scholarly journals Gene expression changes in long-term culture of T-cell clones: genomic effects of chronic antigenic stress in aging and immunosenescence

Aging Cell ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 155-163 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dawn J. Mazzatti ◽  
Andrew White ◽  
Rosalyn J. Forsey ◽  
Jonathan R. Powell ◽  
Graham Pawelec
1982 ◽  
Vol 70 (2) ◽  
pp. 403-404 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Kaltmann ◽  
D. Gemsa ◽  
L. Hültner ◽  
U. Kees ◽  
F. Marcucci ◽  
...  

1982 ◽  
pp. 107-113
Author(s):  
Peter H. Krammer ◽  
Michel Dy ◽  
Werner Falk ◽  
Diethard Gemsa ◽  
Lothar Hültner ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Graham Pawelec ◽  
Erminia Mariani ◽  
Rafael Solana ◽  
Rosalyn Forsey ◽  
Anis Larbi ◽  
...  

2007 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dawn J Mazzatti ◽  
Graham Pawelec ◽  
Robin Longdin ◽  
Jonathan R Powell ◽  
Rosalyn J Forsey

1997 ◽  
Vol 160 (1) ◽  
pp. 31-42 ◽  
Author(s):  
Graham Pawelec ◽  
Arnika Rehbein ◽  
Karin Haehnel ◽  
Andrea Merl ◽  
Medi Adibzadeh

1986 ◽  
Vol 164 (3) ◽  
pp. 962-967 ◽  
Author(s):  
M F Luciani ◽  
J F Brunet ◽  
M Suzan ◽  
F Denizot ◽  
P Golstein

At least some long-term in vitro-cultured cytotoxic T cell clones and uncloned cell populations are able, in the presence of Con A, to lyse other cells, to be lysed by other cells, but not to lyse themselves. This as-yet-unexplained result may have implications as to the mechanism of T cell-mediated cytotoxicity.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 5539-5539
Author(s):  
Xianzheng Zhou ◽  
Xin Huang ◽  
Andrew C. Wilber ◽  
Lei Bao ◽  
Dong Tuong ◽  
...  

Abstract The Sleeping Beauty (SB) transposon system is a non-viral DNA delivery system in which a transposase directs integration of an SB transposon into TA-dinucleotide sites in the genome. To determine whether the SB transposon system can mediate integration and long-term transgene expression in human primary T-cells, freshly isolated peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBLs) without prior activation were nucleofected with SB vectors carrying a DsRed reporter gene. Plasmids containing the SB transposase on the same (cis) (n=10) or separate molecule (trans) (n=8) as the SB transposon mediated long-term and stable reporter gene expression in human primary T-cells. We observed that delivery of SB transposase-encoding plasmid in trans effectively mediated stable gene expression in primary T-cells, exhibiting about a 3-fold increase (11% vs. 3% with 10 microgram plasmid on day 21) in potency in comparison with the cis vector (p<0.0001). In addition, a transposase mutant construct was incapable of mediating stable gene expression in human PBLs (n=6, p<0.0001), confirming that catalytic DDE domain is necessary for transposition in human primary T-cells. Immunophenotyping analysis in transposed T-cells showed that both CD4 and CD8 T-cells were transgene positive. SB-mediated high level of transgene expression in human T-cells was maintained in culture for at least 4 months without losing observable expression. Southern hybridization analysis showed a variety of transposon integrants among the 6 DsRed positive T-cell clones and no transposon sequences identifiable in the 2 DsRed negative clones. Sequencing of transposon:chromosome junctions in 5 out of 6 transposed T-cell clones confirmed that stable gene expression was due to SB-mediated transposition. In other studies, PBLs were successfully transfected using the SB transposon system and shown to stably and functionally express a fusion protein consisting of a surface receptor useful for positive T-cell selection and a “suicide” gene useful for elimination of transfected T-cells after chemotherapy. This study is the first report demonstrating that the SB transposon system can mediate stable gene transfer in human primary PBLs, which may be more advantageous for T-cell based gene therapies over widely used virus-based or conventional mammalian DNA vectors in terms of simplicity, stability, efficiency and safety.


Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 108 (11) ◽  
pp. 866-866
Author(s):  
Carolina Berger ◽  
Michael C. Jensen ◽  
Stanley R. Riddell

Abstract Adoptive transfer of T cells has been employed to reconstitute T cell immunity to viruses such as cytomegalovirus (CMV) in immunodeficient allogeneic stem cell transplant (SCT) patients and is being investigated to treat malignancies. In the allogeneic SCT setting, the T cells are derived from the donor and need to be isolated as clones or highly pure populations to avoid graft-versus-host disease. CD8+ T cells can be divided into defined subsets including CD62L− effector memory (TEM) and central memory T cells (TCM) expressing the CD62L lymph node homing molecule. Both TCM and TEM can give rise to cytolytic effector T cells (TE) after antigen stimulation and can be expanded in vitro for immunotherapy. However, the potential of T cells derived from either the TEM or TCM subset to persist in vivo has not been investigated. We used a macaque model to determine whether reconstitution of T cell memory to CMV by adoptive transfer of CD8+ T cell clones depended on their origin from either the CD62L+ TCM or CD62L− TEM subset. T cell clones were retrovirally transduced to express the macaque CD19 or CD20 surface marker to allow tracking of T cells in vivo. Clones derived from both TCM and TEM had similar avidity and proliferative capacity in vitro, and had a TE phenotype (CD62L−CCR7−CD28−CD127−, granzyme B+). TCM and TEM-derived T cell clones were transferred to macaques at doses of 3–6×108/kg and were both detected in the blood one day after transfer at 1.2–2.7% (low dose) to 20–25% (high dose) of CD8+ T cells. However, the frequency of TEM-derived T cells was undetectable after 3–5 days, and the cells were not present in lymph node or bone marrow obtained at day 14. By contrast, TCM-derived clones persisted in peripheral blood, migrated to tissue sites, and were detectable long-term at significant levels. A distinguishing feature of TCM-derived cells was their responsiveness to homeostatic cytokines. Only TCM-derived clones were rescued from apoptotic cell death by low-dose IL15 for >30 days in vitro and this correlated with higher levels of IL15Rα, IL2Rβ, and IL2Rγ, and of Bcl-xL and Bcl-2, which promote cell survival. To determine if the inability of TEM-derived clones to survive in vitro correlated with an increased susceptibility of cell death in vivo, we measured the proportion of infused cells that were positive for propidium iodide (PI) and Annexin V during the short period of in vivo persistence. One day after transfer, 41–45% of TEM-derived T cells were Annexin V+/PI+, analyzed directly in the blood or after 24 hours of culture. By contrast, only a minor fraction of an adoptively transferred TCM-derived T cell clone was Annexin V+/PI+ and the infused cells survived in vivo. A subset of the persisting T cells reacquired TCM marker (CD62L+CCR7+CD127+CD28+) in vivo and regained functional properties of TCM (direct lytic activity; rapid proliferation to antigen). These T cells produced IFN-γ and TNF-α after peptide stimulation, and studies are in progress to assess their in vivo response to antigen by delivery of T cells expressing CMV proteins. Our studies in a large animal model show for the first time that CD8+ TE derived from TCM but not TEM can persist long-term, occupy memory T cell niches, and restore TCM subsets of CMV-specific immunity. Thus, taking advantage of the genetic programming of cells that have become TCM might yield T cells with greater therapeutic activity and could be targeted for human studies of T cell therapy for both viral and malignant disease.


2015 ◽  
Vol 89 (8) ◽  
pp. 4517-4526 ◽  
Author(s):  
William S. DeWitt ◽  
Ryan O. Emerson ◽  
Paul Lindau ◽  
Marissa Vignali ◽  
Thomas M. Snyder ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTA detailed characterization of the dynamics and breadth of the immune response to an acute viral infection, as well as the determinants of recruitment to immunological memory, can greatly contribute to our basic understanding of the mechanics of the human immune system and can ultimately guide the design of effective vaccines. In addition to neutralizing antibodies, T cells have been shown to be critical for the effective resolution of acute viral infections. We report the first in-depth analysis of the dynamics of the CD8+T cell repertoire at the level of individual T cell clonal lineages upon vaccination of human volunteers with a single dose of YF-17D. This live attenuated yellow fever virus vaccine yields sterile, long-term immunity and has been previously used as a model to understand the immune response to a controlled acute viral infection. We identified and enumerated unique CD8+T cell clones specifically induced by this vaccine through a combined experimental and statistical approach that included high-throughput sequencing of the CDR3 variable region of the T cell receptor β-chain and an algorithm that detected significantly expanded T cell clones. This allowed us to establish that (i) on average, ∼2,000 CD8+T cell clones were induced by YF-17D, (ii) 5 to 6% of the responding clones were recruited to long-term memory 3 months postvaccination, (iii) the most highly expanded effector clones were preferentially recruited to the memory compartment, and (iv) a fraction of the YF-17D-induced clones could be identified from peripheral blood lymphocytes solely by measuring clonal expansion.IMPORTANCEThe exhaustive investigation of pathogen-induced effector T cells is essential to accurately quantify the dynamics of the human immune response. The yellow fever vaccine (YFV) has been broadly used as a model to understand how a controlled, self-resolving acute viral infection induces an effective and long-term protective immune response. Here, we extend this previous work by reporting the identity of activated effector T cell clones that expand in response to the YFV 2 weeks postvaccination (as defined by their unique T cell receptor gene sequence) and by tracking clones that enter the memory compartment 3 months postvaccination. This is the first study to use high-throughput sequencing of immune cells to characterize the breadth of the antiviral effector cell response and to determine the contribution of unique virus-induced clones to the long-lived memory T cell repertoire. Thus, this study establishes a benchmark against which future vaccines can be compared to predict their efficacy.


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