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Citations to this article

Chimerism and tolerance to host and donor in severe combined immunodeficiencies transplanted with fetal liver stem cells.
R Bacchetta, … , H Spits, M G Roncarolo
R Bacchetta, … , H Spits, M G Roncarolo
Published March 1, 1993
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 1993;91(3):1067-1078. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI116264.
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Research Article

Chimerism and tolerance to host and donor in severe combined immunodeficiencies transplanted with fetal liver stem cells.

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Abstract

We have studied the peripheral T cell repertoire of two patients with severe combined immunodeficiency who were successfully treated with human histocompatibility leukocyte antigen (HLA)-mismatched fetal liver stem cell transplantation. The patients presented a split chimerism. T cells were of donor origin, whereas the B cells/monocytes were of the host phenotype. Interestingly, the natural killer (NK) cells in one patient were donor derived and in the other patient of host origin. The NK cells were functional but did not have antihost or donor reactivity. Despite the HLA mismatch between donor and host cells, complete tolerance was achieved in vivo, and a specific unresponsiveness of peripheral blood mononuclear cells from both patients toward the host cells was demonstrated in vitro. Nevertheless, we could isolate T cell receptor (TCR)alpha beta, CD4+ or CD8+, T cell clones specifically reacting with HLA class I and II molecules of the host. The CD4+ host-reactive T cell clones from both patients produced interleukins 2 and 5, interferon-gamma, granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor but are specifically defective in interleukin 4 production. The frequencies of CD8+ host-reactive T cells were high, and were in the same range as those observed for CD8+ alloreactive T cells. In contrast, no donor-reactive CD8+ T cells or host or donor-reactive TCR gamma delta + T cells were detected. These data indicate that, after fetal stem cell transplantation, donor-reactive, but not host-reactive cells, are deleted from the T cell repertoire. Therefore, a peripheral mechanism of suppression or clonal anergy, rather than clonal deletion, is involved in maintaining in vivo tolerance toward the host.

Authors

R Bacchetta, B A Vandekerckhove, J L Touraine, M Bigler, S Martino, L Gebuhrer, J E de Vries, H Spits, M G Roncarolo

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