| Literature DB >> 7916206 |
A N Warrens1, J Y Zhang, S Sidhu, D J Watt, G Lombardi, C A Sewry, R I Lechler.
Abstract
Recent interest in myoblast transfer and in the use of myoblasts as vehicles in gene therapy has made it important to understand the potential immunogenicity of allogeneic or neoantigen-expressing myoblasts. Given the problems of producing a pure population of myoblasts, in this study we used a tumour-derived muscle cell line (TE671), with phenotypic features of myoblasts, which we transfected to express HLA-DR1. However, this cell line was unable to stimulate either established HLA-DR1-specific allorective T cell clones or a primary alloresponse. Nor could it present haemagglutinin peptide HA 306-324 to DR1-restricted, HA 306-324-specific T cell clones or lines. Indeed, preincubation with DR1-expressing TE671 and HA 306-324 rendered such T cells tolerant as judged by their subsequent inability to proliferate in response to a DR1+ B cell line plus peptide HA 306-324. These results imply that myoblasts do not provide costimulatory signals, and are therefore unlikely to stimulate allospecific T cells following myoblasts transplantation or to initiate neoantigen-specific immune responses following in vivo transfection.Entities:
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Year: 1994 PMID: 7916206 DOI: 10.1093/intimm/6.6.847
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Immunol ISSN: 0953-8178 Impact factor: 4.823