scholarly journals Simultaneous administration of a low-dose mixture of donor bone marrow cells and splenocytes plus adenovirus containing the CTLA4Ig gene result in stable mixed chimerism and long-term survival of cardiac allograft in rats

Immunology ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 110 (2) ◽  
pp. 275-286 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yongzhu Jin ◽  
Qingyin Zhang ◽  
JIE Hao ◽  
Xiang Gao ◽  
Yinglu Guo ◽  
...  
Blood ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 89 (7) ◽  
pp. 2376-2383 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald van Os ◽  
Donald Dawes ◽  
John M.K. Mislow ◽  
Alice Witsell ◽  
Peter M. Mauch

Abstract Administration of kit-ligand (KL) before and after doses of 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) results in marrow failure in mice, presumably because of enhanced KL-induced cycling of stem cells, which makes them more susceptible to the effects of 5-FU. In attempt to capitalize on this effect on stem cells, we studied the ability of KL and 5-FU to allow stable donor engraftment of congenically marked marrow in a C57BL/6 (B6) mouse model. KL was administered subcutaneously at 50 μg/kg, 21 hours and 9 hours before and 3 hours after each of two doses of 5-FU (125 mg/kg) given 7 days apart to B6-recipients. Animals then received three injections of 107 congenic B6-Gpi-1a-donor bone marrow cells at 24, 48, and 72 hours after the second 5-FU dose. A separate group of animals received a single dose of either 1 × 107 or 3 × 107 donor marrow cells 24 hours after the last 5-FU dose. The level of engraftment was measured from Gpi-phenotyping at 1, 3, 6, and 8 months in red blood cells (RBCs) and at 8 months by phenotyping cells from the thymus, spleen, and marrow. Percent donor engraftment in RBCs appeared stable after 6 months. The percent donor engraftment in RBCs at 8 months was significantly higher in KL + 5-FU prepared recipients (33.0 ± 2.7), compared with 5-FU alone (18.5 ± 2.6, P < .0005), or saline controls (17.8 ± 1.7, P < .0001). In an additional experiment, granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (100 μg/dose) was added to a reduced dose of KL (12.5 μg/dose); engraftment was similar to KL alone. At 8 months after transplantation the levels of engraftment in other tissues such as bone marrow, spleen, and thymus correlated well with erythroid engraftment to suggest that multipotent long-term repopulating stem cells had engrafted in these animals. There are concerns for the toxicity of total body irradiation (TBI)- or busulfan-based regimens in young recipients of syngeneic or transduced autologous marrow who are transplanted for correction of genetic disease. In these recipients complete donor engraftment may not be needed. The results with KL and 5-FU are encouraging for the further refinement of non-TBI, nonbusulfan techniques to achieve stable mixed chimerism.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 3118-3118
Author(s):  
Rakesh Bam ◽  
Sathisha Upparahalli Venkateshaiah ◽  
Xin Li ◽  
Sharmin Khan ◽  
Wen Ling ◽  
...  

Abstract Primary human myeloma (MM) cells do not survive in culture while current in vitro and in vivo systems for growing these cells are limited to coculture with specific bone marrow (BM) cell type or growth in immunodeficient animal model. The aim of the study was to determine long-term survival and interaction of primary MM plasma cells with a healthy adult human BM that include immune cells capable of functional activation. This system is different from the autologous BM culture that is already affected by the disease. Whole BM cells from healthy donors were cultured in αMEM medium supplemented with 10% FBS and 10% serum pooled from MM patients. Following 7-9 days the cultures were composed of adherent and nonadherent cellular compartments. The nonadherent compartment contained typical BM hematopoietic cells such as monocytes, B and T lymphocytes and NK and normal plasma cells as assessed by flow cytometry, while the adherent compartment contained cells that morphologically resemble macrophages, osteoclasts, megakaryocytes and fibroblast-like cells. At this culture stage, CD138-selected MM cells from 20 patients were added to the BM cultures (4:1 BM:MM cell ratio) and survival and growth of MM cells were determined after 7 days by assessing proportion of CD45low/intermediate/CD38high MM plasma cells among total number of cells. MM and BM cell viability was constantly high (>90%) in cocultures. Subsets of primary MM plasma cells, regardless of molecular risk or subtype, were survived and detected in all cases while in 14 of 20 experiments, number of MM plasma cells was increased by 58±12% (p<0.0005, n=14). MM cell proliferation following long-term coculture was evident by the loss of cell membrane PKH26 dye or by BudR uptake in dividing cocultured MM cells. Growth of primary MM was superior in cocultures supplemented with patient serum compared to healthy donor serum. In additional study, we stably infected IL6- or stroma-dependent MM lines, or two primary MM cell cases capable of passaging in SCID-hu mice with EGFP/luciferase construct and demonstrated increased MM cell growth in all experiments in coculture using bioluminescence analysis (statistical significance range: p<0.04 to p<0.0003). Growth of OPM2 MM line was also enhanced in coculture compared to culture alone. The coculture conditions protected OPM2 cells from dexamethasone but not bortezomib while proportion of MM cell killing by lenalidomide was enhanced compared to culture of OPM2 cells alone. To assess the effect of MM cells on BM cells in coculture, global gene expression profile was performed on BM cells cultured alone or plasma cell-depleted BM after coculture with MM cells from 4 patients. Among the top underexpressed genes we identified immunoglobulin genes related to polyclonal plasma cells, extracellular factors associated with osteoblastogenesis (e.g. MGP, IGFBP2), WNT signaling (e.g. SOX4, LRP1, LRP6) and TGFb bioavailability (e.g. FBN1, LTBP1). Top upregulated genes include immuneregulatory factors such as PROK2, LRG1, OLFM4 and IL16, and cellular markers (e.g. ARG1 expressed by MDSCs). This culture system demonstrates the ability of primary MM cells to interact with and to survive in coculture with healthy adult BM that was first cultivated by patients' serum and is appropriate for studying MM-microenvironment interaction, characterization of MM cell subpopulations capable of long term survival and targeted therapy. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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