13 results on '"Ochs, HD"'
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2. A monoclonal antibody-defined membrane antigen complex is required for neutrophil-neutrophil aggregation
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Schwartz, BR, Ochs, HD, Beatty, PG, and Harlan, JM
- Abstract
We examined the aggregation responses of normal neutrophils treated with the murine monoclonal antibody (MoAb) 60.3. Addition of MoAb 60.3 to normal neutrophils produced dose-dependent inhibition of neutrophil aggregation in response to phorbol myristate acetate, zymosan-activated plasma, and N-formyl-methionylleucylphenylalanine. We conclude that the membrane glycoprotein complex recognized by MoAb 60.3--designated CDw18- -is required for neutrophil-neutrophil aggregation in vitro.
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- 1985
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3. In vivo neutrophil and lymphocyte function studies in a patient with leukocyte adhesion deficiency type II
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Price, TH, Ochs, HD, Gershoni-Baruch, R, Harlan, JM, and Etzioni, A
- Abstract
We investigated in vivo neutrophil and lymphocyte function in a patient who lacks Sialyl-Lewis-X, a ligand for the selectin family of leukocyte adhesion molecules (leukocyte adhesion deficiency II, LAD II). As assessed by skin chamber and skin window techniques, in vivo chemotaxis of neutrophils was markedly impaired (less than 6% of normal values). A marginal pool was present as determined by an increase in circulating neutrophils after epinephrine injection and calculated recovery of infused radiolabeled autologous neutrophils. Kinetic studies showed a reduced half-life of 3.2 hours (normal 7 hours) and markedly increased turnover rate (cells/kg/d) of approximately eight times the normal value. A normal antibody response to the T-cell-dependent antigen bacteriophage phi X174 showed that T/B-cell interaction is not affected in LAD II. These findings provide direct evidence that the selectin family and its ligands play an important role in neutrophil function.
- Published
- 1994
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4. Antibody responses to bacteriophage phi X174 in patients with adenosine deaminase deficiency
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Ochs, HD, Buckley, RH, Kobayashi, RH, Kobayashi, AL, Sorensen, RU, Douglas, SD, Hamilton, BL, and Hershfield, MS
- Abstract
Adenosine deaminase (ADA) deficiency and its biochemical consequences cause severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID). Treatment strategies, designed to correct the biochemical abnormalities, include transplantation of matched bone marrow or haploidentical bone marrow stem cells, repeated partial exchange transfusions with frozen irradiated human red blood cells (RBC), or weekly injection of polyethylene glycol-modified bovine ADA (PEG-ADA). To evaluate the effect of these therapeutic options, we studied in vitro T-cell function and in vivo antibody responses to the T-cell-dependent neoantigen, bacteriophage phi X174, in 10 children with ADA-deficient SCID. In untreated patients, T-cell function was severely depressed, and only minute amounts of antibacteriophage antibody were produced. Transplantation of bone marrow from a matched sibling (one patient) or a phenotypically matched parent (one patient) resulted in a stable graft, normal T-cell function, and substantial but subnormal antibody titers to bacteriophage, with reduced memory and impaired switch from IgM to IgG. Patients receiving T-cell-depleted haploidentical bone marrow stem cells had markedly depressed antibody responses for as long as 3 years posttransplantation, despite rapidly improving T-cell function that became normal in two of four patients. Two methods of enzyme replacement were explored. During treatment with human RBC transfusions, antibody responses to bacteriophage were as severely depressed as in untreated ADA-deficient patients. Treatment with weekly injections of PEG-ADA resulted in normalization of T-cell numbers in all four patients, normal or near-normal T-cell function in two, and mildly but variably improved T-cell function in the other two patients. Quantitatively and qualitatively normal antibody responses to bacteriophage were observed in three of four patients. Assessment of antibody responses to immunization with bacteriophage phi X174 is a useful method to monitor humoral immune function in treated ADA- deficient patients and can be used to estimate when intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) prophylaxis may be safely discontinued.
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- 1992
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5. The role of neutrophil membrane glycoprotein GP-150 in neutrophil adherence to endothelium in vitro
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Harlan, JM, Killen, PD, Senecal, FM, Schwartz, BR, Yee, EK, Taylor, RF, Beatty, PG, Price, TH, and Ochs, HD
- Abstract
We have previously described two patients with a congenital defect in neutrophil function characterized by an inability to form pus. The patients' neutrophils lack a membrane glycoprotein of mol wt 150,000 daltons (GP-150) on analysis by SDS-PAGE. This glycoprotein is part of a membrane antigen complex recognized by the murine monoclonal antibody (MoAb) 60.3. Addition of MoAb 60.3 to normal neutrophils produces defects in chemotaxis and phagocytosis in vitro similar to those observed in the patients. Since neutrophil adherence to vascular endothelium is prerequisite to neutrophil emigration in vivo, we examined the interaction of the patients' neutrophils and normal neutrophils treated with MoAb 60.3 with cultured endothelium. Adherence was determined as the percentage of 51Cr-labeled purified peripheral blood neutrophils which remained adherent to plastic wells or endothelial monolayers after a 45-minute incubation at 37 degrees C. The percentage of neutrophils from patient 1 remaining adherent to uncoated, fibronectin-coated, or laminin-coated plastic was similar to that observed in normal neutrophils (55% to 84% adherence with normal neutrophils v 73% to 78% adherence with the patient's neutrophils and 63% to 82% adherence with MoAb 60.3-treated normal neutrophils). The adherence of the neutrophils from patient 1 and MoAb 60.3-treated normal neutrophils to human or bovine endothelium in serum-free medium was also not significantly different from that observed in normal neutrophils (less than 10% adherence with normal, MoAb 60.3-treated, and patient neutrophils). In medium containing 10% autologous or heterologous human plasma, however, the adherence of neutrophils from patient 1 or MoAb 60.3-treated normal neutrophils to endothelial monolayers was significantly reduced (35% +/- 7% of normal neutrophils in seven experiments). Although phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) (10 ng/mL) and calcium ionophore A23187 (10(-5) mol/L) markedly increased the adherence of normal neutrophils to endothelial monolayers in serum- free medium (40% to 85% adherence), neither agent increased the adherence of the neutrophils from patient 1 or normal neutrophils treated with MoAb 60.3 (less than 5% adherence). The adherence of PMA- activated neutrophils from patient 2 to endothelial monolayers was also markedly decreased when compared with that of normal neutrophils. Postsecretory cell-free supernatants from PMA-activated normal neutrophils failed to augment adherence of neutrophils from patient 1 (less than 5% adherence).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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- 1985
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6. The Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome and X-linked congenital thrombocytopenia are caused by mutations of the same gene
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Zhu, Q, Zhang, M, Blaese, RM, Derry, JM, Junker, A, Francke, U, Chen, SH, and Ochs, HD
- Abstract
The Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome (WAS) is an X-linked recessive disorder characterized by thrombocytopenia, small platelets, eczema, recurrent infections, and immunodeficiency. Besides the classic WAS phenotype, there is a group of patients with congenital X-linked thrombocytopenia (XLT) who have small platelets but only transient eczema, if any, and minimal immune deficiency. Because the gene responsible for WAS has been sequenced, it was possible to correlate the WAS phenotypes with WAS gene mutations. Using a fingerprinting screening technique, we determined the approximate location of the mutation in 13 unrelated WAS patients with mild to severe clinical symptoms. Direct sequence analysis of cDNA and genomic DNA obtained from patient-derived cell lines showed 12 unique mutations distributed throughout the WAS gene, including insertions, deletions, and point mutations resulting in amino acid substitutions, termination, exon skipping, or splicing defects. Of 4 unrelated patients with the XLT phenotype, 3 had missense mutations affecting exon 2 and 1 had a splice-site mutation affecting exon 9. Patients with classic WAS had more complex mutations, resulting in termination codons, frameshift, and early termination. These findings provide direct evidence that XLT and WAS are caused by mutations of the same gene and suggest that severe clinical phenotypes are associated with complex mutations.
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- 1995
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7. Characterization of B-cell lines established from two X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency patients: interleukin-15 binds to the B cells but is not internalized efficiently
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Kumaki, S, Ochs, HD, Timour, M, Schooley, K, Ahdieh, M, Hill, H, Sugamura, K, Anderson, D, Zhu, Q, and Cosman, D
- Abstract
X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency (XSCID) is characterized by absent or profoundly reduced numbers of T cells and normal numbers of B cells in the circulation. Affected patients have mutations of the interleukin-2 (IL-2) receptor gamma chain gene. Using Epstein-Barr virus-transformed B-lymphoblastoid cell lines (B-LCLs) established from two unrelated XSCID patients, we could show that neither expressed the IL-2 receptor gamma chain on the cell surface. A novel cytokine IL-15, which has biologic activities similar to those of IL-2, could bind to the XSCID B-LCLs in the absence of the gamma chain, although both the beta and gamma chains of the human IL-2 receptor were previously shown to be required for IL-15 binding by transfected COS cells. Furthermore, a significant reduction and delay of IL-15 internalization by B lymphoblasts from XSCID patients was observed when compared with that of normal control B-LCLs. These results show the existence of a novel IL-15-specific receptor component that contributes to IL-15 binding but is insufficient for IL-15 internalization in the absence of the IL-2 receptor gamma chain.
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- 1995
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8. Origin of mutations in two families with X-linked chronic granulomatous disease
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Francke, U, Ochs, HD, Darras, BT, and Swaroop, A
- Abstract
The most common X-linked recessive form of chronic granulomatous disease (X-CGD) is characterized by the absence of cytochrome b558 in neutrophils. In a rare variant form of X-CGD, cytochrome b558 is present but not functional. The gene (locus symbol CYBB) was localized to band Xp21 by studies of patients with small chromosome deletions. The gene was cloned based on its location and found to encode the 91-Kd subunit of the cytochrome b558 complex. Most female carriers for X-CGD can be identified by their X-inactivation mosaicism; on average 50% of their neutrophils express the mutant phenotype and fail to reduce nitroblue tetrazolium (NBT). In 2 of 4 families studied, the maternal grandmothers had normal NBT tests, suggesting either nonrandom X- inactivation or new mutations. Restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis using closely linked flanking markers or the NsiI polymorphism detected by the CYBB probe itself, allowed us to identify the X chromosome carrying the mutation as derived from a healthy NBT-positive maternal grandfather. The mothers of the affected boys must have received a paternal X chromosome carrying a new mutation, consistent with the maternal grandmothers' normal NBT tests. In all of eight potential carriers studied, the results of the NBT and DNA marker testing were in complete agreement. Prenatal diagnosis by DNA testing can be performed in early gestation obviating the need for fetal blood sampling.
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- 1990
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9. Monoclonal antibody-defined functional epitopes on the adhesion- promoting glycoprotein complex (CDw18) of human neutrophils
- Author
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Wallis, WJ, Hickstein, DD, Schwartz, BR, June, CH, Ochs, HD, Beatty, PG, Klebanoff, SJ, and Harlan, JM
- Abstract
We have evaluated the functional and immunochemical activities of three monoclonal antibodies (MoAbs) minimally reactive with adherence- defective neutrophils (PMN) from a patient with recurrent bacterial infections. In studies with normal PMN, MoAbs OKM1 and 60.1 both precipitate the same 165kd alpha-subunit (alpha M) within an alpha-beta heterodimer complex (CD11). The CD11 complex is part of a larger complex composed of four glycoproteins (CDw18) precipitated by MoAb 60.3, with properties suggesting that the CDw18 complex is equivalent to the Mac-1, LFA-1, p150, 95 glycoprotein family implicated in adherence-dependent leukocyte functions. PMN adherence to endothelium, spreading on surfaces, aggregation, and phagocytosis of zymosan particles were all inhibited in a dose-dependent fashion by MoAb 60.1 (analogous to previous studies with MoAb 60.3) while MoAb OKM1 had no effect. These findings unify previously disparate observations and suggest that a functionally active site on the adherence promoting glycoprotein complexes CD11 and CDw18 is distant from the alpha M epitope recognized by MoAb OKM1 but closely associated with the alpha M epitope recognized by MoAb 60.1 and the beta-epitope (or epitope created by alpha-beta quaternary structure) recognized by MoAb 60.3.
- Published
- 1986
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10. Recovery of antibody production in human allogeneic marrow graft recipients: influence of time posttransplantation, the presence or absence of chronic graft-versus-host disease, and antithymocyte globulin treatment
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Witherspoon, RP, Storb, R, Ochs, HD, Fluornoy, N, Kopecky, KJ, Sullivan, KM, Deeg, JH, Sosa, R, Noel, DR, Atkinson, K, and Thomas, ED
- Abstract
One-hundred fifty-three recipients of HLA-identical sibling marrow transplants for aplastic anemia or hematologic malignancy were injected with bacteriophage phi X174 (phage), pneumococcal polysaccharide antigen (PPA), or keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH). Antibody levels were determined several times in the 6 wk after injection. Multiple regression techniques were used to determine what factors played significant roles in the antibody response. The most significant factors were the time elapsed from transplantation, chronic graft- versus-host disease (GVHD), and antithymocyte globulin (ATG) treatment. All patients had low antibody responses to all antigens in the first 180 days from transplant. Beyond 180 days patients without chronic GVHD showed antibody responses indistinguishable from those of normal donors. However, patients with chronic GVHD had the following impairments: (1) primary response to phage, (2) conversion from IgM to IgG in secondary response to phage, (3) secondary response to KLH, and (4) response to PPA. ATG treatment given to patients either prophylactically or therapeutically for acute GVHD was followed by lower primary responses to phage in the first 180 days and poor ability to switch from IgM to IgG antibody in the secondary response beyond 180 days postgrafting. Other factors did not yield additional significant information about ability to predict antibody responses including diagnosis, conditioning regimen, treatment in or out of laminar air flow rooms, transplantation, pretransplant refractoriness of the recipient to platelet transfusions from random donors, donor age or donor sex, and steroid administration for treatment for prevention of GVHD. The data indicate that, given enough time after transplantation, the ability to produce normal antibody function recovers except in those patients experiencing chronic GVHD.
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- 1981
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11. Low serum thymic hormone levels in patients with chronic graft-versus- host disease
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Atkinson, K, Incefy, GS, Storb, R, Sullivan, KM, Iwata, T, Dardenne, M, Ochs, HD, Good, RA, and Thomas, ED
- Abstract
We tested the hypothesis that chronic graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) is due to inadequate thymic function by examining pretransplant serum levels of facteur thymique serique (FTS). Four of five patients with no detectable FTS activity developed chronic GVHD, while one of four with some FTS activity did. Further patient numbers are needed to confirm or reject this hypothesis. We further postulated that chronic GVHD, whatever its cause, involves thymic epithelium as a target organ. When tested 11 mo or more posttransplant, patients with chronic GVHD had lower absolute FTS levels (p less than 0.02) and lower age-corrected levels (p = 0.05) than patients without chronic GHVD. Low values in chronic GVHD were associated with the disease itself and not its therapy. These findings show that thymic epithelial secretory function is impaired in chronic GVHD, and this may in part be responsible for the immunodeficiency characteristic of these patients.
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- 1982
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12. Does graft-versus-host disease influence the tempo of immunologic recovery after allogeneic human marrow transplantation? An observation on 56 long-term survivors
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Noel, DR, Witherspoon, RP, Storb, R, Atkinson, K, Doney, K, Mickelson, EM, Ochs, HD, Warren, RP, Weiden, PL, and Thomas, ED
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- 1978
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13. The Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome: studies of lymphocytes, granulocytes, and platelets
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Ochs, HD, Slichter, SJ, Harker, LA, Von Behrens, WE, Clark, RA, and Wedgwood, RJ
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- 1980
- Full Text
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