Reversion of the SCID phenotype by human T cell grafts. Development of cross-species immunocompetence.

  • Donjon C
  • Morkowski H
  • Cheung R
  • et al.
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Abstract

Due to defective recombinase function, mice with severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) lack functional lymphocytes and can accept human lymphoid xenografts. Xenografted animals (SCIDhum) are thought to provide a neutral environment for in vivo studies of normal, malignant or HIV-infected human cells. SCIDhum often develop endogenous, EBV+ lymphomas in the graft and in the our study two-thirds of 142 SCIDhum mice did so. Surprisingly, one-third of animals developed reversion of the SCID phenotype rapidly after human T cell engraftment. 90% of tumors occurred in nonrevertant and only 10% in revertant mice. These revertant animals showed immunologic tolerance for normal human B lymphocytes, maintained stable levels of mouse and human IgM and IgG. In addition, they generated competent mouse T cells able to kill transformed (EBV+) but not fresh B cells from the same donor nor unrelated human B cell lines. The tolerance for human lymphoid cells and the cross-species antitumor competence of host T lymphocytes imply unexpected recognition and selection events. Rather than a neutral "bioreactor," these observations mark the SCID host as potentially active participant in a composite immune system generated by xenografting.

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Donjon, C. M., Morkowski, H., Cheung, R. K., Leeder, J. S., & Dosch, H. M. (1993). Reversion of the SCID phenotype by human T cell grafts. Development of cross-species immunocompetence. The Journal of Immunology, 151(11), 5948–5954. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.151.11.5948

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