| Literature DB >> 26880996 |
Antonio Pierini1, Maite Alvarez2, Robert S Negrin2.
Abstract
Allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) is a powerful therapy to treat multiple hematological diseases. The intensive conditioning regimens used to allow for donor hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) engraftment are often associated with severe toxicity, delayed immune reconstitution, life-threatening infections, and thus higher relapse rates. Additionally, due to the high incidence of graft versus host disease (GvHD), HCT protocols have evolved to prevent such disease that has a detrimental impact on antitumor and antiviral responses. Here, we analyzed the role of host T and natural killer (NK) cells in the rejection of donor HSC engraftment as well as the impact of donor regulatory T cells (Treg) and NK cells on HSC engraftment. We review some of the current strategies that utilize NK or Treg to improve allogeneic HCT therapy in order to accomplish better HSC engraftment and immune reconstitution and achieve a lower incidence of cancer relapse, opportunistic infections, and GvHD.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26880996 PMCID: PMC4736409 DOI: 10.1155/2016/9025835
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cells Int Impact factor: 5.443
Figure 1Role of NK cells during allogeneic HSC rejection. Donor allogeneic HSCs express MHC class I molecules that are not recognized by the inhibitory receptors of licensed NK cells resulting in HSC lysis, whereas there can be unlicensed NK cell subsets that express inhibitory receptors capable of recognizing the MHCI of allogeneic BMC. On the contrary, donor NK cells share MHCI expression with donor BMC and thus are less likely to play a role in allogeneic BMC rejection. In allogeneic HCT settings, the presence of host licensed NK cells at the time of transplantation can influence the donor engraftment outcome.
Figure 2Impact of donor NK cells during allogeneic HCT. Host licensed NK cells are responsible for HSC rejection minimizing donor HSC engraftment. Donor NK cells, in contrast, are known to be tolerant to donor HSC and play a fundamental role in the reduction of GvHD by the elimination of alloreactive T cells. Donor unlicensed NK cells, in HLA-matched HCT, and licensed NK cells, in HLA-mismatched (haploidentical) HCT, can additionally provide stronger antitumor responses due to the lack of recognition of HLA in tumor cells (missing ligand).
Treg adoptive transfer in clinical trials.
| HCT type | Clinical approach | Patients treated | Treg isolation | Treg number/kg | GvHD outcome | |
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Trzonkowski et al., 2009 [ | HLA-matched | T: aGvHD and cGvHD | 2 (1 aGvHD and 1 cGvHD) | Magnetic separation | cGvHD (1 × 105) | 1 (cGvHD) response |
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Brunstein et al., 2011 [ | Cord blood | P | 23 | Magnetic separation | 1 × 105–3 × 106 | aGvHD II–IV (43%) |
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Di Ianni et al., 2011 [ | Haploidentical | P | 28 | Magnetic separation | 2 × 106–4 × 106 | aGvHD (2/26) |
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Martelli et al., 2014 [ | Haploidentical | P | 43 | Magnetic separation | 2 × 106 | aGvHD (6/41) |
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Theil et al., 2015 [ | HLA-matched (4) | T: cGvHD | 5 | Magnetic separation | Median 2.36 × 106 | Response (2) |
T: treatment; P: prevention.