| Literature DB >> 31307533 |
Cormac Cosgrove1, Emilia R Dellacecca1, Joost H van den Berg2, John B Haanen2, Michael I Nishimura3, I Caroline Le Poole4, Hans E N Bergmans5.
Abstract
Tumor immunotherapy using gene-modified T cells has already met with considerable success in the treatment of metastatic melanoma and B cell lymphoma. With improving patient prognoses, new questions arise. In particular, the long-term consequences of treatment among individuals of childbearing age could now be considered. Former patients can carry a cohort of transgenic memory T cells long after treatment has ceased and the effector T cell population has contracted. When patients become parents well after treatment is completed, expectant mothers may still pass transgenic T cells to their unborn children. Consequences should be more measurable if the mother also breastfeeds the baby. Maternal T cells may shape immune responses in the child, can tolerize the child to maternal antigens, and might cause either beneficial or adverse effects in the offspring. The hypothesis put forth is that transgenic T cells transferred from mother to child during and after pregnancy might have consequences that have not been adequately considered to date. Depending on the targeted antigen and the MHC eventually required to present it, such transfer may be beneficial, uneventful or even damaging. Such potential consequences are addressed in this paper. The transgenic T cells might form a pocket of memory T cells in secondary lymphoid organs of the child, expand upon antigen stimulation, and react. However, simple measures might be devised to avoid any reason for concern. These considerations provide ample incentive to probe transgenerational transfer of transgenic T cells.Entities:
Keywords: Breastmilk; CD4; CD8; Offspring; Placenta; Risk assessment; Transgenic T cells
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31307533 PMCID: PMC6631543 DOI: 10.1186/s40425-019-0657-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunother Cancer ISSN: 2051-1426 Impact factor: 13.751
Fig. 1Evaluating transgenerational transfer of adoptively transferred T cells. (1) T cells are isolated from splenocytes and transduced to express a transgenic CAR. (2) Female mice are tumor challenged and treated with CAR T cells, then followed for tumor resolution. (3) After varying intervals, these females or wild type females are bred to have offspring which are (4) then cross fostered. (5) Pups are weaned and challenged with tumor cells or not, then evaluated for tumor growth, autoimmune responses and persistence of transgenic T cells