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. 2002 Nov 27;74(10):1454-60.
doi: 10.1097/00007890-200211270-00019.

T cells mediate resistance to genetically modified bone marrow in lethally irradiated recipients

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T cells mediate resistance to genetically modified bone marrow in lethally irradiated recipients

Jessamyn Bagley et al. Transplantation. .

Abstract

Background: In order for gene therapy to attain clinical relevance, efficient engraftment and long-term survival of cells that express transduced genes of interest must be achieved. In this study, we examined the extent to which host T cells affect engraftment of syngeneic bone marrow cells engineered to express a retrovirally transduced allogeneic major histocompatibility complex class-I gene.

Methods: B10.AKM mice were preconditioned with lethal irradiation or lethal irradiation plus transient CD4 and CD8 T-cell depletion in addition to CD40-CD154 costimulatory blockade and were then reconstituted with syngeneic bone marrow cells transduced with retroviruses that carried the gene that encoded H-2K(b) (K(b)). Expression of K(b) on bone marrow-derived cells was then analyzed, and induction of tolerance to K was evaluated.

Results: Mice conditioned using CD4 and CD8 T-cell depletion in addition to CD40-CD154 costimulatory blockade and lethal irradiation showed a significant increase in the frequency of bone marrow-derived cells that expressed K(b) when compared to animals that received lethal irradiation alone. Survival of allogeneic skin grafts that expressed K(b) was significantly prolonged in animals conditioned with anti-CD4, anti-CD8, and co-stimulatory blockade in addition to lethal irradiation (median survival time, 81 days) when compared to mice that received irradiation alone (mean survival time, 31 days; P=0.001).

Conclusions: Radioresistant host T cells significantly affect the ability to induce tolerance by gene therapy by affecting engraftment of transduced cells that expressed allogeneic major histocompatibility complex class-I genes in the absence of host T-cell depletion and costimulatory blockade, even after lethal irradiation. Thus, radioresistant host T cells are a significant barrier to engraftment of transduced bone marrow progenitors and to the induction of tolerance by gene therapy.

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