异种胸腺置换在HIV感染中实现免疫恢复

Megan Sykes , Valerie Garrigue , R.Paul Johnson , Boris Nikolic , J.Ingacio Rodriguez-Barbosa , Michael Rosenzweig , David H Sachs , Anette Wu , Kazuhiko Yamada , Yong Zhao
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摘要

胸腺是人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)-1感染的靶点,HIV对胸腺祖细胞和胸腺微环境的破坏可能会阻止产生功能性幼稚T细胞来重新填充HIV感染者的外周血CD4 T细胞池。异种胸腺移植可能为克服这一障碍提供了一种有用的策略,因为异种胸腺可能抵抗HIV感染,而且异种供体基本上可以提供无限量的胸腺组织。我们最近的研究表明,一个高度不同的(猪)异种胸腺移植物可以用来取代宿主胸腺,在去胸腺化的T细胞耗尽的小鼠中重建CD4+ T细胞,并且这些CD4+ T细胞在猪胸腺异种移植物中发育后重新填充周围,具有完全的功能,赋予抵抗机会性感染的能力,并对猪供体和受体表现出特异性耐受性。对免疫缺陷小鼠的研究表明,猪胸腺组织同样能够从造血祖细胞中产生成熟的、功能性的人类T细胞,并且这些人类细胞对猪供体具有特异性耐受性。初步研究表明,猪胸腺组织可能具有抵抗HIV-1感染对人类胸腺发育的破坏性影响的能力。尝试将这种方法应用于非人灵长类动物,包括猴免疫缺陷病毒(SIV)感染的恒河猴,已经证明克服强大的受体抗猪T细胞反应对于避免猪胸腺移植物的排斥反应的重要性。然而,初步结果表明,如果完全阻止这种初始免疫反应,可以在猪胸腺异种移植物中产生耐受的灵长类T细胞库。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Xenogeneic thymic replacement to achieve immune restoration in HIV infection

The thymus is a target of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1 infection in humans, and destruction of thymic progenitors and of the thymic microenvironment by HIV may preclude the generation of functional naive T cells to repopulate the peripheral CD4 T cell pool in HIV-infected people. Xenogeneic thymic grafting might provide a useful strategy for overcoming this obstacle, as xenogeneic thymi might resist HIV infection, and xenogeneic donors could provide essentially unlimited amounts of thymic tissue. We have recently demonstrated that a highly disparate (porcine) xenogeneic thymus graft can be used to replace the host thymus to reconstitute CD4+ T cells in thymectomized, T cell-depleted mice, and that these CD4+ T cells that repopulate the periphery after developing in porcine thymic xenografts are fully functional, confer resistance to opportunistic infections, and show specific tolerance to the porcine donor and the recipient. Studies in immunodeficient mice show that porcine thymic tissue is likewise capable of generating mature, functional human T cells from hematopoietic progenitors, and that these human cells are specifically tolerant of the porcine donor. Preliminary studies suggest that porcine thymic tissue may confer resistance to the destructive effects of HIV-1 infection on human thymopoiesis. Attempts to apply this approach in nonhuman primates, including simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV)-infected rhesus monkeys, have demonstrated the importance of overcoming the powerful recipient anti-pig T cell response in order to avoid rejection of porcine thymic grafts. However, preliminary results provide encouragement that a tolerant primate T cell repertoire could be generated in a porcine thymic xenograft if this initial immune response were fully prevented.

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