32 research outputs found

    Secretion of tumor necrosis factor-alpha by fresh human acute nonlymphoblastic leukemic cells: role in the disappearance of normal CFU-GM progenitors.

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    International audienceThe disappearance of normal hematopoiesis during acute nonlymphoblastic leukemia (ANLL) is poorly understood. Several reports indicate that conditioned medium obtained from leukemic cells might inhibit the formation of normal hematopoietic progenitors. However, these blast-conditioned medium (BCM) inhibitory activities are not well characterized. In order to evaluate whether BCM might contain an activity inhibiting the growth of normal marrow progenitors, BCM from 13 consecutive patients with ANLL were tested on normal bone marrow in methylcellulose assays. In all the cases, a significant inhibition of the growth of granulocyte-macrophage colony-forming unit (CFU-GM) progenitors was observed, whereas erythroid burst-forming unit (BFU-E) progenitors were not affected. Further characterization of the BCM inhibitory activity showed using both a biological assay and RIA, the presence of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) in 10 out of 13 BCM. Northern blot analysis performed in six patients showed a correlation between the expression of TNF-alpha mRNA by leukemic cells and the presence of TNF-alpha in BCM. Moreover, the BCM inhibitory activity could be neutralized with an anti-TNF-alpha antiserum. These data indicate that leukemic cells express and release frequently TNF-alpha, which may therefore play an important role in the inhibition of granulopoiesis during leukemia

    In vitro transformation of murine pro-B and pre-B cells by v-mpl, a truncated form of a cytokine receptor.

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    International audiencev-mpl is a constitutively activated, truncated form of a cytokine receptor that has been transduced in a murine retrovirus, the myeloproliferative leukemia virus (MPLV). Expression of this oncogene results in the factor-independent proliferation of myeloid, erythroid, megakaryocytic, and mast precursor cells, which retain the ability to differentiate. However, no lymphoid disease was ever reported. To determine whether MPLV could infect and transform very early B cells and their precursors (BCPs), lymphoid long-term bone marrow cultures were infected with a helper-free MPLV. Within 3 wk after infection, highly proliferating BCPs could be isolated. These cells were able to clone spontaneously in semi-solid cultures, grown in the absence of feeder cell layer or exogenous growth factor and rapidly produced tumors after s.c. injection into synegic irradiated mice. In addition, MPLV transformation of pre-B cells led to the induction of an autocrine activity. Immunophenotypic and molecular analysis indicated that MPLV transformed early pro-B, pro-B, and pre-B cells, according to the expression of HSA, CD43, B220, Thy1, s-IgM and BP1 Ags, and to the rearrangements of Ig genes. Interestingly, MPLV-transformed BCPs expressed Mac1 Ag without acquiring further characteristics of macrophagic differentiation. Although the v-mpl cytoplasmic domain is devoid of tyrosine kinase consensus sequence, MPLV-transformed pre-B cells contained a major approximately 105-kDa tyrosine-phosphorylated protein that was not detected in uninfected cells or in cells transformed by the Abelson viral oncogene (v-abl). These results demonstrate that, like v-abl, the truncated cytokine receptor v-mpl is able to transform BCPs in vitro and suggest that the oncogenic transformation of BCPs by either v-mpl or v-abl use different pathways

    Gene transfer of two entry inhibitors protects CD4+ T cell from HIV-1 infection in humanized mice

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    International audienceTargeting viral entry is the most likely gene therapy strategy to succeed in protecting the immune system from pathogenic HIV-1 infection. Here, we evaluated the efficacy of a gene transfer lentiviral vector expressing a combination of viral entry inhibitors, the C46 peptide (an inhibitor of viral fusion) and the P2-CCL5 intrakine (a modulator of CCR5 expression), to prevent CD4+ T-cell infection in vivo. For this, we used two different models of HIV-1-infected mice, one in which ex vivo genetically modified human T cells were grafted into immunodeficient NOD.SCID.γc−/− mice before infection and one in which genetically modified T cells were derived from CD34+ hematopoietic progenitors grafted few days after birth. Expression of the transgenes conferred a major selective advantage to genetically modified CD4+ T cells, the frequency of which could increase from 10 to 90% in the blood following HIV-1 infection. Moreover, these cells resisted HIV-1-induced depletion, contrary to non-modified cells that were depleted in the same mice. Finally, we report lower normalized viral loads in mice having received genetically modified progenitors. Altogether, our study documents that targeting viral entry in vivo is a promising avenue for the future of HIV-1 gene therapy in humans
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