| Literature DB >> 14634114 |
John D Roback1, Mohammad S Hossain, Levan Lezhava, John W Gorechlad, Sabina A Alexander, David L Jaye, Stephen Mittelstaedt, Sohel Talib, John E Hearst, Christopher D Hillyer, Edmund K Waller.
Abstract
Infusion of donor antiviral T cells can provide protective immunity for recipients of hemopoietic progenitor cell transplants, but may cause graft-vs-host disease (GVHD). Current methods of separating antiviral T cells from the alloreactive T cells that produce GVHD are neither routine nor rapid. In a model of lethal murine CMV (MCMV) infection following MHC-mismatched bone marrow transplantation, infusion of MCMV-immune donor lymphocytes pretreated with the DNA cross-linking compound amotosalen prevented MCMV lethality without producing GVHD. Although 95% of mice receiving 30 x 10(6) pretreated donor lymphocytes survived beyond day +100 without MCMV disease or GVHD, all mice receiving equivalent numbers of untreated lymphocytes rapidly died of GVHD. In vitro, amotosalen blocked T cell proliferation without suppressing MCMV peptide-induced IFN-gamma production by MCMV-primed CD8(+) T cells. In vivo, pretreated lymphocytes reduced hepatic MCMV load by 4-log(10) and promoted full hemopoietic chimerism. Amotosalen-treated, MCMV tetramer-positive memory (CD44(high)) CD8(+) T cells persisted to day +100 following infusion, and expressed IFN-gamma when presented with viral peptide. Pretreated T cells were effective at preventing MCMV lethality over a wide range of concentrations. Thus, amotosalen treatment rapidly eliminates the GVHD activity of polyclonal T cells, while preserving long-term antiviral and graft facilitation effects, and may be clinically useful for routine adoptive immunotherapy.Entities:
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Year: 2003 PMID: 14634114 DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.171.11.6023
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol ISSN: 0022-1767 Impact factor: 5.422