In vitro production of human T cells with known Ag specificity is of major clinical interest for immunotherapy against tumors and infections. We have performed TCRαβ gene transfer into human hemopoietic progenitors from postnatal thymus or umbilical cord blood, and subsequently cultured these precursors on OP9 stromal cells expressing the Notch human ligand Delta-like1. We report here that fully mature, functional T cells with controlled Ag specificity are obtained from such cultures. Using vectors encoding TCRαβ-chains directed against melanoma (MART-1), viral (CMV), and minor histocompatibility (HA-2) Ags, we show that the obtained Ag-specific T cells exert cytolytic activity against their cognate Ag and expand in vitro upon specific TCR stimulation. Therapeutic applications may arise from these results because they provide a way to produce large numbers of autologous mature Ag-specific T cells in vitro from undifferentiated hemopoietic progenitors.
CITATION STYLE
van Lent, A. U., Nagasawa, M., van Loenen, M. M., Schotte, R., Schumacher, T. N. M., Heemskerk, M. H. M., … Legrand, N. (2007). Functional Human Antigen-Specific T Cells Produced In Vitro Using Retroviral T Cell Receptor Transfer into Hematopoietic Progenitors. The Journal of Immunology, 179(8), 4959–4968. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.179.8.4959
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