This paper describes a simple technique to induce alloantigen-specific anergy in human peripheral blood mononuclear cells. The technique can be applied clinically to generate non-alloreactive donor cells. Infusion of these cells could improve immune reconstitution and reduce toxicity after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation.
Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (AHSCT) offers the best chance of cure for many patients with congenital and acquired hematologic diseases. Unfortunately, transplantation of alloreactive donor T cells which recognize and damage healthy patient tissues can result in Graft-versus-Host Disease (GvHD)1. One challenge to successful AHSCT is the prevention of GvHD without associated impairment of the beneficial effects of donor T cells, particularly immune reconstitution and prevention of relapse. GvHD can be prevented by non-specific depletion of donor T cells from stem cell grafts or by administration of pharmacological immunosuppression. Unfortunately these approaches increase infection and disease relapse2-4. An alternative strategy is to selectively deplete alloreactive donor T cells after allostimulation by recipient antigen presenting cells (APC) before transplant. Early clinical trials of these allodepletion strategies improved immune reconstitution after HLA-mismatched HSCT without excess GvHD5, 6. However, some allodepletion techniques require specialized recipient APC production6, 7and some approaches may have off-target effects including depletion of donor pathogen-specific T cells8and CD4 T regulatory cells9.One alternative approach is the inactivation of alloreactive donor T cells via induction of alloantigen-specific hyporesponsiveness. This is achieved by stimulating donor cells with recipient APC while providing blockade of CD28-mediated co-stimulation signals10.This “alloanergization” approach reduces alloreactivity by 1-2 logs while preserving pathogen- and tumor-associated antigen T cell responses in vitro11. The strategy has been successfully employed in 2 completed and 1 ongoing clinical pilot studies in which alloanergized donor T cells were infused during or after HLA-mismatched HSCT resulting in rapid immune reconstitution, few infections and less severe acute and chronic GvHD than historical control recipients of unmanipulated HLA-mismatched transplantation12. Here we describe our current protocol for the generation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) which have been alloanergized to HLA-mismatched unrelated stimulator PBMC. Alloanergization is achieved by allostimulation in the presence of monoclonal antibodies to the ligands B7.1 and B7.1 to block CD28-mediated costimulation. This technique does not require the production of specialized stimulator APC and is simple to perform, requiring only a single and relatively brief ex vivo incubation step. As such, the approach can be easily standardized for clinical use to generate donor T cells with reduced alloreactivity but retaining pathogen-specific immunity for adoptive transfer in the setting of AHSCT to improve immune reconstitution without excessive GvHD.
1. Preparation of PBMC
2. Setting Up the Bulk Alloanergizing Co-culture
3. Setting Up the Bulk Control Co-culture
4. Setting Up the Primary Mixed Lymphocyte Reaction (MLR) to Measure the Efficacy of Co-stimulatory Blockade
5. Setting Up the Secondary MLR to Measure the Efficacy of Alloanergization
6. Measuring the Specificity of Alloanergization
7. Measuring Proliferation in the Primary and Secondary MLRs
8. Calculating the Efficacy of Co-stimulatory Blockade in the Primary MLR
9. Calculating the Efficacy of Alloanergization in the Secondary MLR
The PI of secondary alloresponses is calculated as
10. Calculating the Specificity of Alloanergization in the Secondary MLR
11. Generating Alloanergized Donor PBMC for Clinical Use After Allogeneic Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation (HSCT)
12. Representative Results
Using HLA-mismatched stimulator and responder PBMC, the presence of costimulatory blockade in the primary MLR reduces mean alloproliferation of responder PBMC at Day 5 to around 30% (+/- 10%, mean +/- standard deviation) of that seen in control primary MLR in the absence of costimulatory blockade. This is equivalent to a mean inhibition of primary alloproliferation of around 70% (+/- 10%) at D5, Figure 1 A and B.
In the secondary MLR at Day 5, FP alloproliferation of alloanergized PBMC is typically 10-15% (+/- 10%) of that seen with control PBMC equivalent to a mean inhibition of proliferation of 85-90% (+/- 10%), Figure 2A and B. This demonstrates that alloanergized PBMC are hyporesponsive to FP allostimulators.
In contrast alloanergized PBMC typically retain 70-100% of their proliferation to mitogens (CD3/CD28 antibodies), TP allostimulators and CMV lysate (in CMV-reactive donors). This demonstrates that hyporesponsiveness of alloanergized PBMC is specific to FP alloantigens.
Figure 1. A.Proliferation (determined by thymidine incorporation) in a Primary Mixed Lymphocyte Reaction using HLA-mismatched stimulator and responder peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) in the absence or the presence of costimulatory blockade using humanized monoclonal anti-B7.1 and -B7.2 antibodies. Results are shown as mean (+/-sd) for 8 representative experiments using unique stimulator-responder pairs. B. Percentage inhibition of alloproliferation in primary MLRs performed in the presence of costimulatory blockade using humanized monoclonal anti-B7.1 and -B7.2 antibodies. Results are shown as mean (+/-sd) for the same 8 unique stimulator-responder pairs depicted in Figure 1A.
Figure 2. A. Proliferation (determined by thymidine incorporation) in secondary MLRs where responder PBMC from primary MLRs performed in the absence (control PBMC) or the presence of costimulatory blockade (alloanergized PBMC) are restimulated with irradiated first party stimulators. Results are shown as mean (+/-sd) for the 8 unique stimulator-responder pairs depicted in Figure 1. B. Percentage inhibition of First Party alloproliferation in secondary MLRs where responder PBMC from primary MLRs performed in the absence (control PBMC) or the presence of costimulatory blockade (alloanergized PBMC) are restimulated with irradiated first party stimulators. Results are shown as mean (+/-sd) for the 8 unique stimulator-responder pairs depicted in Figure 1 and Figure 2A.
The induction of alloantigen-specific hyporesponsiveness, or anergy, in donor PBMC via allostimulation in the presence of co-stimulatory blockade is a simple technique for the generation of donor PBMC with reduced alloreactivity. We have developed the process in the laboratory and are currently applying the strategy in the clinic to generate donor PBMC with reduced alloreactivity for infusion after HLA-mismatched allogeneic HSCT. The aim of using such therapy is to improve immune reconstitution without excess toxicity. Although our current clinical application of the strategy is limited to the setting of allogeneic HSCT, the approach could be applied to other settings where tissue damage is caused by unwanted T cell responses, such as rejection of solid organ transplantation or autoimmune conditions.
Several reagents can be used for blockade of CD28-mediated co-stimulatory signals during the alloanergization co-culture process. Here we describe our current protocol using clinical-grade humanized murine monoclonal antibodies directed against the ligands of CD28 (B7.1 and B7.2). Non-clinical grade murine anti-human B7.1 and B7.2 antibodies are commercially available from several manufacturers. Alternatively, the fusion protein Cytotoxic T Lymphocyte Antigen (CTLA) 4-Immunoglobulin (Ig) can be used to block CD28-costimulation during the alloanergization process. CTLA4-Ig, which consists of the extracellular portion of the CTLA4 molecule linked to the IgG Fc gamma receptor, binds with high affinity to B7.1 and B7.2. The use of CTLA4-Ig results in similar efficacy and specificity of alloanergization of human PBMCs.
The technique of alloanergization is simple to perform. Fresh or previously cryopreserved stimulator PBMCs can be used with no significant variation in the outcome of the process. The requirement for only a single relatively brief ex vivo incubation step with no cell sorting procedures minimizes potential for cell death and bacterial contamination of cells prior to infusion which makes the strategy relatively simple to apply at a clinical scale.
One limitation of the approach we describe (and other approaches to selectively reduce alloreactivity of human cells) is the absence of a real-time assay to determine residual alloreactivity. Proliferation assays take 3-5 days to perform to confirm the reduction of alloreactivity and cells generated for clinical use must be infused prior to the results of these assays being available. Furthermore, measurement of proliferation of PBMCs by thymidine incorporation, although easy to perform, measures proliferation of B cells and other cell subsets in addition to T cell proliferation. CFSE dye dilution of responder PBMCs can be used as an alternate assay and permits determination of T cell subset-specific alloproliferation. One way to improve the clinical application of our strategy approach would be to develop and validate an assay of alloreactivity that takes only a few hours to perform which could be performed prior to release of alloanergized cells for clinical use.
In addition to demonstrating the efficiacy of the strategy it is also important to confirm the specificity alloanergization process. This can easily be done by determination of the relative preservation of alloresponses specific to third party allostimulators and when CMV-reactive donor cells are being alloanergized, by the preservation of proliferative responses to CMV
The authors have nothing to disclose.
Supported by the National Institutes of Health (U19 CA100625 and R21 CA137645). JKD was supported by the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society and the American Society of Blood and Marrow Transplantation/OtsukaNew Investigator Award.
Name of Reagent/Equipment | Company | Catalogue number | Comments (optional) |
Ficoll-Hypaque PLUS | GE Life Sciences | 17-1440-02 | |
RPMI 1640 | Invitrogen | 11875-093 | |
Hepes 1M | Invitrogen | 15630-080 | |
L-Glutamine 200mM | Invitrogen | 25030-081 | |
Gentamicin | Invitrogen | 15750-060 | |
Human AB serum (heat inactivated) | Gemini Bio-Products | 100-512 | Use validated batches |
Complete Culture Media (500ml) | 440ml RPMI 1640, 50ml AB serum, 5ml Hepes, 5 ml Glutamine, 167uL Gentamicin | ||
Irradiator | GammaCell 1000 | ||
T-25 Cell Culture Flasks with gas permeable caps | Corning, Inc. | 3056 | |
Humanized Monoclonal anti-B7.1 and anti B7.2 antibodies | See protocol text | ||
U bottomed 96 well culture plates | BD Labware | 353077 | |
Monoclonal CD3 antibody | Beckman Coulter | IM0178 | Reconstitute with 200ml distilled water |
Monoclonal CD28 antibody | Beckman Coulter | IM1376 | Reconstitute with 200ml distilled water |
CMV grade 2 antigen | Microbix | EL-01-02 | |
Tritiated Thymidine | NEN | NET027 | |
Scintillation Fluid | PerkinElmer, Inc. | 1205-440 | |
Harvester | Tomtec | ||
Printed Filtermat A | PerkinElmer, Inc. | 1450-421 | |
Filter Bag | PerkinElmer, Inc. | 1450-432 | |
1450 MicroBeta TriLux Scintillation Counter | Wallac |