scholarly journals Association of immunity and tolerance to host H-2 determinants in irradiated F1 hybrid mice reconstituted with bone marrow cells from one parental strain.

1975 ◽  
Vol 142 (2) ◽  
pp. 321-331 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Sprent ◽  
H V Boehmer ◽  
M Nabholz

Semiallogenetic radiation chimeras were prepared by injecting heavily irradiated F1 hybrid mice with bone marrow cells from one parental strain; the bone marrow cells were treated with anti-theta serum and complement to remove T cells and injected in large numbers (2 times 10-7 cells). The mice survived in excellent health until sacrifice 6 mo later. Thoracic duct cannulation at this stage showed that the mice possessed normal numbers of recirculating lymphocytes. Close to 100% of thoracic duct lymphocytes and lymph node cells were shown to be of donor strain origin. The capacity of lymphocytes from the chimeras to respond to host-type determinants was tested in mixed leukocyte culture and in an assay for cell-mediated lympholysis (CML). Mixed leukocyte reactions (MLR) were measured both in vitro and in vivo; tumor cells and phytohemmaglutinin-stimulated blast cells were used as target cells for measuring CML. While responding normally to third party determinants, cells from the chimeras gave a definite, though reduced MLR when exposed to host-type determinants. However, this proliferative response to host-type determinants, unlike that to third party determinants, was not associated with differentiation into cytotoxic lymphocytes. No evidence could be found that unresponsiveness in this situation was due to blocking serum factors or suppressor T cells. It is argued that the results support the concept that lymphocytes responsive in mixed leukocyte culture have a different specificity to those exerting cell-mediated lympholysis.

Blood ◽  
1977 ◽  
Vol 50 (6) ◽  
pp. 1121-1127 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y Kitamura ◽  
M Tamai ◽  
Y Miyano ◽  
M Shimada

Abstract The question as to whether prior irradiation or injection of cytotoxic drugs is essential for the development of spleen colonies was examined in genetically normal mice. Mixtures of lymph node and bone marrow cells from C57BL mice were injected into (C57BL X CBA-T6T6) F1 hybrid mice without pretreatment. Hematopoietic nodules were observed in the spleens of F1 hybrid mice killed 18 days after injection. The average number of nodules increased linearly with increased numbers of injected bone marrow cells. Hematopoietic stem cells (CFU-S) and dividing cells in the nodules were shown to be of C57BL origin. Histologic examination showed that erythroid cell colonies predominated over granulocytic cell colonies. These results suggest that any kind of treatment that causes the depletion of CFU-S in the spleen of hosts would provide a suitable environment for the production of colonies by transplanted CFU-S.


Blood ◽  
1977 ◽  
Vol 50 (6) ◽  
pp. 1121-1127
Author(s):  
Y Kitamura ◽  
M Tamai ◽  
Y Miyano ◽  
M Shimada

The question as to whether prior irradiation or injection of cytotoxic drugs is essential for the development of spleen colonies was examined in genetically normal mice. Mixtures of lymph node and bone marrow cells from C57BL mice were injected into (C57BL X CBA-T6T6) F1 hybrid mice without pretreatment. Hematopoietic nodules were observed in the spleens of F1 hybrid mice killed 18 days after injection. The average number of nodules increased linearly with increased numbers of injected bone marrow cells. Hematopoietic stem cells (CFU-S) and dividing cells in the nodules were shown to be of C57BL origin. Histologic examination showed that erythroid cell colonies predominated over granulocytic cell colonies. These results suggest that any kind of treatment that causes the depletion of CFU-S in the spleen of hosts would provide a suitable environment for the production of colonies by transplanted CFU-S.


1970 ◽  
Vol 132 (2) ◽  
pp. 317-328 ◽  
Author(s):  
Henry R. Hilgard

Graft-versus-host splenomegaly may be elicited from 500 R X-irradiated F1 hybrid hosts if the hosts are injected with bone marrow cells and thymus cells from parental strain donors. Cells from thymus only or bone marrow only will not elicit graft-versus-host splenomegaly in these hosts. In this requirement for cells from both sources, the bone marrow cells play a nonimmunologic, proliferative role in the splenomegaly, and the thymus cells carry out the immunologic attack. Thus the mechanism of this synergism is quite different from that reported for the humoral immune response to sheep erythrocytes in which both thymus and marrow interact in the production of the specific immunologic response itself.


Blood ◽  
1986 ◽  
Vol 67 (2) ◽  
pp. 479-483
Author(s):  
T Nagasawa ◽  
T Sakurai ◽  
H Kashiwagi ◽  
T Abe

We studied a patient with a rare complication of amegakaryocytic thrombocytopenia (AMT) associated with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). To investigate the underlying pathogenesis of AMT, the effects of peripheral blood T cells and serum on human megakaryocyte progenitor cells were studied using in vitro coculture techniques. Mononuclear bone marrow cells (2 X 10(5) from normal donors produced 33.6 +/- 8.8 (n = 10) colony-forming unit-megakaryocytes (CFU-M) in our plasma clot system. When 2 X 10(5) of the patient's T cells were added to the culture system, the number of CFU-M decreased to only 3.5 +/- 0.6/2 X 10(5) bone marrow cells. No evidence of inhibitory effects was found by the addition of the patient's serum and complement to the culture system. The T cells stored at -80 degrees C on admission were also capable of suppressing autologous CFU-M after recovery from AMT. These results indicate that in vitro suppression of CFU-M from allogenic and autologous bone marrow cells by this patient's T cells provides an explanation for the pathogenesis of AMT associated with SLE.


Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 3674-3674
Author(s):  
Nobuyoshi Hanaoka ◽  
Tatsuya Kawaguchi ◽  
Kentaro Horikawa ◽  
Shoichi Nagakura ◽  
Sonoko Ishihara ◽  
...  

Abstract Immune mechanism is considered to exert in the pathogenesis of marrow failure in paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH), idiopathic aplastic anemia (AA) and myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS); however, the molecular events are unknown. We have currently reported the appearance of NKG2D ligands such as cytomegalovirus glycoprotein UL16 binding proteins (ULBPs) and MHC class I-related chains A and B (MICA/B) on granulocytes and CD34+ marrow cells of some patients with PNH and its related diseases (Hanaoka N, et al. Blood. 2006;107:1184–1191). ULBP and MICA/B are stress-inducible membrane proteins that appear in infection and transformation. The ligands share NKG2D receptor on lymphocytes such as NK, CD8+ T, and γδ T-cells and promote activation of the lymphocytes. Cells expressing the ligands are then deadly injured by NKG2D+ lymphocytes (Groh, PNAS 1996; Cosman, Immunity 2001). Indeed, cells expressing NKG2D ligands were killed in vitro by autologous NKG2D+ lymphocytes of our patients (Hanaoka N, et al. Blood. 2005;106:304a; Blood. 2006;108:295a). In further analysis, ligands were detected on granulocytes in 47 (53%) of 88 patients: 11 (58%) of 19 PNH, 28 (60%) of 47 AA, and 8 (36%) of 22 refractory anemia. Ligands were also detected on immature bone marrow cells in all 11 patients (3 PNH, 5 AA, and 3 refractory anemia) who permitted analysis of their marrow cells. In the patients, it is conceivable that blood cells were exposed to a certain stress to induce NKG2D ligands, leading to NKG2D-mediated marrow injury. We also observed a close association of the ligand expression with pancytopenia and favorable response to immunosuppressive therapy by prospective analysis of 5 patients (3 AA-PNH syndrome and 2 AA) for more than one year up to 5 years. Thus, we here propose that NKG2D-mediated immunity, which drives both NK and T-cells, is critically implicated in the pathogenesis of bone marrow failure of PNH and its related disorders.


Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 915-915
Author(s):  
Christine V. Ichim ◽  
Dzana Dervovic ◽  
Juan Carlo Zuniga-Pflucker ◽  
Richard A. Wells

Abstract Abstract 915 The orphan nuclear receptor NR2F6 is a mammalian homologue of the Drosophila seven-up gene that plays key roles in decisions of cell fate in neuroblast and retinal cells. We have previously described a novel role for NR2F6 in decisions of cell fate of mammalian haematopoietic cells of the myeloid cell lineage. We have shown that over-expression of NR2F6 in bone marrow cells impairs differentiation and extends the proliferative capacity of myeloid and early progenitor cells eventually leading to acute myeloid leukaemia (AML), while silencing of NR2F6 expression in AML cell lines causes terminal differentiation and apoptosis. A role of NR2F6 in lymphopoiesis has yet to be identified. Here we describe for the first time a role for NR2F6 in the specification of lymphoid cells. NR2F6 expression is heterogeneous throughout the haematopoietic hierarchy, with expression being highest in long-term repopulating HSCs and generally declining with the differentiation of progenitor cells. We report that over-expression of NR2F6 abrogates the developmental program necessary for T-cell lymphopoiesis. We assessed the effects of NR2F6 on lymphopoiesis in vivo by competitive bone marrow transplantation of NR2F6-IRES-GFP or GFP retrovirally transduced grafts (n=43). Competitive repopulation of lethally irradiated murine hosts with GFP transduced bone marrow cells resulted in successful engraftment and T-cell development, with GFP+ T-cells present in the thymus, and periphery at rates comparable to the percent marked cells in the original graft. However over-expression of NR2F6 placed developing T-cells at a dramatic competitive disadvantage. Six weeks post transplant the proportion of CD3+ cells derived from NR2F6 transduced bone marrow cells was greatly diminished relative to control (more than 10 fold), while at 12 weeks post-transplant we observed an abrogation of CD3+ cells derived from NR2F6 transduced T-cells (with the percentage of NR2F6 transduced CD3+ cells being comparable to staining with IgG control) in both the thymus and periphery. This stark competitive disadvantage was observed in all recipients of NR2F6 transduced grafts. We confirmed that this is not a phenomenon specific to the marker CD3 by analysing a portion of the animals for expression of CD4 and CD8, which again showed a lack of mature t-cells. In a second series of bone marrow transplants, cells transduced with NR2F6 or GFP were purified by fluorescence-activated cell sorting and grafts of 100% transduced cells were transferred by tail vein injection into lethally irradiated recipients. Animals transplanted with NR2F6 transduced bone marrow demonstrated a gross decrease in their thymic size and cellularity (∼10 fold decrease, n=17). Furthermore, the thymus of NR2F6 transduced animals contained a larger proportion of non-transduced, GFP negative residual haematopoietic cells than the vector control animals, corroborating the competitive disadvantage that NR2F6 transduced bone marrow cells face in the thymus. As observed in our previous experiments these animals demonstrated a gross reduction in the proportion of CD3+ cells in the thymus, spleen, lymph nodes and peripheral blood. To rule out the possibility that over-expression of NR2F6 is preventing the trafficking of progenitor cells to the thymus we differentiated NR2F6 or GFP transduced haematopoietic stem cells (lin-,c-kit+,sca-1+) into T-cells in vitro on OP9-DL1 cells. We observed a drastic reduction in the number of cells generated from NR2F6 transduced stem/progenitor cells (>50 fold at day 23), suggesting that expression of NR2F6 greatly impairs T-cell development. Mechanistically, others have shown that NR2F6 functions as a transcriptional repressor inhibiting the transactivating ability of genes such as Runx1. We conjecture that in lymphoid progenitors as well NR2F6 functions as a transcriptional repressor preventing the activation of pathways necessary for T-cell survival, proliferation and lymphopoiesis. Taken together, these data establish that the orphan nuclear receptor NR2F6 is a novel negative regulator of T-cell lymphopoiesis, and demonstrate that down-regulation of NR2F6 is important for the survival and proliferation of T-cell progenitors. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


1978 ◽  
Vol 147 (6) ◽  
pp. 1838-1842 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Sprent

F1 leads to parent bone marrow chimeras were prepared by transferring F1 hybrid marrow cells into heavily irradiated parental strain mice. When unprimed, donor-derived F1 T cells from the chimeras were activated to sheep erythrocytes (SRC) for 5 days in irradiated normal F1 mice, high IgM and IgG anti-SRC responses were observed with F1 B cells, and with B cells H-2-compatible with the strain in which the T cells were raised from stem cells. Significantly, however, responses with B cells of the opposite parental strain were either absent or very low. The restriction in T-helper function mapped to the K-end of the H-2 complex and could not be attributed to active suppression.


1968 ◽  
Vol 169 (1016) ◽  
pp. 307-327 ◽  

The origin of dividing liver macrophages during states of intense reticulo-endothelial stimulation has been studied in mice by means of the T 6 marker chromosome. The cells were isolated for cytological analysis by means of Garvey’s technique of collagenase and trypsin digestion. During the proliferative phase of graft-versus-host ( GVH ) reaction in the strain combination C 57BL → (C57BL x CBA-T6T6)F 1 , practically all liver macrophages in mitosis were of donor karyotype, even when relatively pure suspensions of thoracic duct small lymphocytes were used as the donor cells. Several lines of evidence established that the dividing cells analysed were part of a macrophage response. The isolated cells in mitosis had macrophage characteristics which reflected the cell proliferation examined in histological sections. This proliferation was largely restricted to the liver sinusoids and to cells with phagocytic properties. The same proportion of these cells appeared to be actively phagoctyic before their arrest in metaphase by Colcemid during GVH reaction as was found in normal mice. Furthermore, more than 70% of the liver sinusoidal cells which incorporated 3 H -thymidine were demonstrably phagocytic before and/or after labelling. Liver macrophage proliferation was greatly depressed by splenectomy 24 h after injection of donor cells, although cells of donor karyotype were still predominant. Similar techniques have been applied to syngeneic radiation chimaeras—( CBA x CBA-T6T6 ) F 1 mice ‘repopulated’ with CBA- T6T6 lymphocytes and CBA bone marrow. When Corynebacterium parvum vaccine was applied as a stimulant, two-thirds of dividing liver macrophages were found to be of lymphocyte origin and one-third or less derived from a precursor in bone marrow cells. Using partial hepatectomy to stimulate macrophage proliferation in these chimaeras, however, it was found that the overwhelming majority were derived from the bone-marrow precursor. The phagocytic property of the majority of proliferating cells was established by combined colloid and 3 H-thymidine labelling. It is concluded that liver macrophages derived from either of two different precursors in populations of recirculating lymphocytes and bone marrow cells respectively can proliferate preferentially, according to the nature of the reticulo-endothelial stimulus. Evidence from a variety of sources supports the contention that the bone-marrow precursor cell represents the major source of ‘normal’ macrophages. Whether the precursor amongst thoracic duct cells is identifiable with any previously recognized category of lymphocyte is not yet known. Its utilization has only been detected so far during conditions of intense reticulo-endothelial stimulation.


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