction.  相似文献   

3.

Background

End stage renal disease (ESRD) is associated with defective T-cell mediated immunity. A diverse T-cell receptor (TCR) Vβ repertoire is central to effective T-cell mediated immune responses to foreign antigens. In this study, the effect of ESRD on TCR Vβ repertoire was assessed.

Results

A higher proportion of ESRD patients (68.9 %) had a skewed TCR Vβ repertoire compared to age and cytomegalovirus (CMV) – IgG serostatus matched healthy individuals (31.4 %, P?<?0.001). Age, CMV serostatus and ESRD were independently associated with an increase in shifting of the TCR Vβ repertoire. More differentiated CD8+ T cells were observed in young ESRD patients with a shifted TCR Vβ repertoire. CD31-expressing naive T cells and relative telomere length of T cells were not significantly related to TCR Vβ skewing.

Conclusions

ESRD significantly skewed the TCR Vβ repertoire particularly in the elderly population, which may contribute to the uremia-associated defect in T-cell mediated immunity.
  相似文献   

4.
Purpose: The CD44 v7/8 splice variant that is frequently expressed in cervical carcinoma and rarely expressed in normal tissues displays promising properties as a target antigen for cancer immune therapy. In this study, cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) were genetically engineered to gain CD44v7/8 target specificity. Methods: Clone 96 (CI96), an established murine cytotoxic T-cell line, and naïve murine T cells were retrovirally transduced with a fusion gene construct encoding for the single chain fragment scFv of the monoclonal antibody VFF17 and for the chain of the T-cell receptor (TCR). The therapeutic potential of genetically engineered T cells was tested in vitro and in vivo. Results: Surface expression of the chimeric TCR on infected Cl96 and naïve T cells was shown by FACS analysis. CD44v7/8-positive target cells were efficiently lysed by transduced Cl96 and naïve T cells, demonstrating the functionality and specificity of the chimeric TCR. In a xenograft BALB/c mouse model, efficient growth retardation of CD44v7/8-positive tumours was mediated by genetically engineered Cl96(VFF17)cyYZ cells. Conclusions: We were able to reprogramme the target specificity of recombinant Cl96 and naïve CTLs resulting in efficient cytolysis of CD44v7/8-positive cervical cancer cells. High transduction rates and the specific cytolysis of CD44v7/8-redirected CTLs are promising tools for an immune gene therapy approach for advanced cervical cancer.Abbreviations Ab Antibody - CTL Cytolytic T lymphocyte - mAb Monoclonal antibody - TCR T-cell receptor  相似文献   

5.
Background aimsTo reduce the risk of graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) after allogeneic stem cell transplantation (alloSCT), T-cell depletion (TCD) of grafts can be performed by the addition of alemtuzumab (ALT) “to the bag” (in vitro) before transplantation. In this prospective study, the authors analyzed the effect of in vitro incubation with 20 mg ALT on the composition of grafts prior to graft infusion. Furthermore, the authors assessed whether graft composition at the moment of infusion was predictive for T-cell reconstitution and development of GVHD early after TCD alloSCT.MethodsSixty granulocyte colony-stimulating factor-mobilized stem cell grafts were obtained from ≥9/10 HLA-matched related and unrelated donors. The composition of the grafts was analyzed by flow cytometry before and after in vitro incubation with ALT. T-cell reconstitution and incidence of severe GVHD were monitored until 12 weeks after transplantation.ResultsIn vitro incubation of grafts with 20 mg ALT resulted in an initial median depletion efficiency of T-cell receptor (TCR) α/β T cells of 96.7% (range, 63.5–99.8%), followed by subsequent depletion in vivo. Graft volumes and absolute leukocyte counts of grafts before the addition of ALT were not predictive for the efficiency of TCR α/β T-cell depletion. CD4pos T cells were depleted more efficiently than CD8pos T cells, and naive and regulatory T cells were depleted more efficiently than memory and effector T cells. This differential depletion of T-cell subsets was in line with their reported differential CD52 expression. In vitro depletion efficiencies and absolute numbers of (naive) TCR α/β T cells in the grafts after ALT incubation were not predictive for T-cell reconstitution or development of GVHD post- alloSCT.ConclusionsThe addition of ALT to the bag is an easy, fast and generally applicable strategy to prevent GVHD in patients receiving alloSCT after myeloablative or non-myeloablative conditioning because of the efficient differential depletion of donor-derived lymphocytes and T cells.  相似文献   

6.
BACKGROUND: Hepatitis C infection induces an acute and chronic liver inflammation that may lead to cirrhosis, liver failure, or hepatocarcinoma. Since the role of alphabeta T lymphocytes in hepatitis C virus (HCV) immunopathology has been analyzed extensively, we investigated the distribution and functional activation of gammadelta T cell subsets in chronically HCV-infected patients. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Blood samples and liver biopsies from 35 patients with compensated chronic HCV infection were compared in terms of T cell subset distribution, expression of activation markers, gammadelta T cell receptor (TCR) repertoire, and pattern of cytokine production. Moreover, we analyzed whether these immunological parameters were associated with other clinical observations (plasma viremia, ALT levels, Ishak index). RESULTS: Differing from peripheral blood distribution, a specific compartmentalization of Vdelta1 T cells (p < 0.001) was observed in the liver of HCV patients. These cells represented a relevant fraction of intrahepatic T lymphocytes (1.8-8.7%) and expressed the memory/effector phenotype (CD62-L- CD45-RO+CD95+). This phenotype was consistent with selective homing upon antigen recognition. Mitogenic stimulation of Vdelta1 + T lymphocytes recruited in the liver revealed the T helper cell type 1 (Th1) pattern of cytokine secretion. Interestingly, the frequency of interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma)-producing Vdelta1 T cells was associated with an higher degree of liver necroinflammation, measured by the Ishak index. Finally, the T-cell repertoire analysis revealed the absence of Vgamma selection in the TCR repertoire of intrahepatic Vdelta1 T cells. CONCLUSIONS: gammadelta T cell distribution in the peripheral blood differs from the Vdelta1 T cell subset because it is policlonally activated and recruited in the liver of chronic HCV-infected patients. During HCV-infection, this T cell subset may release Th1 cytokines and contribute to the necroinflammatory liver disease.  相似文献   

7.
Although the T-cell receptor for antigen (TCR) lacks intrinsic kinase activity, stimulation of this receptor induces tyrosine phosphorylation of multiple substrates. In contrast, the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) has intrinsic cytoplasmic tyrosine kinase catalytic activity that is activated upon EGF binding. To compare the functional effects of the TCR and a transmembrane protein tyrosine kinase (PTK), we used retrovirus-mediated gene transduction to express the human c-erbB proto-oncogene, encoding the EGFR, in a murine T-cell hybridoma. Tyrosine phosphorylation induced by the TCR and the EGFR occurred on substrates unique to each receptor as well as on several shared substrates, including the zeta chain of the TCR. Stimulation of the EGFR induced calcium ion flux in these cells, suggesting that the heterologous tyrosine kinase can couple to the T-cell phospholipase signal transduction pathway, but this stimulus did not lead to interleukin 2 production. However, EGF stimulation of transduced cells significantly enhanced TCR signaling, as assessed by interleukin 2 production, indicating that cross talk can occur between the TCR and a transmembrane PTK.  相似文献   

8.

Background

The SIV/rhesus macaque model for HIV/AIDS is a powerful system for examining the contribution of T cells in the control of AIDS viruses. To better our understanding of CD8+ T-cell control of SIV replication in CD4+ T cells, we asked whether TCRs isolated from rhesus macaque CD8+ T-cell clones that exhibited varying abilities to suppress SIV replication could convey their suppressive properties to CD8+ T cells obtained from an uninfected/unvaccinated animal.

Principal Findings

We transferred SIV-specific TCR genes isolated from rhesus macaque CD8+ T-cell clones with varying abilities to suppress SIV replication in vitro into CD8+ T cells obtained from an uninfected animal by retroviral transduction. After sorting and expansion, transduced CD8+ T-cell lines were obtained that specifically bound their cognate SIV tetramer. These cell lines displayed appropriate effector function and specificity, expressing intracellular IFNγ upon peptide stimulation. Importantly, the SIV suppression properties of the transduced cell lines mirrored those of the original TCR donor clones: cell lines expressing TCRs transferred from highly suppressive clones effectively reduced wild-type SIV replication, while expression of a non-suppressing TCR failed to reduce the spread of virus. However, all TCRs were able to suppress the replication of an SIV mutant that did not downregulate MHC-I, recapitulating the properties of their donor clones.

Conclusions

Our results show that antigen-specific SIV suppression can be transferred between allogenic T cells simply by TCR gene transfer. This advance provides a platform for examining the contributions of TCRs versus the intrinsic effector characteristics of T-cell clones in virus suppression. Additionally, this approach can be applied to develop non-human primate models to evaluate adoptive T-cell transfer therapy for AIDS and other diseases.  相似文献   

9.
10.
After initiation of antiretroviral therapy (ART), HIV loads and frequencies of HIV epitope-specific immune responses decrease. A diverse virus-specific T cell receptor (TCR) repertoire allows the host to respond to viral epitope diversity, but the effect of antigen reduction as a result of ART on the TCR repertoire of epitope-specific CD8(+) T cell populations has not been well defined. We determined the TCR repertoires of 14 HIV-specific CD8(+) T cell responses from 8 HIV-positive individuals before and after initiation of ART. We used multiparameter flow cytometry to measure the distribution of memory T cell subsets and the surface expression of PD-1 on T cell populations and T cell clonotypes within epitope-specific responses from these individuals. Post-ART, we noted decreases in the frequency of circulating epitope-specific T cells (P = 0.02), decreases in the number of T-cell clonotypes found within epitope-specific T cell receptor repertoires (P = 0.024), and an overall reduction in the amino acid diversity within these responses (P < 0.0001). Despite this narrowing of the T cell response to HIV, the overall hierarchy of dominant T cell receptor clonotypes remained stable compared to that pre-ART. CD8(+) T cells underwent redistributions in memory phenotypes and a reduction in CD38 and PD-1 expression post-ART. Despite extensive remodeling at the structural and phenotypic levels, PD-1 was expressed at higher levels on dominant clonotypes within epitope-specific responses before and after initiation of ART. These data suggest that the antigen burden may maintain TCR diversity and that dominant clonotypes are sensitive to antigen even after dramatic reductions after initiation of ART.  相似文献   

11.
HIV's considerable capacity to vary its HLA-I-restricted peptide antigens allows it to escape from host cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs). Nevertheless, therapeutics able to target HLA-I-associated antigens, with specificity for the spectrum of preferred CTL escape mutants, could prove effective. Here we use phage display to isolate and enhance a T-cell antigen receptor (TCR) originating from a CTL line derived from an infected person and specific for the immunodominant HLA-A(*)02-restricted, HIVgag-specific peptide SLYNTVATL (SL9). High-affinity (K(D) < 400 pM) TCRs were produced that bound with a half-life in excess of 2.5 h, retained specificity, targeted HIV-infected cells and recognized all common escape variants of this epitope. CD8 T cells transduced with this supraphysiologic TCR produced a greater range of soluble factors and more interleukin-2 than those transduced with natural SL9-specific TCR, and they effectively controlled wild-type and mutant strains of HIV at effector-to-target ratios that could be achieved by T-cell therapy.  相似文献   

12.
Flow cytometric analysis of the Vbeta repertoire in healthy controls   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
BACKGROUND: Analysis of the T-cell receptor (TCR)-Vbeta repertoire has been used for studying selective T-cell responses in autoimmune disease, alloreactivity in transplantation, and protective immunity against microbial and tumor antigens. For the interpretation of these studies, we need information about the Vbeta repertoire usage in healthy individuals. METHODS: We analyzed blood T-lymphocyte (sub)populations of 36 healthy controls (age range: from neonates to 86 years) with a carefully selected most complete panel of 22 Vbeta monoclonal antibodies, which together recognized 70-75% of all blood TCRalphabeta(+) T lymphocytes. Subsequently, we developed a six-tube test kit with selected Vbeta antibody combinations for easy and rapid detection of single ("clonal") Vbeta domain usage in large T-cell expansions. RESULTS: The mean values of the Vbeta repertoire usage were stable during aging in blood TCRalphabeta(+) T lymphocytes as well as in the CD4(+) and CD8(+) T-cell subsets, although the standard deviations increased in the elderly. The increased standard deviations were caused by the occurrence of oligoclonal T-cell expansions in the elderly, mainly consisting of CD8(+) T lymphocytes. The 15 detected T-cell expansions did not reach 40% of total TCRalphabeta(+) T lymphocytes and represented less than 0.4 x 10(9) cells per liter in our study. Vbeta usage of the CD4(+) and CD8(+) subsets was comparable for most tested Vbeta domains, but significant differences (P < 0.01) between the two subsets were found for Vbeta2, Vbeta5.1, Vbeta6.7, Vbeta9.1, and Vbeta22 (higher in CD4(+)), as well as for Vbeta1, Vbeta7.1, Vbeta14, and Vbeta23 (higher in CD8(+)). Finally, single Vbeta domain expression in large T-cell expansions can indeed be detected by the six-tube test kit. CONCLUSIONS: The results of our study can now be used as reference values in studies on distortions of the Vbeta repertoire in disease states. The six-tube test kit can be used for detection of single Vbeta domain expression in large T-cell expansions (>2.0 x 10(9)/l), which are clinically suspicious of T-cell leukemia.  相似文献   

13.
T cell populations are regulated both by signals specific to the T-cell receptor (TCR) and by signals and resources, such as cytokines and space, that act independently of TCR specificity. Although it has been demonstrated that disruption of either of these pathways has a profound effect on T-cell development, we do not yet have an understanding of the dynamical interactions of these pathways in their joint shaping of the T cell repertoire. Complete DiGeorge Anomaly is a developmental abnormality that results in the failure of the thymus to develop, absence of T cells, and profound immune deficiency. After receiving thymic tissue grafts, patients suffering from DiGeorge anomaly develop T cells derived from their own precursors but matured in the donor tissue. We followed three DiGeorge patients after thymus transplantation to utilize the remarkable opportunity these subjects provide to elucidate human T-cell developmental regulation. Our goal is the determination of the respective roles of TCR-specific vs. TCR-nonspecific regulatory signals in the growth of these emerging T-cell populations. During the course of the study, we measured peripheral blood T-cell concentrations, TCRβ V gene-segment usage and CDR3-length spectratypes over two years or more for each of the subjects. We find, through statistical analysis based on a novel stochastic population-dynamic T-cell model, that the carrying capacity corresponding to TCR-specific resources is approximately 1000-fold larger than that of TCR-nonspecific resources, implying that the size of the peripheral T-cell pool at steady state is determined almost entirely by TCR-nonspecific mechanisms. Nevertheless, the diversity of the TCR repertoire depends crucially on TCR-specific regulation. The estimated strength of this TCR-specific regulation is sufficient to ensure rapid establishment of TCR repertoire diversity in the early phase of T cell population growth, and to maintain TCR repertoire diversity in the face of substantial clonal expansion-induced perturbation from the steady state.  相似文献   

14.
The many important facets of T-cell repertoire diversity   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
In the thymus, a diverse and polymorphic T-cell repertoire is generated by random recombination of discrete T-cell receptor (TCR)-alphabeta gene segments. This repertoire is then shaped by intrathymic selection events to generate a peripheral T-cell pool of self-MHC restricted, non-autoaggressive T cells. It has long been postulated that some optimal level of TCR diversity allows efficient protection against pathogens. This article focuses on several recent advances that address the required diversity for the generation of an optimal immune response.  相似文献   

15.
Li H  Ye C  Ji G  Han J 《Cell research》2012,22(1):33-42
Historically, sharing T cell receptors (TCRs) between individuals has been speculated to be impossible, considering the dramatic discrepancy between the potential enormity of the TCR repertoire and the limited number of T cells generated in each individual. However, public T cell response, in which multiple individuals share identical TCRs in responding to a same antigenic epitope, has been extensively observed in a variety of immune responses across many species. Public T cell responses enable individuals within a population to generate similar antigen-specific TCRs against certain ubiquitous pathogens, leading to favorable biological outcomes. However, the relatively concentrated feature of TCR repertoire may limit T cell response in a population to some other pathogens. It could be a great benefit for human health if public T cell responses can be manipulated. Therefore, the mechanistic insight of public TCR generation is important to know. Recently, high-throughput DNA sequencing has revolutionized the study of immune receptor repertoires, which allows a much better understanding of the factors that determine the overlap of TCR repertoire among individuals. Here, we summarize the current knowledge on public T-cell response and discuss future challenges in this field.  相似文献   

16.
Effective T cell receptor (TCR) transfer until now required stable retroviral transduction. However, retroviral transduction poses the threat of irreversible genetic manipulation of autologous cells. We, therefore, used optimized RNA transfection for transient manipulation. The transfection efficiency, using EGFP RNA, was >90%. The electroporation of primary T cells, isolated from blood, with TCR-coding RNA resulted in functional cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) (>60% killing at an effector to target ratio of 20:1) with the same HLA-A2/gp100-specificity as the parental CTL clone. The TCR-transfected T cells specifically recognized peptide-pulsed T2 cells, or dendritic cells electroporated with gp100-coding RNA, in an IFNγ-secretion assay and retained this ability, even after cryopreservation, over 3 days. Most importantly, we show here for the first time that the electroporated T cells also displayed cytotoxicity, and specifically lysed peptide-loaded T2 cells and HLA-A2+/gp100+ melanoma cells over a period of at least 72 h. Peptide-titration studies showed that the lytic efficiency of the RNA-transfected T cells was similar to that of retrovirally transduced T cells, and approximated that of the parental CTL clone. Functional TCR transfer by RNA electroporation is now possible without the disadvantages of retroviral transduction, and forms a new strategy for the immunotherapy of cancer.Niels Schaft and Jan Dörrie contributed equally  相似文献   

17.

Background aims

To produce an anti-leukemic effect after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation we have long considered the theoretical possibility of using banks of HLA-DP specific T-cell clones transduced with a suicide gene. For that application as for any others, a clonal strategy is constrained by the population doubling (PD) potential of T cells, which has been rarely explored or exploited.

Methods

We used clinical-grade conditions and two donors who were homozygous and identical for all HLA-alleles except HLA-DP. After mixed lymphocyte culture and transduction, we obtained 14 HLA-DP–specific T-cell clones transduced with the HSV-TK suicide gene. Clones were then selected on the basis of their specificity and functional characteristics and evaluated for their doubling potential.

Results

After these steps of selection the clone NAT-DP4(TK), specific for HLA-DPB1*04:01/04:02, which produced high levels of interferon-γ (IFNγ), tumor necrosis factor (TNF), interleukin-2 (IL-2) and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), was fully sequenced. It has two copies of the HSV-TK suicide transgene whose localizations were determined. Four billion NAT-DP4(TK) cells were frozen after 50 PDs. Thawed NAT-DP4(TK) cells retain the potential to undergo 50 additional PDs, a potential very far beyond that required to produce a biological effect. This PD potential was confirmed on 6/16 additional different T-cell clones. This type of well-defined clone can also support a second genetic modification with CAR constructs.

Conclusion

The possibility of choosing rare donors and exploiting the natural proliferative potential of T lymphocytes may dramatically reduce the clinical and immunologic complexity of adoptive transfer protocols that rely on the use of third-party T-cell populations.  相似文献   

18.
Peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) genetically modified to express T cell receptors (TCR) specific to known melanoma antigens, such as melanoma antigen recognized by T cells-1 (MART-1), and gp100 can elicit objective tumor regression when administered to patients with metastatic melanoma. It has also been demonstrated that modifications within the constant regions of a fully human TCR can enhance surface expression and stability without altering antigen specificity. In this study, we evaluated the substitution of murine constant regions for their human counterpart within the DMF5 MART-1-specific TCR. Unlike previous studies, all modified TCRs were inserted into retroviral vectors and analyzed for expression and function following a clinical transduction protocol. PBL were transduced with retroviral supernatant generated from stable packaging lines encoding melanoma-specific TCRs. This protocol resulted in high levels of antigen-specific T cells without the need for additional peptide stimulation and selection. Both the human and murinized TCR efficiently transduced PBL; however, the murinized TCR exhibited significantly higher tetramer binding, mean fluorescence intensity, as well as, increased in vitro effector function following our clinical transduction and expansion protocol. Additional TCR modifications including insertion of a second disulfide bond or the linker modifications evaluated herein did not significantly enhance TCR expression or subsequent in vitro effector function. We conclude that the substitution of a human constant region with a murine constant region was sufficient to increase receptor expression and tetramer binding as well as antitumor activity of the DMF5 TCR and could be a tool to augment other antigen-specific TCR.  相似文献   

19.
The highly diverse heterodimeric surface T cell receptor (TCR) gives the T lymphocyte its specificity for MHC-bound peptides needed to initiate antigen-recognition. In normal peripheral blood, spleen and lymph nodes, the TCR repertoire of the T lymphocytes is usually polyclonal. However, in malignancies such as leukemias, as well as in lymphoproliferative diseases of mature T cells, the TCR is a reflection of the clonality of the malignant cells and is therefore monoclonal. Several clinical conditions (mainly solid tumors and autoimmune diseases) have been described where the TCR repertoire is restricted. The ability to demonstrate clonal TCR usage provides a useful tool to dissect the immunopathology of inflammatory diseases. In this review we discuss these findings and propose to sub-divide diseases with restricted TCR repertoire into a group of conditions in which there is a known TCR ligand, as opposed to diseases in which the restricted TCR repertoire is the result of impaired T-cell development. This classification sheds light on the pathogenesis of several inflammatory diseases.  相似文献   

20.
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