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Quantitative assessment of human T lymphocytes in RAG2(-/-)gammac(-/-) mice: the impact of ex vivo manipulation on in vivo functionality

Authors :
Gert Storm
Elles R. Simonetti
Anton Hagenbeek
Mark Bonyhadi
Rozemarijn S. van Rijn
Anton C.M. Martens
Saskia B. Ebeling
Cancer Center Amsterdam
Clinical Haematology
Source :
Experimental hematology, 35(1), 117-127. Elsevier Inc.
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Recent clinical trials of adoptive immunotherapy showed diminished reactivity of human T cells upon ex vivo manipulation. For a safe and effective clinical application of human T cells, it is necessary to improve ex vivo manipulation procedures and evaluate their impact on in vivo functionality. However, there is no preclinical model for quantitative assessment of in vivo functionality of human T cells. In this study, we investigated the feasibility of using the huPBMC- RAG2(-/-)gammac(-/-) xenogeneic mouse model. As a first example, we compared 3 different ex vivo culture conditions for human T cells. METHODS: RAG2(-/-)gammac(-/-) mice received cultured human T cells that were stimulated via CD3 alone or costimulated via CD28 (CD3/28) and/or human 4-1BB (CD3/28/4-1BB). Engraftment levels and survival of the cells were measured. The dynamics of the human T cell phenotypes were analyzed during culture and in vivo, as well as the mechanism of the xenoresponse. RESULTS: Engraftment potential was improved twofold for costimulation compared to CD3 alone (p < 0.001). Phenotypic analysis showed a strikingly similar pattern of development towards CD4(+) and CD8(+) effector and effector-memory cells, suggesting antigen-driven survival and expansion. All parameters used to analyze different effects on in vivo T-cell functionality, like culture condition, engraftment levels, survival of the cells over time, or xenogeneic graft-vs-host disease were absolutely independent of the distribution of the T cell population in vivo following contact with xeno-antigen. CONCLUSION: The huPBMC-RAG2(-/-)gammac(-/-) xenogeneic transplant model is the most sensitive to date for in vivo functional evaluation of human T cells

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0301472X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Experimental hematology, 35(1), 117-127. Elsevier Inc.
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cdfede125aaffc06dc88bc37bc053adc