Selective depletion of alloreactive t cells from allografts using the isolex ® and closed system culture technology

2000 ◽  
Vol 28 (7) ◽  
pp. 126
Author(s):  
M. Luqman ◽  
C. Ho ◽  
J. Bender ◽  
M. Loudovaris ◽  
D. Van Epps
2007 ◽  
Vol 123 ◽  
pp. S106-S107
Author(s):  
Eva Matejkova ◽  
Zuzana Hrotekova ◽  
Drahomira Kyjovska ◽  
Jaroslav Michalek ◽  
Petra Vidlakova

Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 1067-1067
Author(s):  
Erkut Bahceci ◽  
Marina Komarovskaya ◽  
Robert Kreitman ◽  
Dennis Cooper ◽  
Ira Pastan

Abstract Severe T cell depletion required for allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation from haplo-identical donors results in poor immune reconstitution and leads to high rates of mortality from infections, and relapse. One approach to overcome this problem is to infuse T cells depleted of alloreactivity. Selective depletion (SD) of alloreactive T cells is achieved by elimination of activated T cells after ex-vivo stimulation with recipient cells. To determine optimum selective depletion conditions, we have investigated the factors that modify alloreactivity of T cells. Methods: Alloreactivity was measured by one-way mixed lymphocyte reaction (MLR) using 3H thymidine uptake. PBMCs were used as responders and either irradiated expanded T cells (expT) or dendritic cells (DCs) as stimulators. T cells were expanded using anti-CD3 coated beads. DCs were generated from monocytes by GM-CSF and IL-4 stimulation. Selective depletion was performed by co-incubation of responder and stimulator cells for 72 hours and depletion of activated cells by an immunotoxin, LMB-2 (Anti-Tac (Fv)-PE-38), which was added to the culture at 24 and 48 hours. Effectiveness of the depletion was tested by a secondary MLR utilizing the original stimulator cells and unrelated third part cells. Results: Expansion of T cells has resulted in increase of HLA-DR, CD80 and CD86 expression compared to resting T cells (52.5% vs. 6%, 20.9% vs. 0.9%, and 32.9% vs. 20.9%, respectively), resulting in better stimulation in MLR (6505 cpm vs 1620 cpm). In one-way MLR using either PBMCs or CD25 depleted PBMCs as responders and expanded T cells and DCs as targets, with or without anti-CD28 in the culture media. DCs were better stimulators than expT cells (6636 vs. 4308). However, most dramatic effect was seen when anti-CD28 was added to the culture, increasing response to both expT cells and to a lesser extent DCs (40,169 and 19,303). Removal of CD25 positive cells also improved alloreactivity in all culture conditions (6636 in expT, 16,644 in DC, 57,363 in expT+CD28, and 30,943 in DC+CD28). To better define the effect of the target, we have performed Vbeta repertoire analysis of responding cells after expT cell, DC and expT cell+anti-CD28 stimulation. Flow cytometry revealed expansion of discrete Vbeta families, in addition to shared ones. We have then performed selective depletion using PBMCs or CD 25 depleted PBMCs as stimulators and expT cells, expT cell+anti-CD28, and DCs as stimulators. Residual alloreactivity after expT cell stimulation against original stimulators, DCs and third party cells were 7%, 147% and 99% respectively. Interestingly, after SD utilizing DCs as stimulators, there was substantial residual activity against expT cells (69%). When SD was performed using expT cells as stimulators with anti-CD28, combined with CD25 depletion, the depletion against both original stimulators and DCs was improved (2% and 54%, respectively). Conclusion: Depletion of regulatory T cells, and co-stimulation with ant-CD28 improves alloreactivity and selective depletion. Whether improvement in in-vitro selective depletion will result in better clinical outcome will be tested in a clinical trial.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 578-578 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marie Bleakley ◽  
Audrey Mollerup ◽  
Colette Chaney ◽  
Michele Brown ◽  
Stanley R. Riddell

Abstract Graft versus host disease (GVHD) after allogeneic stem cell transplant (SCT) is initiated by the activation of alloreactive T cells by host dendritic cells (DC) in lymphoid tissue. Studies in murine models have demonstrated that selective depletion of naïve T cells abrogates GVHD in major and minor histocompatibility antigen (miH) mismatched SCT and provides for rapid reconstitution of memory T cell responses to pathogens. This suggests the memory subset may lack a sufficient repertoire of alloreactive T cells or fail to localize to sites where GVHD is initiated. If such a strategy were effective in humans, morbidity from GVHD would be reduced, but the graft versus leukemia (GVL) effect might be compromised. To explore the potential of this approach in humans, we developed a novel limiting dilution assay using DC as stimulator cells in vitro to analyze the frequency and repertoire of human miH reactive T cells in highly purified naïve and memory T cell subsets obtained from HLA identical volunteer donor pairs. For each pair, mature DC were derived by differentiation of CD14+ monocytes in vitro from one volunteer, and pure (>97%) populations of naïve (CD62L+, CD45 RA+, CD45RO-) and memory (CD45RO+) CD8 T cells were obtained by FACS sorting of CD8 enriched PBMC from the respective HLA identical sibling. Memory and naïve T cells were cultured for 12 days in 96 well plates at a range of concentrations with DC at a 30:1 ratio and IL12 (10 ng/ml), and IL15 (10 ng/ml) was added on day 7. On day 12, the wells were screened against target cells from each volunteer in a chromium release assay (CRA) to quantitative T cells with reactivity against miH. All wells with reactivity in this screening assay were subsequently expanded using anti CD3 antibody and IL2 and retested by CRA to validate the results of the screening assay. In multiple experiments using different HLA matched pairs, T cells with specific and reproducible cytotoxic activity (>15% lysis) against target cells from the DC donor but not autologous targets were only isolated from wells plated with naïve CD8 T cells, and there was no reproducible cytotoxicity from wells plated with memory T cells. This data demonstrates that miH specific CD8 T cells are found predominantly, and possibly exclusively, in the naïve T cell subset in humans. This data is consistent with a dramatically reduced repertoire of miH alloreactive T cells in the memory T cell pool and supports the development of protocols to prevent GVHD by selective depletion of CD45RA+ CD8+ T cells from the hematopoietic cell graft. However, T cells specific for miH also contribute to the GVL effect and CD45RA depletion would be expected to compromise antileukemic activity. Using the above approach for isolating miH specific CTL from naïve CD8 T cells, we have found a diverse repertoire of alloreactivity in most cultures and identified a subset of T cell lines and clones specific for miH presented selectively on hematopoietic cells. These T cells recognize primary ALL and AML samples that express the restricting HLA allele in vitro. MiH specific T cell clones can be reliably generated by this method using DC derived from monocytes of patients with advanced leukemia. Thus, it may be feasible to utilize this approach to isolate T cells specific for hematopoietic restricted miH for adoptive therapy as an adjunct to CD45RA depletion to preserve the GVL effect and allow separation of GVL from GVHD.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 5249-5249
Author(s):  
Rajinder P.S. Bajwa ◽  
Philip L. McCarthy ◽  
Paul K. Wallace ◽  
Stephen Wallace ◽  
Yiyuan Wu ◽  
...  

Abstract Selective depletion of alloreactive T cells from a stem cell graft has the potential of reducing graft versus host disease (GvHD) while preserving graft versus malignancy and third party responses. For this purpose several techniques generate and deplete alloreactive cells, which are donor-derived T cells activated by recipient tissue. The kinetics of T cell activation in donor-recipient co-culture systems is critical in optimizing the timing of depletion of alloreactive T cells. We present the T cell activation kinetics in our preclinical system. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) were derived from several pairs of unrelated healthy human volunteers. 2500 cGy irradiated cells (stimulators) were co-cultured with PBMCs (responders) in a 1:1 ratio and a concentration of 5 x 106/ml in serum free medium. Stimulator cells were labeled with PKH67 and the co-cultures were, analyzed for CD3, CD4, and CD25, expression by flow cytometry on days 0 through 7, using Topro-3 to exclude dead cells. We also added low dose Interleukin-2 (IL2) for augmenting the generation of alloreactive cells, to see if this made a difference. Our results show that alloreactive CD8 cells (CD3+, CD4−, CD25+) increased from ≤1 % on day 0, to 6.5 percent by day 5; the addition of IL2 amplified this to nearly 10% by day 5. CD4 + activated T cells (CD3+, CD4+, CD25+dim or total) did not appreciably increase over time and ranged between 2 to 5%; the addition of IL2 did not have any effect. T regulatory cells (CD3+, CD4+, CD25+bright) increased from ≤1 percent at baseline to 5% by day 5 and these were unaffected by the addition of IL2. The proportion of non-activated T lymphocytes, decreased with time of co-culture progression. Our results show that T lymphocyte activation, defined by CD25 expression, progressively increases through the first week of co-culture. This important observation will help in establishing the timing of allograft manipulation, for the selective depletion of alloreactive T cells in clinical hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. Figure Figure


Cytotherapy ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 16 (4) ◽  
pp. S19
Author(s):  
J. Velthuis ◽  
L. De Jong ◽  
R. Sidi Boumédine ◽  
M. Giard ◽  
D. Roy ◽  
...  

2010 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 8-22 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Rettinger ◽  
M. Schumm ◽  
M. Pfeiffer ◽  
S. Kuçi ◽  
A. Willasch ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (13) ◽  
pp. 2829-2836 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claudia Stuehler ◽  
Stephan Mielke ◽  
Manik Chatterjee ◽  
Johannes Duell ◽  
Sarah Lurati ◽  
...  

Abstract Graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in patients with hematologic malignancies undergoing allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. Current treatment of GVHD relies on immunosuppressive regimens, considerably increasing the incidence of opportunistic infections. As T cells mediate both GVHD as well as protection against viral infections and the malignant disease, strategies to selectively target host-reactive T cells without impairing pathogen- and disease-specific immunity are highly warranted. Activation of T cells is accompanied by increased expression of the chaperone heat shock protein of 90 kDa (Hsp90), which stabilizes several key signaling pathways crucial for T-cell activation. In this study, selective targeting of Hsp90 in activated T lymphocytes with pharmacologic inhibitors already applied successfully in anticancer therapy resulted in induction of apoptosis predominantly in activated cells. Moreover, if T cells were stimulated with allogeneic dendritic cells, alloreactive T cells were selectively eliminated. In contrast, third party reactions including antiviral T-cell immunity were quantitatively and functionally fully preserved. These data suggest that Hsp90 represents a novel target for selective depletion of alloreactive T cells, and provide the rationale for application of Hsp90 inhibitors as potential approach to selectively prevent and treat GVHD in hematopoietic stem cell transplantation recipients without impairing pathogen- and disease-specific T-cell immunity.


Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 3250-3250
Author(s):  
Eva Matejkova ◽  
Ivana Buresova ◽  
Petra Vidlakova ◽  
Drahomira Kyjovska ◽  
Ellen S. Vitetta ◽  
...  

Abstract A major challenge in the field of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) is to prevent the alloreactivity of donor T-cells which leads to acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) while preserving a graft-versus-tumor (GVT) effect. Selective depletion using anti-CD25 immunotoxin (IT) can eliminate harmful alloreactive T-cells while preserving other donor T-cells with antileukemic/antitumor reactivity. We have used irradiated peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from cancer patients and healthy donor PBMC as responder cells in primary mixed leukocyte reaction (MLR).To prepare GVL/GVT-specific T-cells, alloreactive T-cells in primary MLR were depleted with anti-CD25 IT. The remaining T-cells had insignificant alloreactivity in secondary MLR. Allodepleted donor cells were then repeatedly stimulated using purified leukemia/tumor cells from the same cancer patient. Leukemia/tumor-reactive donor T-cells were purified by immunomagnetic separation on the basis of INF-g production. 23 MLRs (12 with acute myeloid leukemia cells, 3 with acute lymphocytic leukemia cells and 8 with renal carcinoma cells) were performed. Selective depletion of alloreactive donor T-cells with anti-CD25 IT led to more than 2log depletion (99.2–100%, median 99.7%). Graft-versus-leukemia (GVL) effect of donor T-cells was well preserved (4.7% of donor T cells were GVL-reactive) while the graft-versus-host (GVH) reactivation of donor cells was negligible even after repeated stimulation with patient’s non-leukemic PBMC. In the case of renal cell carcinoma, GVT effect was less dominant (1.8% of donor T cells were GVT-reactive clones) and GVH reactivation appeared in 2.4% of donor T cells. In conclusion, it is possible to selectively deplete donor alloreactive T-cells with anti-CD25 IT. In case of patients with leukemia, a strong GVL reactivity was noticed in allodepleted donor T cells while in case of renal cell carcinoma the GVT effect was less dominant and associated with mild GVH-reactivation.


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