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In vivo persistence of donor cells following adoptive transfer of allogeneic dendritic cells in HIV-infected patients

Authors :
M H, Shapero
S K, Kundu
E, Engleman
R, Laus
W C, van Schooten
T C, Merigan
Source :
Cell transplantation. 9(3)
Publication Year :
2000

Abstract

Peripheral blood samples from HIV-seropositive individuals enrolled in a pilot clinical trial investigating the use of allogeneic dendritic cell therapy were evaluated for mixed chimerism. In this study, dendritic cells from HLA-identical, HIV-seronegative siblings were used. Patients received an infusion of dendritic cells pulsed with HIV MN gp160 protein or with peptides from HLA-A2 restricted epitopes of env, gag, and pol proteins every month for 6-9 months. Of the five allogeneic dendritic cell recipients, two showed increases in HIV antigen-specific immune responses. Allele-specific polymorphisms were identified in three sib-pairs that allowed infused donor cells to be detected using sensitive PCR-based molecular methods. Analysis of blood samples from patients showed similar patterns of donor cell persistence after the first infusion, in that cells were detectable for at least 1 week. Also, differences were observed in the kinetics of cell survival between the first and subsequent infusion cycles in all three patients. This suggests variation in HIV-specific immune responses detected among these three patients was not due to differences in persistence of infused donor cells.

Details

ISSN :
09636897
Volume :
9
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cell transplantation
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........759e4fabe9f9cc9dd42308995bc4dc9a