Analysis of the Functions of Glycoproteins E and I and Their Promoters During VZV Replication In Vitro and in Skin and T-Cell Xenografts in the SCID Mouse Model of VZV Pathogenesis

Author(s):  
Ann M. Arvin ◽  
Stefan Oliver ◽  
Mike Reichelt ◽  
Jennifer F. Moffat ◽  
Marvin Sommer ◽  
...  
Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 5256-5256
Author(s):  
Doug Cipkala ◽  
Kelly McQuown ◽  
Lindsay Hendey ◽  
Michael Boyer

Abstract The use of cytotoxic T-lymphocytes (CTL) has been attempted experimentally with various tumors to achieve disease control. Factors that may influence GVT include CTL cytotoxicity, ability to home to disease sites, and survival of T cells in the host. The objective of our study is to evaluate the GVL effects of human alloreactive CTL against ALL in a chimeric NOD/scid mouse model. CTL were generated from random blood donor PBMCs stimulated with the 697 human ALL cell line and supplemented with IL-2, -7, or -15. CTL were analyzed for in vitro cytotoxicity against 697 cells, phenotype, and in vitro migration on day 14. NOD/scid mice were injected with 107 697 ALL cells followed by 5x106 CTL. Mice were sacrificed seven days following CTL injection and residual leukemia was measured in the bone marrow and spleen via flow cytometry. The ratios of CD8/CD4 positive T cells at the time of injection were 46/21% for IL-2, 52/31% for IL-7, and 45/14% for IL-15 cultured CTL (n=13). Control mice not receiving CTL had a baseline leukemia burden of 2.01% and 0.15% in the bone marrow and spleen, respectively (n=15). Mice treated with IL-15 cultured CTL had a reduction in tumor burden to 0.2% (n=13, p=0.01) and 0.05% (n=13, p=0.01) in bone marrow and spleen, respectively. Those treated with IL-2 or IL-7 cultured CTL showed no significant difference in leukemia burden in either the bone marrow (IL-2 1.28%, Il-7 5.97%) or spleen (IL-2 0.4%, IL-7 0.33%). No residual CTL could be identified in the bone marrow or spleen at the time of sacrifice in any CTL group. CTL grown in each cytokine resulted in similar in vitro cytotoxicity at an effector:target ratio of 10:1 (IL-2 41.3%, IL-7 37.7%, IL-15 45.3%, n=12–15, p>0.05 for all groups) and had statistically similar intracellular perforin and granzyme-B expression. In vitro CTL migration to a human mesenchymal stem cell line was greatest with IL-15 CTL (30.5%, n=4), followed by IL-7 CTL (18.9%, n=4), and least in IL-2 CTL (17.9%, n=4), though the differences were not significant. In vitro CTL migration was analyzed to an SDF-1α gradient as CXCR4/SDF-1α interactions are necessary for hematopoietic progenitor cell homing to the bone marrow. IL-15 cultured CTL showed the highest migration (48.8%, n=8) as compared to IL-2 (21.7%, n=6, p=0.048) or IL-7 CTL (35.9%, n=8, p>0.05). However, surface expression of CXCR4 measured by flow cytometry was significantly higher in IL-7 CTL (89.4%, n=9) compared to IL-2 CTL (52.2%, n=9, p<0.001) and IL-15 CTL (65.4%, n=10, p=0.002). Experiments are currently underway to further evaluate the role of CXCR4/SDF-1α in GVL. Preliminary in vivo experiments do not suggest any significant differences in CTL engraftment when evaluated at 24 hours post injection. Expression of the anti-apoptotic bcl-2 protein was greatest on IL-7 (MFI=5295, n=13) and IL-15 (MFI=4865, n=14) when compared to IL-2 CTL (MFI=3530, n=13, p=0.02 vs. IL-7, p=0.05 vs. IL-15), suggesting an increased in vivo survival ability. We hypothesize that IL-15 cultured CTL have greater GVL effects due to either higher in vivo survival, greater bone marrow homing efficiency, or both. Future experiments are planned to evaluate in vivo administration of IL-2 to enhance CTL survival in the host. In conclusion, IL-15 cultured CTL had significantly greater in vivo GVL effects compared to IL-2 and IL-7 CTL in the NOD/scid mouse model. This model can be utilized to evaluate the mechanism of T cell mediated GVL against ALL and potentially other human malignancies.


Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 1900-1900
Author(s):  
Ying Yan ◽  
Peter Steinherz ◽  
Xiuqin Guan ◽  
Ann Jakubowski ◽  
Joesph P. McGuirk ◽  
...  

Abstract We have described a severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) mouse model that permits the subcutaneous growth of primary human acute leukemia blast cells into a measurable subcutaneous nodule which may be followed by the development of disseminated disease. Utilizing the SCID mouse model, we examined the ability of patient-derived leukemic blasts to generate leukemic growth in the animals after subcutaneous inoculation without conditioning treatment. Leukemia blasts derived from 133 patients with acute leukemias, (67 acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and 66 acute myeloid leukemia (AML)), were inoculated into SCID mice. The leukemias displayed three distinct growth patterns: "aggressive", "indolent", or "no tumor growth". Out of 133 patients, leukemia samples 46 (34.5%) displayed an aggressive growth pattern, 14 (10.5%) indolent growth and 73 (55.0%) did not grow in SCID mice. The growth probability of leukemias from relapsed and/or refractory disease was 3 fold higher than that from patients with newly diagnosed disease. Serial observations found that leukemic blasts from the same individual, which did not initiate tumor growth at initial presentation and/or at early relapse, may engraft and grow in the later stages of disease, suggesting that the ability of leukemia cells for engraftment and proliferation was gradually acquired following the process of leukemia progression. Nine autonomous growing leukemia cell lines were established in vitro. These displayed an aggressive proliferation pattern, suggesting a possible correlation between the capacity of human leukemia cells for autonomous proliferation in vitro and an aggressive growth potential in SCID mice. It was demonstrated that patients whose leukemic blasts displayed an aggressive growth and dissemination pattern in SClD mice had a poor clinical outcome in patients with ALL as well as AML. Patients whose leukemic blasts grew indolently or whose leukemia cells failed to induce growth had a significantly longer DFS and more favorable clinical course.


2011 ◽  
Vol 70 (Suppl 2) ◽  
pp. A73-A74
Author(s):  
M. I. Koenders ◽  
R. J. Marijnissen ◽  
S. Abdollahi-Roodsaz ◽  
F. E. D. Padova ◽  
A. H. Boots ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 64 (6) ◽  
pp. 1762-1770 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marije I. Koenders ◽  
Renoud J. Marijnissen ◽  
Leo A. B. Joosten ◽  
Shahla Abdollahi-Roodsaz ◽  
Franco E. Di Padova ◽  
...  

2007 ◽  
Vol 52 (3) ◽  
pp. 1150-1152 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cristina Rueda ◽  
Soledad Fenoy ◽  
Fernando Simón ◽  
Carmen del Aguila

ABSTRACT The anticryptosporidial activity of Bobel-24 (2,4,6-triiodophenol) was studied for the first time, resulting in a reduction of the in vitro growth of Cryptosporidium of up to 99.6%. In a SCID mouse model of chronic cryptosporidiosis, significant differences (P < 0.05) in oocyst shedding were observed in animals treated with 125 mg/kg/day. These results merit further investigation of Bobel-24 as a chemotherapeutic option for cryptosporidiosis.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (5) ◽  
pp. e0250120
Author(s):  
Andrey Skripchenko ◽  
Monique P. Gelderman ◽  
Jaroslav G. Vostal

Platelets for transfusion are stored at room temperature (20–24°C) up to 7 days but decline in biochemical and morphological parameters during storage and can support bacterial proliferation. This decline is reduced with p38MAPK inhibitor, VX-702. Storage of platelets in the cold (4–6°C) can reduce bacterial proliferation but platelets get activated and have reduced circulation when transfused. Thermocycling (cold storage with brief periodic warm ups) reduces some of the effects of cold storage. We evaluated in vitro properties and in vivo circulation in SCID mouse model of human platelet transfusion of platelets stored in cold or thermocycled for 14 days with and without VX-702. Apheresis platelet units (N = 15) were each aliquoted into five storage bags and stored under different conditions: room temperature; cold temperature; thermocycled temperature; cold temperature with VX-702; thermocycled temperature with VX-702. Platelet in vitro parameters were evaluated at 1, 7 and 14 days. On day 14, platelets were infused into SCID mice to assess their retention in circulation by flow cytometry. VX-702 reduced negative platelet parameters associated with cold and thermocycled storage such as an increase in expression of activation markers CD62, CD63 and of phosphatidylserine (marker of apoptosis measured by Annexin binding) and lowered the rise in lactate (marker of increase in anaerobic metabolism). However, VX-702 did not inhibit agonist-induced platelet aggregation indicating that it does not interfere with platelet hemostatic function. In vivo, VX-702 improved initial recovery and area under the curve in circulation of human platelets infused into a mouse model that has been previously validated against a human platelet infusion clinical trial. In conclusion, inhibition of p38MAPK during 14-days platelet storage in cold or thermocycling conditions improved in vitro platelet parameters and platelet circulation in the mouse model indicating that VX-702 may improve cell physiology and clinical performance of human platelets stored in cold conditions.


Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 4518-4518
Author(s):  
Takuya Matsunaga ◽  
Kazunori Kato ◽  
Maki Tanaka ◽  
Yukari Masuta ◽  
Kageaki Kuribayashi ◽  
...  

Abstract Bone marrow (BM) minimal residual disease causes relapse after chemotherapy in AML. We have previously reported that VLA4-positive leukemic cells acquired resistance to drug-induced apoptosis through the PI-3K/AKT/Bcl-2 signaling pathway, which is activated by the interaction of VLA4 and fibronectin on BM stromal cells. This resistance was negated by mouse-anti-human VLA4Ab (mouse VLA4Ab). In human leukemia SCID mouse model, we demonstrated a 100% survival rate with combination of mouse VLA4 Ab and AraC, while with AraC alone, only slight prolongation of survival was attained. In clinical study, overall survival at 5 years was 90% for 10 VLA4− patients and 25% for 15 VLA4+ patients (Matsunaga T et al, Nature Med 2003, 9, 1158–1165). In the present study, to perform the translational research, we first examined the myelosuppressive effect of the combination of rat-anti-mouse VLA4 Ab and AraC in C57/BL6 mice, and found that CBC data were almost the same as those of the mice treated with AraC alone. We next produced humanized chimeric-anti-human VLA4 Ab (chimeric-VLA4Ab), and examined its efficacy in combination with anti-cancer drugs in vitro and in vivo (human leukemia SCID mouse model). Chimeric-VLA4Abs were produced as follows: (i) total RNA of mouse VLA4 Abs were extracted from two hybridomas (SG/17 and SG/73), (ii) cDNA were synthesized by reverse transcriptase, (iii) variable region gene of mouse VLA4 Abs were amplified by 5′RACE method, (iv) TA cloning of amplified gene was performed, (v) sequence of mouse VLA4Abs gene was determined, (v) cloned variable region gene of mouse VLA4 Abs and constant region gene of human IgG1 were inserted into expression vector, and the expression vector was transfected into 293T cells, (vi) supernatant of the 293T cells was collected and purified to obtain chimeric-VLA4 Abs. The effects of chimeric-VLA4 Abs thus obtained in in vitro and in vivo (human leukemia SCID mouse model) were comparable to those of mouse VLA4 Abs. To perform the clinical study, we are presently producing the GMP-graded chimeric-VLA4 Abs.


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