Uchida N et al. (OCT 2009)
Journal of virology 83 19 9854--62
Development of a human immunodeficiency virus type 1-based lentiviral vector that allows efficient transduction of both human and rhesus blood cells.
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) vectors transduce rhesus blood cells poorly due to a species-specific block by TRIM5alpha and APOBEC3G,which target HIV-1 capsid and viral infectivity factor (Vif),respectively. We sought to develop a lentiviral vector capable of transducing both human and rhesus blood cells by combining components of both HIV-1 and simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV),including SIV capsid (sCA) and SIV Vif. A chimeric HIV-1 vector including sCA (chiHIV) was superior to the conventional SIV in transducing a human blood cell line and superior to the conventional HIV-1 vector in transducing a rhesus blood cell line. Among human CD34(+) hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs),the chiHIV and HIV-1 vectors showed similar transduction efficiencies; in rhesus CD34(+) HSCs,the chiHIV vector yielded superior transduction rates. In in vivo competitive repopulation experiments with two rhesus macaques,the chiHIV vector demonstrated superior marking levels over the conventional HIV-1 vector in all blood lineages (first rhesus,15 to 30% versus 1 to 5%; second rhesus,7 to 15% versus 0.5 to 2%,respectively) 3 to 7 months postinfusion. In summary,we have developed an HIV-1-based lentiviral vector system that should allow comprehensive preclinical testing of HIV-1-based therapeutic vectors in the rhesus macaque model with eventual clinical application.
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Wang X-N et al. (JUL 2009)
Transplantation 88 2 188--97
Regulatory T-cell suppression of CD8+ T-cell-mediated graft-versus-host reaction requires their presence during priming.
BACKGROUND: Despite the promising therapeutic potential of regulatory T cells (Treg) in animal studies of graft-versus-host disease (GVHD),little is known about their effect on human GVHD. Whether Treg are capable of ameliorating GVHD tissue damage has never been demonstrated in humans. It is also unknown whether Treg modulation of GVH histopathologic damage relies on their presence during effector T-cell priming,or whether allogeneic Treg are safe to use clinically. METHODS: To address these questions,we used an in vitro human skin explant GVHD model,which mimics the physiopathology of GVHD. First,donor"-derived CD8 T cells were stimulated with human leukocyte antigen-unmatched "recipient" dendritic cells (priming phase)�
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Allan LL et al. (SEP 2009)
Blood 114 12 2411--6
Apolipoprotein-mediated lipid antigen presentation in B cells provides a pathway for innate help by NKT cells.
Natural killer T (NKT) cells are innate-like lymphocytes that recognize lipid antigens and have been shown to enhance B-cell activation and antibody production. B cells typically recruit T-cell help by presenting internalized antigens recognized by their surface antigen receptor. Here,we demonstrate a highly efficient means whereby human B cells present lipid antigens to NKT cells,capturing the antigen using apolipoprotein E (apoE) and the low-density lipoprotein receptor (LDL-R). ApoE dramatically enhances B-cell presentation of alpha-galactosylceramide (alphaGalCer),an exogenous CD1d presented antigen,inducing activation of NKT cells and the subsequent activation of B cells. B cells express the LDL-R on activation,and the activation of NKT cells by B cells is completely LDL-R dependent,as shown by blocking experiments and the complete lack of presentation when using apoE2,an isoform of apoE incapable of LDL-R binding. The dependence on apoE and the LDL-R is much more pronounced in B cells than we had previously seen in dendritic cells,which can apparently use alternate pathways of lipid antigen uptake. Thus,B cells use an apolipoprotein-mediated pathway of lipid antigen presentation,which constitutes a form of innate help for B cells by NKT cells.
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Eberhard Y et al. (OCT 2009)
Blood 114 14 3064--73
Chelation of intracellular iron with the antifungal agent ciclopirox olamine induces cell death in leukemia and myeloma cells.
Off-patent drugs with previously unrecognized anticancer activity could be rapidly repurposed for this new indication. To identify such compounds,we conducted 2 independent cell-based chemical screens and identified the antimicrobial ciclopirox olamine (CPX) in both screens. CPX decreased cell growth and viability of malignant leukemia,myeloma,and solid tumor cell lines as well as primary AML patient samples at low-micromolar concentrations that appear pharmacologically achievable. Furthermore,oral CPX decreased tumor weight and volume in 3 mouse models of leukemia by up to 65% compared with control without evidence of weight loss or gross organ toxicity. In addition,oral CPX prevented the engraftment of primary AML cells in nonobese diabetic/severe combined immunodeficiency mouse models,thereby establishing its ability to target leukemia stem cells. Mechanistically,CPX bound intracellular iron,and this intracellular iron chelation was functionally important for its cytotoxicity. By electron paramagnetic resonance,CPX inhibited the iron-dependent enzyme ribonucleotide reductase at concentrations associated with cell death. Thus,in summary,CPX has previously unrecognized anticancer activity at concentrations that are pharmacologically achievable. Therefore,CPX could be rapidly repurposed for the treatment of malignancies,including leukemia and myeloma.
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Costantini C et al. (JAN 2009)
Immunobiology 214 9-10 828--34
On the co-purification of 6-sulfo LacNAc(+) dendritic cells (slanDC) with NK cells enriched from human blood.
The ability of NK cells to directly recognize pathogens and be activated via Toll-like receptors (TLR) is increasingly recognized. Nevertheless,controversial results on the NK cell ability to be directly activated by lipopolysaccharide (LPS),the ligand of TLR4,have been recently reported. To start elucidating the reasons explaining the contrasting observations of the literature,we focused on the potential role of currently used NK cell purification procedures to condition putative NK cell responsiveness to LPS. To do so,human NK cells were isolated by negative selection,using three different commercial kits,to be comparatively evaluated for the production of IFNgamma in response to ultra-pure LPS and/or IL-2. Despite the lack of surface TLR4,we found that two out of the three NK cell-enriched populations released IFNgamma (and one of the two,IL-12p70 as well) in response to the LPS plus IL-2 combination,whereas the last one did not. However,the two LPS plus IL-2-responsive NK cell populations were found variably contaminated with 6-sulfo LacNAc(+) dendritic cells (slanDC),demonstrated responsible for triggering,via the production of IL-12p70 in response to LPS,the release of IFNgamma by IL-2-stimulated NK cells. Accordingly,slanDC depletion completely abrogated the capacity to produce both IL-12p70 and IFNgamma in response to LPS plus IL-2 by slanDC-containing NK cells. Taken together,our data uncover that two commercially available kits,specifically designed to isolate NK cells by negative selection,also co-purify variable amounts of slanDC. The latter cells may dramatically affect the outcome of experiments carried on to evaluate NK cell responsiveness to TLR agonists such as LPS.
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Le Dieu R et al. (AUG 2009)
Journal of immunological methods 348 1-2 95--100
Negative immunomagnetic selection of T cells from peripheral blood of presentation AML specimens.
To date,studies on T cells in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) have been limited to flow cytometric analysis of whole peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) specimens or functional work looking at the impact of AML myeloblasts on normal or remission T cells. This lack of information on T cells at the time of presentation with disease is due in part to the difficulty in isolating sufficiently pure T cells from these specimens for further study. Negative immunomagnetic selection has been the method of choice for isolating immune cells for functional studies due to concerns that binding antibodies to the cell surface may induce cellular activation,block ligand-receptor interactions or result in immune clearance. In order specifically to study T cells in presentation AML specimens,we set out to develop a method of isolating highly pure CD4 and CD8 T cells by negative selection from the peripheral blood (PB) of newly diagnosed AML patients. This technique,unlike T cell selection from PB from normal individuals or from patients with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia,was extremely problematic due to properties of the leukaemic myeloblasts. A successful method was eventually optimized requiring the use of a custom antibody cocktail consisting of CD33,CD34,CD123,CD11c and CD36,to deplete myeloblasts.
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Chen Y et al. (JUL 2009)
Journal of immunology (Baltimore,Md. : 1950) 183 2 1346--59
Regulation of dendritic cells and macrophages by an anti-apoptotic cell natural antibody that suppresses TLR responses and inhibits inflammatory arthritis.
Although natural Abs (NAbs) are present from birth,little is known about what drives their selection and whether they have housekeeping functions. The prototypic T15-NAb,first identified because of its protective role in infection,is representative of a special type of NAb response that specifically recognizes and forms complexes with apoptotic cells and which promotes cell-corpse engulfment by phagocytes. We now show that this T15-NAb IgM-mediated clearance process is dependent on the recruitment of C1q and mannose-binding lectin,which have known immune modulatory activities that also provide eat me" signals for enhancing phagocytosis. Further investigation revealed that the addition of T15-NAb significantly suppressed in vitro LPS-induced TNF-alpha and IL-6 secretion by the macrophage-like cell line�
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Trzonkowski P et al. (OCT 2009)
Clinical immunology (Orlando,Fla.) 133 1 22--6
First-in-man clinical results of the treatment of patients with graft versus host disease with human ex vivo expanded CD4+CD25+CD127- T regulatory cells.
Here,we describe a procedure and first-in-man clinical effects of adoptive transfer of ex vivo expanded CD4+CD25+CD127- T regulatory cells (Tregs) in the treatment of graft versus host disease (GvHD). The cells were sorted from buffy coats taken from two family donors,expanded ex vivo and transferred to respective recipients who suffered from either acute or chronic GvHD. The therapy allowed for significant alleviation of the symptoms and reduction of pharmacologic immunosuppression in the case of chronic GvHD,while in the case of grade IV acute GvHD it only transiently improved the condition,for the longest time within all immunosuppressants used nonetheless.
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Eccleston J et al. (JUL 2009)
Journal of immunology (Baltimore,Md. : 1950) 183 2 1222--8
Class switch recombination efficiency and junction microhomology patterns in Msh2-, Mlh1-, and Exo1-deficient mice depend on the presence of mu switch region tandem repeats.
The Msh2 mismatch repair (MMR) protein is critical for class switch recombination (CSR) events that occur in mice that lack the Smu tandem repeat (SmuTR) region (SmuTR(-/-) mice). The pattern of microhomology among switch junction sites in Msh2-deficient mice is also dependent on the presence or absence of SmuTR sequences. It is not known whether these CSR effects reflect an individual function of Msh2 or the function of Msh2 within the MMR machinery. In the absence of the SmuTR sequences,Msh2 deficiency nearly ablates CSR. We now show that Mlh1 or Exo1 deficiencies also eliminate CSR in the absence of the SmuTR. Furthermore,in SmuTR(-/-) mice,deficiencies of Mlh1 or Exo1 result in increased switch junction microhomology as has also been seen with Msh2 deficiency. These results are consistent with a CSR model in which the MMR machinery is important in processing DNA nicks to produce double-stranded breaks,particularly in sequences where nicks are infrequent. We propose that double-stranded break paucity in MMR-deficient mice leads to increased use of an alternative joining pathway where microhomologies are important for CSR break ligation. Interestingly,when the SmuTR region is present,deficiency of Msh2 does not lead to the increased microhomology seen with Mlh1 or Exo1 deficiencies,suggesting that Msh2 might have an additional function in CSR. It is also possible that the inability to initiate MMR in the absence of Msh2 results in CSR junctions with less microhomology than joinings that occur when MMR is initiated but then proceeds abnormally due to Mlh1 or Exo1 deficiencies.
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Jones RB et al. (SEP 2009)
Journal of virology 83 17 8722--32
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 escapes from interleukin-2-producing CD4+ T-cell responses without high-frequency fixation of mutations.
The presence of interleukin-2 (IL-2)-producing human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)-specific CD4(+) T-cell responses has been associated with the immunological control of HIV-1 replication; however,the causal relationship between these factors remains unclear. Here we show that IL-2-producing HIV-1-specific CD4(+) T cells can be cloned from acutely HIV-1-infected individuals. Despite the early presence of these cells,each of the individuals in the present study exhibited progressive disease,with one individual showing rapid progression. In this rapid progressor,three IL-2-producing HIV-1 Gag-specific CD4(+) T-cell responses were identified and mapped to the following optimal epitopes: HIVWASRELER,REPRGSDIAGT,and FRDYVDRFYKT. Responses to these epitopes in peripheral blood mononuclear cells were monitored longitudinally to textgreater1 year postinfection,and contemporaneous circulating plasma viruses were sequenced. A variant of the FRDYVDRFYKT epitope sequence,FRDYVDQFYKT,was observed in 1/21 plasma viruses sequenced at 5 months postinfection and 1/10 viruses at 7 months postinfection. This variant failed to stimulate the corresponding CD4(+) T-cell clone and thus constitutes an escape mutant. Responses to each of the three Gag epitopes were rapidly lost,and this loss was accompanied by a loss of antigen-specific cells in the periphery as measured by using an FRDYVDRFYKT-presenting major histocompatibility complex class II tetramer. Highly active antiretroviral therapy was associated with the reemergence of FRDYVDRFYKT-specific cells by tetramer. Thus,our data support that IL-2-producing HIV-1-specific CD4(+) T-cell responses can exert immune pressure during early HIV-1 infection but that the inability of these responses to enforce enduring control of viral replication is related to the deletion and/or dysfunction of HIV-1-specific CD4(+) T cells rather than to the fixation of escape mutations at high frequencies.
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Garidou L et al. (SEP 2009)
Journal of virology 83 17 8905--15
Therapeutic memory T cells require costimulation for effective clearance of a persistent viral infection.
Persistent viral infections are a major health concern worldwide. During persistent infection,overwhelming viral replication and the rapid loss of antiviral T-cell function can prevent immune-mediated clearance of the infection,and therapies to reanimate the immune response and purge persistent viruses have been largely unsuccessful. Adoptive immunotherapy using memory T cells is a highly successful therapeutic approach to eradicate a persistent viral infection. Understanding precisely how therapeutically administered memory T cells achieve clearance should improve our ability to terminate states of viral persistence in humans. Mice persistently infected from birth with lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus are tolerant to the pathogen at the T-cell level and thus provide an excellent model to evaluate immunotherapeutic regimens. Previously,we demonstrated that adoptively transferred memory T cells require recipient dendritic cells to effectively purge an established persistent viral infection. However,the mechanisms that reactivate and sustain memory T-cell responses during clearance of such an infection remain unclear. Here we establish that therapeutic memory T cells require CD80 and CD86 costimulatory signals to efficiently clear an established persistent viral infection in vivo. Early blockade of costimulatory pathways with CTLA-4-Fc decreased the secondary expansion of virus-specific CD8(+) and CD4(+) memory T cells as well as their ability to produce antiviral cytokines and purge the persistent infection. Late costimulation blockade also reduced virus-specific T-cell numbers,illustrating that sustained interactions with costimulatory molecules is required for efficient T-cell expansion. These findings indicate that antiviral memory T cells require costimulation to efficiently clear a persistent viral infection and that costimulatory pathways can be targeted to modulate the magnitude of an adoptive immunotherapeutic regimen.
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Xaymardan M et al. (AUG 2009)
Stem cells (Dayton,Ohio) 27 8 1911--20
c-Kit function is necessary for in vitro myogenic differentiation of bone marrow hematopoietic cells.
In recent years,the differentiation of bone marrow cells (BMCs) into myocytes has been extensively investigated,but the findings remain inconclusive. The purpose of this study was to determine the conditions necessary to induce myogenic differentiation in short-term cultures of adult BMCs,and to identify the BMC subpopulation responsible for this phenomenon. We report that high-density cultures of murine hematopoietic BMCs gave rise to spontaneous beating cell clusters in the presence of vascular endothelial and fibroblast growth factors. These clusters originated from c-kit(pos) cells. The formation of the clusters could be completely blocked by adding a c-kit/tyrosine kinase inhibitor,Gleevec (imatinib mesylate; Novartis International,Basel,Switzerland,http://www.novartis.com),to the culture. Cluster formation was also blunted in BMCs from c-kit-deficient (Kit(W)/Kit(W-v)) mice. Clustered cells expressed cardiomyocyte-specific transcription factor genes Gata-4 and Nkx2.5,sarcomeric proteins beta-MHC and MLC-2v,and ANF and connexin-43. Immunostaining revealed alpha-sarcomeric actinin expression in more than 90% of clustered cells. Under electron microscopy,the clustered cells exhibited a sarcomeric myofiber arrangement and z-bands. This study defines the microenvironment required to achieve a reproducible in vitro model of beating,myogenic cell clusters. This model could be used to examine the mechanisms responsible for the postnatal myogenic differentiation of BMCs. Our results identify c-kit(pos) bone marrow hematopoietic cells as the source of the myogenic clusters.
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