Peripheral blood mononuclear cells from a patient who rejected a T-cell-depleted marrow graft showed spontaneous cytotoxic activity specific for HLA-Cw4 and HLA-B35 alloantigens of the donor. T-cell-receptor complementarity-determining region 3 length distributions in a blood sample obtained at the time of rejection generally showed distortions in only 1 or 2 peaks, indicating that recipient T cells with a broad repertoire of antigen receptors survived the pretransplantation conditioning regimen. An HLA-Cw4-specific, CD8+ T-cell clone was recovered from a blood sample after rejection. The T-cell-receptor-B gene rearrangement expressed by this clone was not readily detectable in other blood samples drawn before or after the transplantation, indicating that this clone was only 1 of many recipient-derived T cells that recognized HLA alloantigens of the donor. These results demonstrate the role of the HLA-C locus in T-cell-mediated alloimmune responses and add to emerging evidence that indicates the need to evaluate HLA-C compatibility in selecting hematopoietic stem cell donors for patients who have an increased risk of rejection.
CITATION STYLE
Pei, J., Akatsuka, Y., Anasetti, C., Lin, M. T., Petersdorf, E. W., Hansen, J. A., & Martin, P. J. (2001). Generation of HLA-C-specific cytotoxic T cells in association with marrow graft rejection: Analysis of alloimmunity by T-cell cloning and testing of T-cell-receptor rearrangements. Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation, 7(7), 378–383. https://doi.org/10.1053/bbmt.2001.v7.pm11529487
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