Human adenovirus (HAdV) infection may cause life-threatening complications in recipients of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT), the highest risk being observed in children given T-cell depleted haploidentical allografts. The effectiveness of pharmacologic therapy for HAdV infection is suboptimal. Recently, cell therapy was demonstrated to offer a unique opportunity to restore antiviral immune surveillance, leading to clearance of infection and prevention/treatment of disease. However, infusion of insufficiently selected HAdV-specific T cells in haplo-HSCT may increase the risk of graft-versus-host disease. We conducted scale-up experiments to validate a method of in vitro culture to expand T cells specific for HAdV from donor peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC), based on stimulation with a pool of five 30-mer peptides derived from HAdV5 hexon protein, for use in recipients of haplo-HSCT. A total of 21 T-cell lines that included a majority of CD4(+) T lymphocytes, were generated. Nineteen of the 21 T-cell lines proliferated specifically against HAdV. The 2 nonspecific, and 3 T-cell lines with lower specific activity, included a median of 48% CD8(+) T cells. The 19 HAdV-specific T-cell lines showed a median 357-fold decrease in alloreactivity, compared with proliferation of noncultured donor PBMC in response to recipient PBMC, only 4/19 T-cell lines showing residual alloreactivity. Our data indicate that HAdV-specific CD4(+) T-cell lines with efficient in vitro antiviral response and low/undetectable alloreactivity against recipient targets may be expanded from PBMC of most human leukocyte antigen-haploidentical HSCT donors after stimulation with HAdV hexon protein-derived peptides. These T cells may be safely employed for adoptive treatment of HAdV complications.

Comoli, P., Schilham, M. W., Basso, S., Van Vreeswijk, T., Ester Bernardo, M., Maccario, R., Van Tol, M. J. D., Locatelli, F., Veltrop-Duits, L. A., T-cell Lines Specific for Peptides of Adenovirus Hexon Protein and Devoid of Alloreactivity Against Recipient Cells can be Obtained From HLA-haploidentical Donors, <<JOURNAL OF IMMUNOTHERAPY>>, 2008; 31 (6): 529-536. [doi:10.1097/cji.0b013e31817b9c6b] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/258376]

T-cell Lines Specific for Peptides of Adenovirus Hexon Protein and Devoid of Alloreactivity Against Recipient Cells can be Obtained From HLA-haploidentical Donors

Locatelli, Franco;
2008

Abstract

Human adenovirus (HAdV) infection may cause life-threatening complications in recipients of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT), the highest risk being observed in children given T-cell depleted haploidentical allografts. The effectiveness of pharmacologic therapy for HAdV infection is suboptimal. Recently, cell therapy was demonstrated to offer a unique opportunity to restore antiviral immune surveillance, leading to clearance of infection and prevention/treatment of disease. However, infusion of insufficiently selected HAdV-specific T cells in haplo-HSCT may increase the risk of graft-versus-host disease. We conducted scale-up experiments to validate a method of in vitro culture to expand T cells specific for HAdV from donor peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC), based on stimulation with a pool of five 30-mer peptides derived from HAdV5 hexon protein, for use in recipients of haplo-HSCT. A total of 21 T-cell lines that included a majority of CD4(+) T lymphocytes, were generated. Nineteen of the 21 T-cell lines proliferated specifically against HAdV. The 2 nonspecific, and 3 T-cell lines with lower specific activity, included a median of 48% CD8(+) T cells. The 19 HAdV-specific T-cell lines showed a median 357-fold decrease in alloreactivity, compared with proliferation of noncultured donor PBMC in response to recipient PBMC, only 4/19 T-cell lines showing residual alloreactivity. Our data indicate that HAdV-specific CD4(+) T-cell lines with efficient in vitro antiviral response and low/undetectable alloreactivity against recipient targets may be expanded from PBMC of most human leukocyte antigen-haploidentical HSCT donors after stimulation with HAdV hexon protein-derived peptides. These T cells may be safely employed for adoptive treatment of HAdV complications.
2008
Inglese
Comoli, P., Schilham, M. W., Basso, S., Van Vreeswijk, T., Ester Bernardo, M., Maccario, R., Van Tol, M. J. D., Locatelli, F., Veltrop-Duits, L. A., T-cell Lines Specific for Peptides of Adenovirus Hexon Protein and Devoid of Alloreactivity Against Recipient Cells can be Obtained From HLA-haploidentical Donors, <<JOURNAL OF IMMUNOTHERAPY>>, 2008; 31 (6): 529-536. [doi:10.1097/cji.0b013e31817b9c6b] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/258376]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10807/258376
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