Long-Term Immunological Profile and T Cell Dynamics In Patients Treated With Allogeneic Transplantation and TK-Cells For Hematological Malignancies

Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 165-165
Author(s):  
Giacomo Oliveira ◽  
Maria Teresa Lupo Stanghellini ◽  
Nicoletta Cieri ◽  
Raffaella Greco ◽  
Maddalena Noviello ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Suicide gene therapy applied to allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-HSCT) is one of the widest clinical applications of gene therapy. By the infusion of donor lymphocytes transduced to express the Herpes Simplex Virus Thymidine Kinase (TK) suicide gene, patients achieve a rapid immune reconstitution and substantial protection against tumor recurrence. TK-cells are promptly eliminated in case of graft versus host disease (GvHD), with complete resolution of the adverse reaction. In previous studies, we showed that TK-cell infusions are necessary and sufficient to promote the generation of a fast, polyclonal and full competent T cell repertoire. In the present work we characterize the immunological profile of a cohort of long-term survivors after suicide gene therapy and we studied the long-term fate of TK-cells to shed light on memory T cell dynamics after transplantation. Results We studied 14 adult patients who underwent allo-HSCT (haploidentical HSCT: n=11; HLA-identical HSCT n=3) and infusion of purified suicide-gene modified donor T cells (median dose: 1.9x107 cells/kg, range:0.9x106-2.8x108) for high-risk hematologic malignancies between 1995 and 2010. At a median follow-up of 8,7 years (range 3-17), all patients are in complete remission. Five out of 14 patients experienced GvHD in the early phase post immune reconstitution; in all cases, ganciclovir administration proved effective in abrogating the adverse reaction. No symptoms or complications related to GvHD were observed during the long-term follow up, and none of the patient is receiving immunosuppressive drugs. We observed a complete recovery of NK cells, comprising of mature (CD56+CD16+) and immature (CD56+CD16-) NK cells. Interestingly the proportion of B cells circulating long-term in patients was significantly higher than that observed in age-related healthy controls (p<0.0001). Full recovery of CD3, including CD4 and CD8 cell counts was observed in this long-term analysis. The youngest patients (age range: 22-34 years) showed naïve and memory frequencies similar to age-matched controls. Conversely, in oldest patients (age range: 44-66 years) the frequency of naïve T cells was inferior to age-matched healthy subjects (p=0.0038), and was compensated by a larger proportion of central memory and effector memory cells. Nevertheless, we observed a high percentage of recent thymic emigrants, suggesting a full recovery of thymic output not only in young but also in old patients. Stem memory CD4 and CD8 T cell counts were similar to that of healthy controls, independently from age. CMV-specific T cells, quantified by dextramer staining, were detected in CMV+ patients. TK-cells were detected in the majority of analyzed patients (90%), at low levels (median=0,43%±6,9%). Ex vivo selection of pure TK-cells after polyclonal stimulation and NGFR-purification confirmed the presence of functional transduced cells, thus directly demonstrating the ability of memory T cells to persist for years. The proportion of TK-cells detectable at the longest follow-up did not correlate with the number of infused cells, nor patients or donors’ age, but instead with the peak of TK-cells observed within the first 3 months after infusion, suggesting that antigen recognition is dominant in driving in vivo expansion and persistence of memory T cells. Of notice TK-cells could be retrieved also in patients successfully treated with ganciclovir for GvHD, thus confirming the selective action of ganciclovir only on proliferating TK-cells. Accordingly, ganciclovir sensitivity was preserved in long-term persisting TK-cells, independently from their differentiation phenotype. While infused TK-cells displayed a predominant effector memory phenotype, gene modified T cells persisting long-term were enriched for central memory (CD45RA-CD62L+) and stem memory (CD45RA+CD62L+CD95+) phenotypes, suggesting the higher ability of these T cell subsets to persist and shape the immunological profile long-term in treated patients. Conclusion These data show that a complete donor-derived immune system is restored in adult surviving long-term after suicide gene therapy. After infusion, gene modified cells persist for up to 14 years in treated patients. Further studies on TK-cell TCR repertoire and vector integrations are currently being performed to elucidate the in vivo dynamics of infused memory T cells. Disclosures: Valtolina: MolMed S.p.A: Employment. Traversari:MolMed S.p.A: Employment. Bordignon:MolMed S.p.A: Employment. Bonini:MolMed S.p.A: Consultancy.

Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 4793-4793
Author(s):  
Giacomo Oliveira ◽  
Maria Teresa Lupo Stanghellini ◽  
Eliana Ruggiero ◽  
Nicoletta Cieri ◽  
Mattia D'Agostino ◽  
...  

Abstract BACKGROUND: Suicide gene therapy applied to haploidentical hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (haplo-HSCT) is one of the widest clinical applications of gene therapy. By the infusion of donor lymphocytes transduced to express the Herpes Simplex Virus Thymidine Kinase (TK) suicide gene, patients achieve a rapid immune reconstitution and substantial protection against tumor recurrence. TK-cells are promptly eliminated in case of graft versus host disease (GvHD), with complete resolution of the adverse reaction. In previous studies, we showed that TK-cell infusions are necessary and sufficient to promote the generation of a fast, polyclonal and full competent T cell repertoire. In the present work we characterize the immunological profile of a cohort of long-term survivors after suicide gene therapy and we studied the long-term fate of TK-cells to shed light on memory T cell dynamics after transplantation. RESULTS: We studied 9 adult patients who underwent haplo-HSCT and infusion of purified suicide-gene modified donor T cells (median dose: 1.9x107 cells/kg, range:0.9x106-39.5x106) for high-risk hematologic malignancies between 1995 and 2010 (TK patients). At a median follow-up of 7,4 years (range 3.2-12.3), all patients are in complete remission. Two out of 9 patients (22%) experienced GvHD in the early phase post immune reconstitution; in all cases, ganciclovir (GCV) administration proved effective in abrogating the adverse reaction. No symptoms or complications related to GvHD were observed during the long-term follow up, and none of the patient is receiving immunosuppressive drugs. A complete recovery of NK cells, B lymphocytes and αβ or γδ T cells was observed. The CD8+ and CD4+ T cell compartment of TK patients were characterized by level of naïve and memory cell comparable to age and sex matched healthy controls. The quantification of CD4+ CD31+ CD62L+ CD45RA+ CD95- recent thymic emigrants and measure of single joint T-cell receptor excision circles demonstrated that the normalization of the T cell compartment was supported by a completely recovered thymic output. TK-cells were detected in all patients (100%), at low levels (median=4cells/uL). Ex vivo selection of pure TK-cells after polyclonal stimulation and LNGFR-purification confirmed the presence of functional transduced cells, thus directly demonstrating the ability of memory T cells to persist for years. Of notice TK-cells could be retrieved also in patients successfully treated with GCV for GvHD, thus confirming the selective action of GCV only on proliferating TK-cells. Accordingly, GCV sensitivity was preserved in long-term persisting TK-cells, independently from their differentiation phenotype. TK-cells circulating in patients displayed a memory phenotype comprising effector memory (TEM), central memory (TCM) and stem memory (TSCM) T cells and exhibited a low level of Ki-67 positivity, thus suggesting the maintenance of a pool of gene modified memory cells through homeostatic proliferation. The number of TK-cells circulating at the longest follow-up did not correlate with the number of infused cells, nor patients or donors’ age, but instead with the peak of TK-cells observed within the first months after infusion, suggesting that antigen recognition is dominant in driving in vivo expansion and persistence of memory T cells. We evaluated whether the phenotype of infused TK-cells was able to affect the long-term fate of gene-modified memory T cells. We observed that the number of infused TSCM cells positively correlated with early TK-cell expansion and with their long-term persistence, suggesting that TSCMmight play a privileged role in the generation of a long-lasting immunological memory. CONCLUSION: These data show that a complete and physiological donor-derived immune system is restored in adult surviving long-term after suicide gene therapy. After infusion, gene modified cells persist for up to 12 years in treated patients. This setting can be exploited to investigate the requirements at the basis of the generation of a long-lasting immunological memory in vivo. Further studies on TK-cell TCR repertoire and vector integrations are currently being performed to elucidate the in vivo dynamics of infused memory T cells. Disclosures Lambiase: MolMed S.p.A: Employment. Traversari:MolMed S.p.A: Employment. Bordignon:MolMed S.p.A: Chairman and CEO Other. Bonini:MolMed S.p.A: Consultancy.


Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 263-263
Author(s):  
Giacomo Oliveira ◽  
Eliana Ruggiero ◽  
Maria Teresa Lupo Stanghellini ◽  
Nicoletta Cieri ◽  
Mattia D'Agostino ◽  
...  

Abstract BACKGROUND: Long-term T-cell survival is pivotal for the development of effective therapeutic approaches against pathogens and cancer, since the success of immunotherapy requires the generation of a robust, safe but also durable immune response. Even if it is established that memory cells can survive and persist for years, little is known about the requirements for their long-term persistence. Suicide gene therapy after T-cell depleted haploidentical hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (haplo-HSCT) provides a unique model to study memory T cells. In this setting, patients receive the post-transplant infusion of donor-derived gene-modified memory T lymphocytes retrovirally transduced to express the Herpes Simples Virus Thymidine Kinase (TK) suicide gene and the DLNGFR selection marker. The presence of a safety switch allows the infusion into patients of a broad T-cell repertoire in the absence of immune suppression, while the surface marker enables unambiguous detection and close monitoring of gene-modified cells circulating in treated patients. In the present work we characterize the immunological profile of a cohort of long-term survivors after suicide gene therapy and we studied the fate of persisting TK cells to shed light on memory T cell dynamics in vivo and to unravel the requirements for long-term persistence directly in humans. RESULTS: We studied 10 adult patients who underwent haplo-HSCT and infusion of suicide-gene modified donor T cells (median dose: 1.9x107 cells/kg, range:1-39.5x106) for high-risk hematologic malignancies between 1995 and 2012. Three out of 10 patients (33%) experienced GvHD early after HSCT; in all cases, ganciclovir (GCV) administration proved effective in abrogating the adverse reaction. At a median follow-up of 7 years (range 2-14), all patients were in complete remission and free of GvHD, and displayed a complete and broad donor-derived immune system characterized by physiological counts of NK cells, B lymphocytes, γδ T cells and naïve and memory CD4+ or CD8+ T cells. TK cells were detected in all patients, at low levels (median=4cells/uL), even in patients treated with GCV. Ex vivo selection of pure TK-cells confirmed the presence of functional transduced cells, thus directly demonstrating the ability of memory T cells to persist for years. Importantly, GCV sensitivity was preserved in long-term persisting TK cells, independently from their differentiation phenotype. Longitudinal follow up revealed that TK cells circulated in patients at stable levels and displayed a conserved phenotype comprising effector memory (TEM), central memory (TCM) and stem memory (TSCM) T cells. The low level of Ki-67 positivity suggested the maintenance of a pool of gene-modified memory cells through homeostatic proliferation. Polyclonality was demonstrated by sequencing among TK cells of thousands of diverse TCRs with a broad usage of V and J alpha and beta genes. The number of TK cells persisting at the longest follow-up did not correlate with the amount of infused cells, but instead with the peak of TK cells measured within the first months after infusion, suggesting that antigen recognition is dominant in driving in vivo expansion and persistence of memory T cells. Accordingly, we documented the persistence of CMV and Flu-specific TK cells only after post-transplant CMV reactivation or after Flu infection. Characterization of TK cell products infused to patients showed that the amount of infused TSCM cells positively correlates with early expansion and long-term persistence of gene-marked cells. By combining sorting of memory T-cell subsets with sequencing of integration sites, TCRα and TCRβ clonal markers, we longitudinally traced T-cell clones from infused products to late follow-up time-points. We showed that although T cells retrieved long-term are enriched in clones originally shared in different memory T-cell subsets, dominant long-term clonotypes preferentially originate from infused TSCM clones, suggesting that TSCM might play a privileged role in the generation of a long-lasting immunological memory. CONCLUSION: In a completely restored immune system, suicide gene-modified donor T cells persist for up to 14 years in treated patients. Long-term persistence of memory T cells is determined by antigen exposure, and by the original phenotype of infused cells, according to a hierarchical model in which TSCM are superior to TCM and TEM/EFF. Disclosures Lambiase: MolMed S.p.A: Employment. Traversari:MolMed S.p.A: Employment. Bordignon:MolMed S.p.A: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees. Bonini:MolMed S.p.A: Consultancy.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 115 (17) ◽  
pp. 3508-3519 ◽  
Author(s):  
John C. Markley ◽  
Michel Sadelain

Abstract The γc-cytokines are critical regulators of immunity and possess both overlapping and distinctive functions. However, comparative studies of their pleiotropic effects on human T cell–mediated tumor rejection are lacking. In a xenogeneic adoptive transfer model, we have compared the therapeutic potency of CD19-specific human primary T cells that constitutively express interleukin-2 (IL-2), IL-7, IL-15, or IL-21. We demonstrate that each cytokine enhanced the eradication of systemic CD19+ B-cell malignancies in nonobese diabetic/severe combined immunodeficient (NOD/SCID)/γcnull mice with markedly different efficacies and through singularly distinct mechanisms. IL-7– and IL-21–transduced T cells were most efficacious in vivo, although their effector functions were not as enhanced as IL-2– and IL-15–transduced T cells. IL-7 best sustained in vitro T-cell accumulation in response to repeated antigenic stimulation, but did not promote long-term T-cell persistence in vivo. Both IL-15 and IL-21 overexpression supported long-term T-cell persistence in treated mice, however, the memory T cells found 100 days after adoptive transfer were phenotypically dissimilar, resembling central memory and effector memory T cells, respectively. These results support the use of γc-cytokines in cancer immunotherapy, and establish that there exists more than 1 human T-cell memory phenotype associated with long-term tumor immunity.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 5252-5252
Author(s):  
Takeya Sato ◽  
Anton Neschadim ◽  
Vanessa I. Rasaiah ◽  
Manfred Konrad ◽  
Daniel H. Fowler ◽  
...  

Abstract The infusion of donor lymphocytes in allogenic BMT recipients provides potent antitumor activity to treat recurrent malignancies. One complication, however, is severe GvHD, which is mediated by T cells in the graft. One approach to control GvHD is to employ ‘suicide’ gene therapy. In the customary adaptation of this approach, the herpes simplex virus type 1 thymidine kinase (HSV1-tk) gene, combined with the antiviral prodrug ganciclovir (GCV), is used to control GvHD after introduction of this suicide gene into donor T lymphocytes. However, the efficiency of HSV1-tk is suboptimal and the issue of host immunogenicity against this heterologous effector gene product can hamper outcomes. In addition, prophylactic GCV is often used to control cytomegalovirus infection after BMT. This confounds the broad clinical implementation of this approach. Our novel suicide gene therapy strategy combines the use of human thymidylate monophosphate kinase (tmpk) and the prodrug Zidovudine (AZT) in a lentiviral vector (LV) format. Since tmpk is endogenously expressed in human cells, immunogenic responses will be limited. We constructed a LV expression system carrying wild-type or one of two modified forms of tmpk. These engineered tmpk mutants (F105Y and BL) show substantially increased catalytic conversion of AZT compared to wild-type tmpk. Our vector also includes a truncated form of human CD19 (hCD19Δ), not normally expressed on the T cell lineage, that can be used to enrich and track transduced cells. Highly efficient (95%) transduction of Jurkat cells (human T cell leukemia line) was attained by a single infection with our LVs (MOI of 10). Transduced cells were efficiently and selectively killed in a dose-dependent manner by AZT (IC50 of 2 μM), while wild-type tmpk transduced cells were unaffected by AZT up to 100 μM. In response to AZT treatment, the apoptotic cell indices of cells transduced with wild-type tmpk, F105Y, or BL were 6.2 ± 0.3 %, 40.7 ± 1.7 %, and 46.1 ± 4.6 %, respectively (n=3). We next established by HPLC that cells transduced with a LV encoding a mutant form of tmpk effectively convert AZT into its active anti-metabolite form, AZT-triphosphate (AZT-TP). Intracellular ratio of AZT-TP to AZT-monophosphate (MP) is 11.3 in cells transduced with a LV encoding the BL mutant of tmpk, compared to 0.02 in non-transduced cells and 0.10 in wild-type tmpk transduced cells. Our findings also revealed that following incubation with indirubin-3′-oxime, which inhibits cellular proliferation, and AZT treatment, transduced cells were successfully killed. Thus the cytotoxic mechanism differs from HSV1-tk mediated cell killing and is independent of cell proliferation. We also succeeded in the infection of primary mouse and human T cells to over 40% and 70% transduction efficiency, respectively. Lastly, we have shown that in vivo growth of tumor cells transduced with these mutant tmpk LVs was totally inhibited by treatment with AZT. These results demonstrate that our novel suicide gene therapy system has significant potential for many clinical applications.


Viruses ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (8) ◽  
pp. 1490
Author(s):  
Victoria Matyushenko ◽  
Irina Isakova-Sivak ◽  
Igor Kudryavtsev ◽  
Arina Goshina ◽  
Anna Chistyakova ◽  
...  

Background: New coronavirus SARS-CoV-2, a causative agent of the COVID-19 pandemic, has been circulating among humans since November 2019. Multiple studies have assessed the qualitative and quantitative characteristics of virus-specific immunity in COVID-19 convalescents, however, some aspects of the development of memory T-cell responses after natural SARS-CoV-2 infection remain uncovered. Methods: In most of published studies T-cell immunity to the new coronavirus is assessed using peptides corresponding to SARS-CoV-1 or SARS-CoV-2 T-cell epitopes, or with peptide pools covering various parts of the viral proteins. Here, we determined the level of CD4+ and CD8+ memory T-cell responses in COVID-19 convalescents by stimulating PBMCs collected 1 to 6 months after recovery with sucrose gradient-purified live SARS-CoV-2. IFNγ production by the central and effector memory helper and cytotoxic T cells was assessed by intracellular cytokine staining assay and flow cytometry. Results: Stimulation of PBMCs with live SARS-CoV-2 revealed IFNγ-producing T-helper effector memory cells with CD4+CD45RA−CCR7− phenotype, which persisted in circulation for up to 6 month after COVID-19. In contrast, SARS-CoV-2-specific IFNγ-secreting cytotoxic effector memory T cells were found at significant levels only shortly after the disease, but rapidly decreased over time. Conclusion: The stimulation of immune cells with live SARS-CoV-2 revealed a rapid decline in the pool of effector memory CD8+, but not CD4+, T cells after recovery from COVID-19. These data provide additional information on the development and persistence of cellular immune responses after natural infection, and can inform further development of T cell-based SARS-CoV-2 vaccines.


Author(s):  
Mashael Alabed ◽  
Asma Sultana Shaik ◽  
Narjes Saheb Sharif-Askari ◽  
Fatemeh Saheb Sharif-Askari ◽  
Shirin Hafezi ◽  
...  

Memory T cells play a central role in regulating inflammatory responses during asthma. However, tissue distribution of effector memory (T<sub>EM</sub>) and central memory (T<sub>CM</sub>) T-cell subtypes, their differentiation, and their contribution to the persistence of lung tissue inflammation during asthma are not well understood. Interestingly, an increase in survival and persistence of memory T cells was reported in asthmatic lungs, which may suggest a shift toward the more persistent T<sub>CM</sub> phenotype. In this report, we investigated the differential distribution of memory T-cell subtypes during allergic lung inflammation and the mechanism regulating that. Using an OVA-sensitized asthma mouse model, we observed a significant increase in the frequency of T<sub>CM</sub> cells in inflamed lungs compared to healthy controls. Interestingly, adoptive transfer techniques confirmed substantial infiltration of T<sub>CM</sub> cells to lung tissues during allergic airway inflammation. Expression levels of T<sub>CM</sub> homing receptors, CD34 and GlyCAM-1, were also significantly upregulated in the lung tissues of OVA-sensitized mice, which may facilitate the increased T<sub>CM</sub> infiltration into inflamed lungs. Moreover, a substantial increase in the relative expression of T<sub>CM</sub> profile-associated genes (EOMES, BCL-6, ID3, TCF-7, BCL-2, BIM, and BMI-1) was noted for T<sub>EM</sub> cells during lung inflammation, suggesting a shift for T<sub>EM</sub> into the T<sub>CM</sub> state. To our knowledge, this is the first study to report an increased infiltration of T<sub>CM</sub> cells into inflamed lung tissues and to suggest differentiation of T<sub>EM</sub> to T<sub>CM</sub> cells in these tissues. Therapeutic interference at T<sub>CM</sub> infiltration or differentiations could constitute an alternative treatment approach for lung inflammation.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonella Scaglione ◽  
Silvana Opp ◽  
Alicia Hurtado ◽  
Christine Pampeno ◽  
Ziyan Lin ◽  
...  

The COVID-19 pandemic caused by the coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 is a major global public threat. Currently, a worldwide effort has been mounted to generate billions of effective SARS-CoV-2 vaccine doses to immunize the world population at record speeds. However, there is still demand for alternative effective vaccines that rapidly confer long-term protection and rely upon cost-effective, easily scaled-up manufacturing. Here, we present a Sindbis alphavirus vector (SV), transiently expressing the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein (SV.Spike), combined with the OX40 immunostimulatory antibody (OX40) as a novel, highly effective vaccine approach. We show that SV.Spike plus αOX40 elicits long-lasting neutralizing antibodies and a vigorous T cell response in mice. Protein binding, immunohistochemical and cellular infection assays all show that vaccinated mice sera inhibits spike functions. Immunophenotyping, RNA Seq transcriptome profiles and metabolic analysis indicate a reprogramming of T cells in vaccinated mice. Activated T cells were found to mobilize to lung tissue. Most importantly, SV.Spike plus αOX40 provided robust immune protection against infection with authentic coronavirus in transgenic mice expressing the human ACE2 receptor (hACE2-Tg). Finally, our immunization strategy induced strong effector memory response, potentiating protective immunity against re-exposure to SARS-CoV-2 spike protein. Our results show the potential of a new Sindbis virus-based vaccine platform to counteract waning immune response that can be used as a new candidate to combat SARS-CoV-2. Given the strong T cell responses elicited, our vaccine is likely to be effective against variants that are proving challenging, as well as, serve as a platform to develop a broader spectrum pancoronavirus vaccine. Similarly, the vaccine approach is likely to be applicable to other pathogens.


Blood ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 98 (7) ◽  
pp. 2071-2076 ◽  
Author(s):  
José L. Cohen ◽  
Olivier Boyer ◽  
David Klatzmann

After allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT), mature transplanted T cells play a major role in restoration of the immune system. However, they can also induce a life-threatening complication: graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). Suicide gene therapy of GVHD aims to selectively eliminate alloreactive T cells mediating GVHD while sparing nonalloreactive T cells that should contribute to immune reconstitution. It was demonstrated previously that treatment with ganciclovir (GCV) can control GVHD in mice by killing donor T cells engineered to express the thymidine kinase (TK) suicide gene. TK allows phosphorylation of nontoxic GCV into triphosphate GCV, which is selectively toxic for dividing cells. Thus, in the TK-GCV system, the specificity of cell killing depends on the cycling status of TK T cells rather than allogeneic recognition. This is a potential drawback because in recipients of lymphopenic allogeneic HSCT, alloreactive and homeostatic signals drive the proliferation of donor T cells. It is shown here that the onset of alloreactive T-cell division occurs earlier than that of nonalloreactive T cells, thus establishing a time frame for GCV administration. A 7-day GCV treatment initiated at the time of HSCT allowed efficient prevention of GVHD, while sparing a pool of nondividing donor TK T cells. These cells later expanded and contributed to the replenishment of the recipient immune system with a diversified T-cell receptor repertoire. These results provide a rationale for designing the therapeutic scheme when using TK-GCV suicide gene therapy in allogeneic HSCT.


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