Immunotherapy in Aplastic Anemia Using a Biotherapeutic Approach.

Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 4214-4214
Author(s):  
Weiwei Liu ◽  
Jiayu Chen ◽  
Yangqiu Li ◽  
Demao Yang

Abstract We have developed a cell-based immunotherapy and successfully treated some patients with benzene-induced and idiopathic aplastic anemia (AA). Autologous and/or allogeneic peripheral blood mononuclear cells were cultured in vitro with a combination of cytokines and calcium ionophore for 2 days before given to patients via intravenous infusion--initially with patients with mild or modest disease. However, these patients had been treated with conventional immune suppression plus growth factors for 6 months to 1.5 years. During this rather prolonged time, they did not recover spontaneously, and one or more lineages (mostly platelet) of their peripheral blood counts had never been normal. The frequency of the treatment was once a week and patients stopped receiving any other therapy. Encouraged by the fact that these patients had strong and rapid recovery of blood counts after receiving a number of cycles of the therapy, we then treated patients with more severe disease. This immunotherapy is very powerful in that no patients, among total 29 we have treated so far, even with the most severe form of benzene-induced AA, have failed therapy in our hospitals. It was found that severe disease requires more aggressive and prolonged therapy, the longest period of time we have performed the therapy for such patients is one year. The first group of patients we treated were followed up to 2.5 years and no secondary clonal disorders were found. It was found in our ongoing studies that infusion of large numbers of allogeneic immune cells is even more effective than infusion of small numbers of autologous cells for patients with severe disease. We have used 2–5x108 allogeneic immune cells per infusion per day for 5 consecutive days, followed by small numbers of autologous infusions (1 to 10 million from 50 ml of peripheral blood, depending on the severity of the disease). This cycle of therapy is repeated once a month for as long as the neutrophil count is more than 0.5x109/L. The efficacy of the therapy seems to correlate well with the number of cells infused and the frequency of infusion. The mechanism by which our immunotherapy works is not completely clear to us, and we are currently trying to understand it better by performing various animal experiments to see how stem cells benefit from the therapy. Because allogeneic cells work well for patients with AA, we speculate that our immunotherapy has little to do with HLA-mediated specific immune responses but rather affects target cells, tissues, and organs through cytokines produced by both infused and target cells and cell contact. Analysis of patients’ thymus function indicates improvement in T-cell differentiation and maturation. Finally, we are using the same therapy to treat 6 patients with severe idiopathic AA and have found that the therapy is also effective for these patients. One patient had a complete response after 3 months of therapy and the other 5 have had dramatic improvements in bone marrow histology, reduced blood transfusion, and increased neutrophil, leukocyte and reticulocyte counts after several months of therapy. We found, in general, that idiopathic AA is much more difficult and requires an even longer period of time to cure than benzene-induced AA using this immunotherapy and also that cure of this terrible disease using biotherapeutic approachs may become possible. This simple but very effective immunotherapy may have more potential in treatment of other hematopoietic disorders.

Blood ◽  
1980 ◽  
Vol 55 (6) ◽  
pp. 937-943
Author(s):  
F Takaku ◽  
T Suda ◽  
H Mizoguchi ◽  
Y Miura ◽  
H Uchino ◽  
...  

Thirty-six patients with aplastic anemia and three with aplastic anemia- PNH syndrome in eight institutes were studied for the presence of peripheral blood mononuclear cells having a suppressive effect on granulocyte-macrophage (G-M) and erythroid colony formation using a uniform protocol. In 11 cases of 29 (38%) and 9 cases of 29 (31%), the presence of mononuclear cells with a suppressive effect on G-M and erythroid colony formation, respectively, was demonstrated. However, the presence of mononuclear cells suppressive both to G-M and erythroid colony formation was demonstrated only in 3 of 19 cases (16%).


Blood ◽  
1980 ◽  
Vol 55 (6) ◽  
pp. 937-943 ◽  
Author(s):  
F Takaku ◽  
T Suda ◽  
H Mizoguchi ◽  
Y Miura ◽  
H Uchino ◽  
...  

Abstract Thirty-six patients with aplastic anemia and three with aplastic anemia- PNH syndrome in eight institutes were studied for the presence of peripheral blood mononuclear cells having a suppressive effect on granulocyte-macrophage (G-M) and erythroid colony formation using a uniform protocol. In 11 cases of 29 (38%) and 9 cases of 29 (31%), the presence of mononuclear cells with a suppressive effect on G-M and erythroid colony formation, respectively, was demonstrated. However, the presence of mononuclear cells suppressive both to G-M and erythroid colony formation was demonstrated only in 3 of 19 cases (16%).


Author(s):  
Carl Randall Harrell ◽  
Bojana Simovic Markovic ◽  
Crissy Fellabaum ◽  
Dragica Miloradovic ◽  
Aleksandar Acovic ◽  
...  

Abstract Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) produce immunomodulatory factors that regulate production of cytokines and chemokines in immune cells affecting their functional properties. Administration of MSCs-sourced secretome, including MSC-derived conditioned medium (MSC-CM) and MSC-derived exosomes (MSC-Exos), showed beneficial effects similar to those observed after transplantation of MSCs. Due to their nano-size dimension, MSC-Exos easily penetrate through the tissue and in paracrine and endocrine manner, may deliver MSC-sourced factors to the target immune cells modulating their function. MSCs derived from amniotic fluid (AF-MSCs) had superior cell biological properties than MSCs derived from bone marrow. We recently developed “Exosomes Derived Multiple Allogeneic Proteins Paracrine Signaling (Exo-d-MAPPS)”, a biological product in which the activity is based on AF-MSC-derived Exos capable to deliver immunomodulatory molecules and growth factors to the target cells. Herewith, we analyzed immunosuppressive capacity of Exo-d-MAPPS against human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (pbMNCs) and demonstrated that Exo-d-MAPPS efficiently suppressed generation of inflammatory phenotype in activated pbMNCs. Exo-d-MAPPS attenuated production of inflammatory cytokines and promoted generation of immunosuppressive phenotype in Lipopolysaccharide-primed pbMNCs. Exo-d-MAPPS treatment reduced expansion of inflammatory Th1 and Th17 cells and promoted generation of immunosuppressive T regulatory cells in the population of Concanavalin A-primed pbMNCs. Similarly, Exod-MAPPS treatment suppressed pro-inflammatory and promoted anti-inflammatory properties of α-GalCer-primed pbMNCs. In summing up, due to its capacity for suppression of activated pbMNCs, Exo-d-MAPPS should be further explored in animal models of acute and chronic inflammatory diseases as a poten-tially new remedy for the attenuation of detrimental immune response.


Author(s):  
G. R. Hook ◽  
M. A. Greenwood ◽  
D. Barba ◽  
B. Ikejiri ◽  
S. N. Chen ◽  
...  

Culture of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBM) with recombinant interleukin-2 (rIL-2) results in lymphokine activated killer cells (LAK) that can kill fresh non-cultured, natural killer cell resistant tumor cells. Clinically, human LAK and rIL-2 immunotherapy can cause regression of some tumors in humans and preliminary trials using LAK cells to treat glioma patients are beginning . LAK effector cells are a subset of the LAK population that must physically contact target cells in order to kill them. In this and the following abstract, we report the morphology of LAK cells killing human glioma derived cells in vitro.PBM cells were obtained from normal adult volunteers and stimulated in culture for 4 days with rIL-2 (Cetus, Emeryville, CA). Glioma-derived cells were obtained at surgery from a recurrent glioma patient and established as a cell line (SNB-92). SNB-92 cells were positive for glial fibrillary acidic protein and were used at passage 8.


2017 ◽  
Vol 69 (3) ◽  
pp. 383-390
Author(s):  
Luis López-Soto ◽  
José Galván-Moroyoqui ◽  
Manuel Martínez-Soto ◽  
Martín Almada-Balderrama ◽  
Ashley Rosales-Ruiz ◽  
...  

Both increased serum ferritin levels and Toll-like receptor (TLR) activation show independent association with the inflammatory processes. During inflammation, cell activation and apoptosis are accompanied by the release of membrane-derived microparticles (MPs), which are considered to be mediators of intercellular communication as they induce specific responses in target cells. The aim of this study was to determine whether glycated and glycoxidated ferritin induce in vitro release TLR microparticles from CD14+ peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells were stimulated with glycated, glycoxidated and native ferritin. The release of microparticles from CD14+ cells, the presence of TLR2+ and TLR4+ on the microparticles surface and the presence of interleukins-6 and -8 (IL-6 and IL-8) inside the microparticles after stimulation were determined by flow cytometry. The role of nuclear factor ?B (NF-?B) was evaluated by pretreatment of the cells with the Bay 11-7085 inhibitor. Glycated and glycoxidated ferritin induced the release of microparticles from CD14+ cells, the majority of which expressed TLR2+ and TLR4+ on their surface and contained IL-6 and IL-8. These effects were dependent on NF-?B activation. Our findings show that glycated and glycoxidated ferritin might be involved in the release of microparticles and stimulation of inflammatory responses.


2021 ◽  
pp. 2101798
Author(s):  
Ilona E. Kammerl ◽  
Sophie Hardy ◽  
Claudia Flexeder ◽  
Andrea Urmann ◽  
Julia Peierl ◽  
...  

Immune cells contain a specialised type of proteasome, i.e. the immunoproteasome, which is required for intracellular protein degradation. Immunoproteasomes are key regulators of immune cell differentiation, inflammatory activation and autoimmunity. Immunoproteasome function in peripheral immune cells might be altered by smoking and in COPD thereby affecting immune cell responses.We here analysed the expression and activity of proteasome complexes in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) isolated from healthy male young smokers as well as from patients with severe COPD and compared them to matching controls. Proteasome expression was upregulated in COPD patients as assessed by RT-qPCR and mass spectrometry-based proteomics analysis. Proteasome activity was quantified using activity-based probes and native gel analysis. We observed distinct activation of immunoproteasomes in the peripheral blood cells of young male smokers and severely ill COPD patients. Native gel analysis and linear regression modeling confirmed robust activation and elevated assembly of 20S proteasomes, which correlated significantly with reduced lung function parameters in COPD patients. The immunoproteasome was distinctly activated in COPD patients upon inflammatory cytokine stimulation of PBMCs in vitro. Inhibition of the immunoproteasome reduced proinflammatory cytokine expression in COPD-derived blood immune cells.Given the crucial role of chronic inflammatory signalling and the emerging involvement of autoimmune responses in COPD, therapeutic targeting of the immunoproteasome might represent a novel therapeutic concept for COPD.


Diagnostics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (6) ◽  
pp. 1037
Author(s):  
Patricia Ruiz-Limon ◽  
Maria L. Ladehesa-Pineda ◽  
Clementina Lopez-Medina ◽  
Chary Lopez-Pedrera ◽  
Maria C. Abalos-Aguilera ◽  
...  

Endothelial dysfunction (ED) is well known as a process that can lead to atherosclerosis and is frequently presented in radiographic axial spondyloarthritis (r-axSpA) patients. Here, we investigated cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying r-axSpA-related ED, and analyzed the potential effect of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) in promoting endothelial injury in r-axSpA. A total of 30 r-axSpA patients and 32 healthy donors (HDs) were evaluated. The endothelial function, inflammatory and atherogenic profile, and oxidative stress were quantified. In vitro studies were designed to evaluate the effect of PBMCs from r-axSpA patients on aberrant endothelial activation. Compared to HDs, our study found that, associated with ED and the plasma proatherogenic profile present in r-axSpA, PBMCs from these patients displayed a pro-oxidative, proinflammatory, and proatherogenic phenotype, with most molecular changes noticed in lymphocytes. Correlation studies revealed the relationship between this phenotype and the microvascular function. Additional in vitro studies confirmed that PBMCs from r-axSpA patients promoted endothelial injury. Altogether, this study suggests the relevance of r-axSpA itself as a strong and independent cardiovascular risk factor, contributing to a dysfunctional endothelium and atherogenic status by aberrant activation of PBMCs. Lymphocytes could be the main contributors in the development of ED and subsequent atherosclerosis in this pathology.


Viruses ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 514
Author(s):  
Denise Utami Putri ◽  
Cheng-Hui Wang ◽  
Po-Chun Tseng ◽  
Wen-Sen Lee ◽  
Fu-Lun Chen ◽  
...  

The heterogeneity of immune response to COVID-19 has been reported to correlate with disease severity and prognosis. While so, how the immune response progress along the period of viral RNA-shedding (VRS), which determines the infectiousness of disease, is yet to be elucidated. We aim to exhaustively evaluate the peripheral immune cells to expose the interplay of the immune system in uncomplicated COVID-19 cases with different VRS periods and dynamic changes of the immune cell profile in the prolonged cases. We prospectively recruited four uncomplicated COVID-19 patients and four healthy controls (HCs) and evaluated the immune cell profile throughout the disease course. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) were collected and submitted to a multi-panel flowcytometric assay. CD19+-B cells were upregulated, while CD4, CD8, and NK cells were downregulated in prolonged VRS patients. Additionally, the pro-inflammatory-Th1 population showed downregulation, followed by improvement along the disease course, while the immunoregulatory cells showed upregulation with subsequent decline. COVID-19 patients with longer VRS expressed an immune profile comparable to those with severe disease, although they remained clinically stable. Further studies of immune signature in a larger cohort are warranted.


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