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Ectopic Human Telomerase Catalytic Subunit Expression Maintains Telomere Length But Is Not Sufficient for CD8+ T Lymphocyte Immortalization

Authors :
Jean-Charles Cerottini
Tom Just
Pedro Romero
Markus Nabholz
Danila Valmori
Marco Migliaccio
Patrick Reichenbach
Mario Amacker
Source :
The Journal of Immunology. 165:4978-4984
Publication Year :
2000
Publisher :
The American Association of Immunologists, 2000.

Abstract

Like most somatic human cells, T lymphocytes have a limited replicative life span. This phenomenon, called senescence, presents a serious barrier to clinical applications that require large numbers of Ag-specific T cells such as adoptive transfer therapy. Ectopic expression of hTERT, the human catalytic subunit of the enzyme telomerase, permits fibroblasts and endothelial cells to avoid senescence and to become immortal. In an attempt to immortalize normal human CD8+ T lymphocytes, we infected bulk cultures or clones of these cells with a retrovirus transducing an hTERT cDNA clone. More than 90% of transduced cells expressed the transgene, and the cell populations contained high levels of telomerase activity. Measuring the content of total telomere repeats in individual cells (by flowFISH) we found that ectopic hTERT expression reversed the gradual loss of telomeric DNA observed in control populations during long term culture. Telomere length in transduced cells reached the levels observed in freshly isolated normal CD8+ lymphocytes. Nevertheless, all hTERT-transduced populations stopped to divide at the same time as nontransduced or vector-transduced control cells. When kept in IL-2 the arrested cells remained alive. Our results indicate that hTERT may be required but is not sufficient to immortalize human T lymphocytes.

Details

ISSN :
15506606 and 00221767
Volume :
165
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Immunology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6ac1eb833f475dbd134e352f399362ef