[BLlogo7.gif]

Bloodline

Home
About
Call for Papers
Free Membership
Search

XML icon

Educational Features

Image Atlas
Case Studies
Private Lectures
Conference Reviews
Journal Articles
Book Reviews
Glossary


Resources

Conference Calendar
Grants & Fellowships
Hematology Links
BMT Reviews
Classifieds


Specialties

BMT/Stem Cell
Cord Blood
Thrombosis
Hemostasis
Laboratory
Malignancies
Pediatrics
Red Cell Disorders
Infections
Transfusion Medicine
Veterinary


websel.gif:

toprated.gif:

T-Cell Recovery After UCBT

T-Cell Recovery in Adults and Children Following Umbilical Cord Blood Transplantation

Andreas K. Klein, Dhavalkumar D. Patel, Maria E. Gooding, Gregory D. Sempowski, Benny J. Chen, Congxiao Liu, Joanne Kurtzberg, Barton F. Haynes, Nelson J. Chao

Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation 7:454-466
© 2001 American Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation

T-cell reconstitution following allogeneic stem cell transplantation may involve thymic education of donor-derived precursors or peripheral expansion of mature T cells transferred in the graft. T cell-receptor excision circles (sjTRECs) are generated within the thymus and identify new thymic emigrants and those that have not divided. We measured quantitative and qualitative immunologic reconstitution and sjTREC levels in adult and pediatric recipients of umbilical cord blood transplants (UCBTs). sjTRECs were detected at normal levels in all children, starting 12 months after transplantation. sjTRECs were not detected until 18 months after transplantation in adults, and then only at a 3-fold lower level than expected for age. We used complementarity-determining region 3 (CDR3) spectratyping to measure changes in T cell-receptor diversity occurring with restoration of thymic function. T-cell repertoires were skewed in adults and children at 12 to 18 months after transplantation but recovered to near-normal diversity at 2 to 3 years post-UCBT. T-cell repertoires appeared more diverse earlier in children (at 1 to 2 years post-UCBT) than in adults (at 3 to 4 years post-UCBT). We conclude that early T-cell recovery after UCBT occurs primarily through peripheral expansion of adoptively transferred donor T cells and results in skewing of the T-cell repertoire. The reappearance of sjTREC-containing cells after UCBT is associated with increasing numbers of phenotypically naive T cells, improved mitogen and recall antigen responses, and diversification of the T-cell repertoire. The delay in central T-cell recovery in adults relative to children may be due to differences in thymic function resulting from age-related atrophy, graft-versus-host disease, or the pharmacologic effects of prophylaxis and treatment of graft-versus-host disease.

pdficon.gif: Download the full article.


sm_cjpLogo.gifCopyright 1995-2010 - Carden Jennings Publishing Co., Ltd. All rights reserved. The material available at this site is for educational purposes only and is NOT intended for any diagnostic, clinically related, or other purpose. Carden Jennings Publishing Co., Ltd., assumes no responsibility for any use or misuse of this material and makes no warranty or representation of any kind with respect to the material available at this site.

Featured Resources



Multiple Myeloma: A Practical Guide to Current Management

TOCpic.jpg:
BloodLine Image Atlas