T-cell depletion of an HLA-haploidentical graft is often used to prevent graft-vs.-host disease (GvHD), but the procedure may lead to increased graft failure, relapse, and infections due to delayed immune recovery. We hypothesized that selective depletion of the CD45RA+ subset can effectively reduce GvHD through removal of naïve T cells, while providing improved donor immune reconstitution through adoptive transfer of CD45RA– memory T cells. Herein, we present results from the first 17 patients with poor-prognosis hematologic malignancy who received haploidentical donor transplantation with CD45RA-depleted progenitor cell grafts following a novel reduced intensity conditioning regimen without total body irradiation or serotherapy. Extensive depletion of CD45RA+ T cells and B cells, with preservation of abundant memory T cells, was consistently achieved in all 17 products. Neutrophil engraftment (median day +10) and full donor chimerism (median day +11) was rapidly achieved post-transplantation. Early T-cell reconstitution directly correlated with the CD45RA-depleted graft content. T-cell function recovered rapidly with broad TCR Vβ spectra. There was no infection-related mortality in this heavily pretreated population, and no patient developed acute GvHD despite infusion of a median of >100 million per kilogram haploidentical T cells.
Shaping an embryo requires tissue-scale cell rearrangements known as morphogenetic events. These force-dependent processes require cells to adhere to their neighbors, through cadherin-catenin complexes, and to their extracellular matrix substrates, through integrin-based focal contacts. Integrin receptors are not only important for attachment to the extracellular matrix, but also for its fibrillar assembly.Fibrillogenesis requires actomyosin contractility, regulated in part by cadherin-catenin complexes. One such catenin, plakoglobin, mediates the attachment of actin stress fibers to cadherin cytoplasmic tails through its interactions with actin-binding proteins. In Xenopus gastrulae, plakoglobin has been identified as an essential member in the forceinduced collective migration of the mesendoderm tissue. In the current study, we have further characterized the role of plakoglobin in two additional morphogenetic processes, epiboly and convergent extension. Plakoglobin-deficient tadpoles are 40% shorter and gastrulae contain notochords that are 60% wider than stage-matched controls, indicating convergent extension defects. The radially intercalating ectoderm of morphant animal caps is nearly twice as thick as controls. Furthermore, morphant embryos exhibit a failure to assemble a fibronectin matrix at the notochord-somite-boundary or along the blastocoel roof. The loss of the fibronectin matrix, while not due to changes in overall patterning, is a result of a failure to assemble the soluble dimers into long fibrils. The force of attachment to a cadherin or fibronectin substrate is reduced in plakoglobin morphants, indicating defects in adhesion to both cadherin and fibronectin. These data suggest that plakoglobin regulates morphogenesis and fibronectin assembly through cellcell and cell-matrix adhesion.
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