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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2017-09-05
    Description: The earlier diagnosis of cancer is one of the keys to reducing cancer deaths in the future. Here we describe our efforts to develop a noninvasive blood test for the detection of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma. We combined blood tests forKRASgene mutations with carefully thresholded protein biomarkers to determine whether the combination of these markers was superior to any single marker. The cohort tested included 221 patients with resectable pancreatic ductal adenocarcinomas and 182 control patients without known cancer.KRASmutations were detected in the plasma of 66 patients (30%), and every mutation found in the plasma was identical to that subsequently found in the patient’s primary tumor (100% concordance). The use ofKRASin conjunction with four thresholded protein biomarkers increased the sensitivity to 64%. Only one of the 182 plasma samples from the control cohort was positive for any of the DNA or protein biomarkers (99.5% specificity). This combinatorial approach may prove useful for the earlier detection of many cancer types.
    Print ISSN: 0027-8424
    Electronic ISSN: 1091-6490
    Topics: Biology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2002-10-01
    Description: Administration of the immunosuppressive drug cyclosporine A (CsA) following autologous stem cell transplantation paradoxically elicits a systemic autoimmune syndrome resembling graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). This syndrome, termed autologous GVHD, is associated with autoreactive CD8+ T cells that recognize major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II determinants in association with a peptide from the invariant chain. To investigate the potential role of cytokines and chemokines in autologous GVHD, interleukin 2 (IL-2), IL-4, IL-10, interferon γ (IFN-γ), and macrophage inflammatory protein-1α (MIP-1α) gene expression in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) was determined in 36 patients treated with CsA following transplantation and correlated with the induction of cytolytic activity against autologous phytohemagglutinin-stimulated lymphocytes (PHA-blasts) and the breast cancer cell line (T47D). The determination of gene expression by real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) revealed that IL-10 mRNA levels by PBMCs in patients with autologous GVHD were 29-fold higher than in healthy individuals. IFN-γ (4-fold), IL-2 (3-fold), and MIP-1α (44-fold) mRNA levels were also increased in GVHD-induced patients compared with healthy individuals. The ability of PBMCs to lyse autologous PHA-blasts and T47D tumor cells exhibited an identical temporal relationship with expression of IL-10 and IFN-γ during autologous GVHD. Moreover, the susceptibility to autologous GVHD as assessed in 75 patients was significantly associated with the IL-10−1082 G/G polymorphic alleles, allelic variants in the promoter region that govern IL-10 production. These findings indicate that IL-10 may play an unexpected but critical role in autologous GVHD and could be utilized to enhance a graft-versus-tumor effect after transplantation. Interestingly, polymorphisms in the IL-10 promoter region may also explain differences in the susceptibility of patients to autologous GVHD induction.
    Print ISSN: 0006-4971
    Electronic ISSN: 1528-0020
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2004-11-16
    Description: Syngeneic graft-vs-host disease (SGVHD) is a T cell dependent autoaggression syndrome induced by administering Cyclosporine following syngeneic bone marrow transplantation. The SGVHD autoreactive T cells recognize the MHC class II-invariant chain peptide complex (MHC class II-CLIP) and can be separated into functional subsets based on their differential dependence on the N- and C-terminal peptide flanking domains of CLIP. The present studies were undertaken to determine whether the N- or C-terminal flanking domain dependent subsets of CLIP reactive T cells reside within the CD4+CD25+ regulatory compartment. Multi-color flow cytometry was used to identify and isolate CD4+ (FITC) CD25+ (PE) T cells. Antigen-specific T cells within this compartment were identified with a soluble MHC class II-Ig chimeric construct (bioinylated, Cychrome avidin counterstaining) loaded with variants of CLIP containing the MHC class II binding domain and having either the N- or C-terminal flanking regions (N-CLIP, CLIP-C). Approximately 8.5% of the cells within the normal CD4+ lymphocyte population were CD25+. Both N-CLIP (1.1%) and CLIP-C (4.8%) reactive T cells coould be detected in the CD4+CD25+ population. Assessment of CD28, CTLA4, B7.1 and B7.2 mRNA expression levels by quantitative PCR directly ex vivo, revealed remarkable differences between the N-CLIP and CLIP-C specific CD4+CD25+ T cells. Although CD28 mRNA levels were comparable for both subsets, B7.2 and CTLA4 mRNA transcript levels were significantly increased (〉50 fold) in the CLIP-C+CD4+CD25+ T cells compared to the N-CLIP specific subset. On the other hand, levels of B7.1 mRNA were increased 〉10 fold in N-CLIP+CD4+CD25+ T cells. Additional studies assessing mRNA transcript levels for the regulatory transcription factor Foxp3, also revealed a disparity between the N-CLIP and C-CLIP specific subsets. mRNA transcript levels for Foxp3 were markedly increased (〉35 fold) in the CLIP-C dependent subset compared to the levels detected in N-CLIP+CD4+CD25+ T cells. Low levels of cytokine (IL-2, IL-4, interferon-γ) mRNA transcripts were detected in both subsets. Interestingly, intradermal immunization of normal animals with the peptides presented on dendritic cells increased mRNA transcript levels for type 1 cytokines in the N-CLIP reactive subset and type 2 cytokines in the CLIP-C dependent subset. Taken together, the results indicate that the CLIP-C antigen specific CD4+CD25+ cells have a profile consistent with regulatory T cells whereas the profile of the N-CLIP+CD4+CD25+ lymphocytes is more characteristic of activated T helper cells. The ability to identify and isolate regulatory T cells ex vivo and to modify their activity by immunization provides opportunities to both enhance and monitor the re-establishment of self-tolerance.
    Print ISSN: 0006-4971
    Electronic ISSN: 1528-0020
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2007-11-16
    Description: Recovery of immune function after initial treatment of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is critical, not only for protection against infections but also for surveillance against recurrent disease. A better understanding of the nature of lymphocyte recovery following induction and consolidation therapy for AML could guide the design of immunotherapy strategies aimed at boosting the anti-leukemia activity of a reconstituted immune system. Prior studies examining thymic T cell production following bone marrow transplantation (BMT) have found varying levels of thymic output post-transplant, as measured by T cell Receptor Excision Circle (TREC) levels in the peripheral blood of adult patients. Of note, relapse of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) following BMT is correlated with decreased levels of TREC positive T cells. In order to characterize immune reconstitution in AML, we studied 26 patients after induction or consolidation time sequential chemotherapy. Their median age was 52 (range 23–69). Thirteen patients received cytarabine, daunorubicin, and etoposide (AcDVP-16) induction therapy, 3 patients received cytarabine, daunorubicin, and cytarabine (AcDAc) consolidation therapy and 10 patients received flavopiridol, cytarabine, and mitoxantrone (FLAM) either as induction or consolidation therapy. Peripheral blood samples were collected approximately every other day for 3–5 time points after each patient’s white blood cell count exceeded 200 cells/cubic mm on three consecutive days. Among the four patients evaluated to date, flow cytometry results show that a majority of cells seen early in immune reconstitution are CD3+ lymphocytes (range 69–97%). Subset analyses on 3 of these 4 patients have shown CD4:CD8 ratios ranging from 3:1 to 4:1, while the fourth patient exhibited an inverse of this ratio at 1:5. In addition, CD25+FOXP3+ T cells represented a median of 5.1% (range 2.5–12.3%) of the CD3+ T cells. Since T cells represented the abundance of cells in the peripheral blood during early bone marrow recovery, we then assessed whether these cells represented recent thymic emigrants or naïve T cells by examining TRECs using real time PCR (RT-PCR). TRECs were present in 24 of the 26 patients with levels ranging between 100 and 100,000 copies per 100,000 cells. Furthermore, 4 control samples from normal volunteers (ages 37–43) revealed the absence of TREC positive cells. Further analyses of these time points and correlations between TREC levels and clinical responses are ongoing.
    Print ISSN: 0006-4971
    Electronic ISSN: 1528-0020
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2004-11-16
    Description: Graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) is a serious, life-threatening complication that occurs following allogeneic (allo) bone marrow transplantation (BMT). The use of non-specific immunosuppression or T cell depletion has reduced the incidence of GVHD but at the expense of increased rates of infection and leukemic relapse. Modulation of the major costimulatory pathway (CD28/CTLA4:B7) involved in T cell activation and regulation may lead to specific immune tolerance in the absence of global non-specific immunosuppression. The identification of mRNA splice variants encoding for soluble forms of CD28, CTLA4 and GITR suggests that costimulation of T cells is complex and is not limited to cell-cell contact. The present studies examined the hypothesis that the onset of GVHD and the re-establishment of immune tolerance correlate with the expression levels of these costimulatory molecules. mRNA transcript levels for the soluble (s) and full-length (fl; cell surface associated) variants assessed by quantitative PCR, were temporally examined in peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBLs) from patients undergoing alloBMT (n=38) or autologous (auto) BMT (n=39) with the induction of autoGVHD by cyclosporin A treatment post-transplant. Levels of s and fl CD28 mRNA transcripts in PBLs were significantly increased (〉1.5 fold, P2.3-fold, P2.1-fold). sCTLA4 expression in patients with alloGVHD was significantly decreased than patients without alloGVHD. Interestingly, temporal analysis revealed that the levels for sCTLA4 paralleled the recovery from GVHD implicating an active process in the establishment of non-responsiveness. CD28, CTLA4 and GITR s and fl mRNA levels in CD4+CD25+ T regulatory (Treg) cells from allo and autoBMT patients were significantly increased (7-, 41- or 22-fold, P4 fold reduction of 3H-thymidine incorporation). However, pretreatment of the Treg subset with short interfering RNA (siRNA) to knockdown sCTLA4 gene (confirmed by quantitative PCR) significantly reduced the ability of these cells to suppress the response (minimal suppression was detected, 6%). In vitro siRNA studies also indicated that Treg cells with inhibited sCTLA4 expression were unable to suppress the response of IL-2-stimulated autoreactive CD8+ T cells. Taken together, the results indicate that increased expression of CTLA4 (soluble and cell-surface associated) and the “negative” signal delivered by this molecule to the T cell may regulate the development of GVHD and help to re-establish self tolerance after BMT. Defining the role of costimulation and the modulation of this pathway on immune recognition and regulation not only provides opportunities to enhance the re-establishment of tolerance but also may help to intensify anti-tumor immunotherapeutic strategies.
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    Electronic ISSN: 1528-0020
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2008-11-16
    Description: OBJECTIVE: Investigate the contribution of PIG-A mutations to clonal expansion in paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH). INTRODUCTION: Whether PNH cells are inherently less susceptible to apoptosis remains controversial. Studies using PNH mouse models and lymphoid cell lines have failed to find a difference in apoptosis, but reports using K562 cells have found a relative resistance. Studies using primary CD34+ cells from PNH patients have also found a relative resistance of PNH cells, but not in comparison to CD34+ cells from normal controls. We designed experiments 1) to control for genetic heterogeneity among PNH and control cell lines, 2) to address the potential methodological issues associated with studying lymphocytes, which are rarely affected in PNH, and 3) address inconsistency comparing normal and PNH progenitors that have experienced different in vivo environments. METHODS: GPI-anchored protein (GPI-AP) positive and negative primary CD34+ hematopoietic progenitors from PNH patients were assayed for annexin V positivity by flow cytometry in a cell-mediated killing assay using autologous effectors from PNH patients or allogeneic effectors from healthy controls. To specifically assess the role of the PIG-A mutation in the development of clonal dominance and address confounders of secondary mutation and differential immune selection in vivo, we established an inducible PIG-A CD34+ myeloid cell line, TF-1. Using a doxycycline-inducible wild type PIG-A tet-SUPER transgene expression system, in which GPI-AP− and GPI-AP+ cells are isogenic, we assessed apoptosis resistance and clonal expansion in response to various pro-apoptotic stimuli. Apoptosis resistance was assessed after exposure to allogeneic effectors, NK92 effectors, TNF-α, and γ-irradiation. Apoptosis was measured by annexin V/PI staining (effector experiments) or caspase 3/7 activity (TNF-α and γ-irradiation experiments). Blocking experiments of NK92-mediated killing utilized mAb to ULBP1 and ULBP2, as per Hanaoka et al. Clonal competition experiments tracked wild type and PIG-A mutant TF-1 cells using flow cytometry after exposure to TNF-α as a surrogate for immune attack. RESULTS: In PNH patients, GPI-AP− CD34+ hematopoietic progenitors were less susceptible than GPI-AP+ CD34+ precursors to autologous (8% versus 49%, p
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2011-11-18
    Description: Abstract 1009 Delayed immune reconstitution with increased risk of opportunistic infection is a major complication of HLA-haploidentical stem cell transplantation, especially in protocols employing extensive T cell depletion of the graft. Previous studies at our institution with high-dose, post-transplantation Cy (PT/Cy) have reported low rates of non-relapse mortality and serious opportunistic infections. Here we characterize immune reconstitution in fifty-three consecutive hematologic malignancies patients receiving nonmyeloablative conditioning, T cell-replete, HLA-haploidentical bone marrow transplantation (BMT), and graft versus host disease prophylaxis including PT/Cy. Patients with advanced hematologic malignancies (median age 51, range 14–71; 5 AML, 2 ALL, 4 MDS, 2 CML, 4 CLL, 1 CMML, 25 NHL, 7 Hodgkins, 3 mantle cell) received Cy 14.5 mg/kg/day IV on days −6 and −5, fludarabine 30 mg/m2/day IV on days −6 to −2, 200 cGy of TBI on day -1 and T cell replete bone marrow from donors with a median age of 44 (range 14–68). GVHD prophylaxis consisted of Cy (50 mg/kg/day) on days 3 and 4, mycophenolate mofetil for 30 days, and tacrolimus for 6 months. Grafts contained an infused median TNC/kg of 4.1 e8 (range 2.6–6.6 e8), CD3+/kg 3.6 e7 (range 1.7–6.7e7) and a CD34+/kg of 3.5e6 (range 1.4–7.0e6). Sustained engraftment of donor cells occurred in 86% of evaluable patients (44/51).The median times to neutrophil (〉500/μL) and platelet recovery (〉20,000/μL) were 17 days (range, 13–92 days) and 28 days (range, 13–580 days), respectively. Post-transplantation recovery of lymphocyte subsets is shown in Table 1 and Figure 1 and is notable for the following: 1) The median lymphocyte count at day 30 after transplantation is 〉180/ml and recovers to over 800/ml by day 60; 2) CD4+ T cell counts recover to a median 〉120/ml by day 60 and 〉220/ml by day 180 after transplantation; and 3) recovery of CD31+ recent thymic emigrants and CD45RA+ naïve T cells is delayed compared to recovery of memory T cells. T cell receptor spectratyping analysis on a subset of 10 patient/donor pairs chosen specifically for having no relapse/no GVHD (n=4), GVHD and no relapse (n=3), or late relapse (n=3) revealed that patients without relapse, GVHD, or recent viral infection had excellent reconstitution of the T cell repertoire to the level of the pre-transplant donor, as early as 6 months post-transplant (Figure 2). CMV specific T cell response using ELISPOT measured on a subset of 17 patients whose donors were reactive to CMV, revealed that donor-derived immunity to CMV returns by Day 60 in about 70% of patients (12/17) (Figure 3). In conclusion, immune reconstitution after non-myeloablative haploidentical T cell replete BMT with PT/Cy compares favorably with other reduced intensity conditioning alternative donor regimens and suggests that PT/Cy selectively preserves pathogen-specific memory T cells necessary to protect against infection. Further correlations of immune reconstitution with specific infectious and overall outcomes are being analyzed.Figure 1T-, B-, and NK-cell ReconstitutionFigure 1. T-, B-, and NK-cell ReconstitutionFigure 2T cell receptor spectratypingFigure 2. T cell receptor spectratypingFigure 3CMV-specific T cell frequencyFigure 3. CMV-specific T cell frequencyTable 1.Post-transplantation Lymphocyte Subset RecoveryMedian (cells/μL) (N)Interquartile range (cells/μL)ALCDonor1765 (46)1480–2100Recipient pre-BMT840 (45)425–1295Day 30184 (49)54–402Day 60820 (38)470–1260Day 180915 (34)670–1560Day 3653060 (22)820–2030CD3+CD4+CD45RA+ (naïve)Donor119 (33)82–189Recipient pre-BMT22 (34)4–38Day 300.33 (35)0.07–1Day 603 (29)1–9Day 18011 (23)5–31Day 36523 (13)13–92CD3+CD4+CD45RA−CCR7+ (central memory)Donor135 (33)95–158Recipient pre-BMT54 (34)11–79Day 302 (35)0.5–11Day 6034 (29)10–79Day 18061 (23)35–117Day 36589 (13)60–122CD3+CD4+CD45RA−CCR7− (effector memory)Donor187 (33)130–245Recipient pre-BMT87 (34)14–134Day 303 (35)1–18Day 6059 (29)14–122Day 180102 (23)43–179Day 365142 (12)64–204CD3+CD4+CD45RA+CD31+ (recent thymic emigrants)Donor61 (33)30–97Recipient pre-BMT6 (34)1–16Day 300.9 (35)0.03–0.4Day 601 (29)0.5–2Day 1804 (23)1–11Day 3657 (13)2–12CD3+CD4+Foxp3+Donor28 (33)23–35Recipient pre-BMT13 (34)6–24Day 301 (35)0.1–5Day 608 (29)4–16Day 18013 (23)7–25Day 36514 (13)7–17ALC, absolute lymphocyte count; WBC, white blood cell count; Treg, regulatory T cell Disclosures: Jones: Aldagen: Patents & Royalties.
    Print ISSN: 0006-4971
    Electronic ISSN: 1528-0020
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 1997-03-15
    Description: Administration of the immunosuppressive drug cyclosporine after autologous bone marrow transplantation induces a systemic autoimmune syndrome resembling graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). This syndrome termed autologous GVHD has significant antitumor activity. Associated with autologous GVHD is the development of T lymphocytes that recognize major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II determinants, including self. The present studies attempted to characterize and define the molecular specificity of the effector T lymphocytes in autologous GVHD induced in patients with metastatic breast cancer. The results suggest that the effector cells associated with human autologous GVHD are CD8+ T lymphocytes expressing the α/β T-cell receptor. Additional studies show that the effector T cells recognize MHC class II antigens in association with a peptide from the invariant chain (CLIP). Pretreatment of autologous lymphoblast target cells with anti-CLIP antibody completely blocked lysis mediated by autologous GVHD effector T cells. On the other hand, force loading this peptide markedly enhanced the susceptibility of the target cells to recognition by the autoreactive T cells. The recognition of the MHC class II CLIP complex may account for the novel specificity of the effector T cells associated with human autologous GVHD. Moreover, identification of the target peptide may allow for the development of novel immunotherapeutic strategies to enhance the antitumor efficacy of autologous GVHD.
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2008-11-16
    Description: Patients who demonstrate a rapid but limited initial lymphocyte recovery following therapy have a significantly better response rate than patients where lymphocyte recovery is markedly delayed. Timed sequential therapy (TST) is a cell cycle dependent based approach for curative therapeutic potential in acute myelogenous leukemia (AML). Recovery of T cells in this setting can be due to thymic dependent T cell development or as a consequence of directed (antigen) expansion of effector T lymphocytes. The present studies evaluated immunological reconstitution of 26 AML patients following induction or consolidation TST. Thirteen patients received cytarabine, daunorubicin and etoposide (AcDVP-16) induction therapy, 3 patients received cytarabine, daunorubicin and cytarabine (AcDAc) and 10 patients received flavopiridol, cytarabine and mitoxantrone (FLAM) either as induction or consolidation therapy. Peripheral blood lymphocytes were collected during the initial phase of white blood cell reconstitution (〉200 cells/ cu mm). Lymphocyte Recovery preceded that of myeloid elements (median of day 24 versus day 30) with peak lymphocyte counts ranging from 300–1800 and a median of 650 cells/cu mm. Multi-color flow cytometric analysis revealed recovery of CD4, CD8 and NK cells with the CD3+CD4+:CD3+CD8+ ratio averaging 4.5:1 (range 1:1– 8:1). Assessment of T cell recombinant excision circles (TREC’s) suggested that a significant proportion of the T cells (median 40,000 copies per 100,000 cells; range 100 – 100,000 copies) were recent thymic emigrants. Somewhat surprisingly, there was a significant expansion of the CD4+CD25+Foxp3+ regulatory T cell compartment (median 5.1%; range 2.5 – 12.3%). To examine whether the expansion of this T cell compartment cells was due to endogenous thymic output or developed by homeostatic mechanisms, CD4+CD25+Foxp3+ cells isolated flow cytometrically were assessed for TREC’s and by spectratyping for Vb T cell receptor gene utilization. The results revealed that the majority (〉90%) of CD4+CD25+Foxp3+ cells did not express TREC’s and therefore, did not recently emigrate from the thymus. Moreover, there was a marked oligoclonal skewing as defined by a limited Vb T cell receptor repertoire suggesting expansion did not occur by a non-specific, global homeostatic. In contrast, the repertoire of the non-regulatory T cell compartment (CD4, CD8) was unbiased. These results suggest that the expansion of the CD4+CD25+Foxp3+ T cell compartment is either driven by antigen or by restricted homeostatic mechanisms. The lack of significant, correlative levels of typical homeostatic cytokines (i.e., IL-2, IL-7; Bioplex analysis) may provide an environment where CD4+CD25+Foxp3+ T cells can only be driven to expand by antigenic stimulation. The continued presence of antigen driven regulatory T cells may impede the successful deployment of immunologically directed anti-tumor strategies.
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2011-01-13
    Description: Few published studies characterize early lymphocyte recovery after intensive chemotherapy for acute myelogenous leukemia (AML). To test the hypothesis that lymphocyte recovery mirrors ontogeny, we characterized early lymphocyte recovery in 20 consecutive patients undergoing induction timed sequential chemotherapy for newly diagnosed AML. Recovering T lymphocytes were predominantly CD4+ and included a greatly expanded population of CD3+CD4+CD25+Foxp3+ T cells. Recovering CD3+CD4+CD25+Foxp3+ T cells were phenotypically activated regulatory T cells and showed suppressive activity on cytokine production in a mixed lymphocyte reaction. Despite an initial burst of thymopoiesis, most recovering regulatory T cells were peripherally derived. Furthermore, regulatory T cells showed marked oligoclonal skewing, suggesting that their peripheral expansion was antigen-driven. Overall, lymphocyte recovery after chemotherapy differs from ontogeny, specifically identifying a peripherally expanded oligoclonal population of activated regulatory T lymphocytes. These differences suggest a stereotyped immunologic recovery shared by patients with newly diagnosed AML after induction timed sequential chemotherapy. Further insight into this oligoclonal regulatory T-cell population will be fundamental toward developing effective immunomodulatory techniques to improve survival for patients with AML.
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