Reference : Sustained correction of B-cell development and function in a murine model of X-linked ag...
Scientific journals : Article
Human health sciences : Hematology
http://hdl.handle.net/2268/110134
Sustained correction of B-cell development and function in a murine model of X-linked agammaglobulinemia (XLA) using retroviral-mediated gene transfer
English
Yu, P. W. [ > > ]
Tabuchi, R. S. [ > > ]
Kato, R. M. [ > > ]
Astrakhan, A. [ > > ]
Humblet, Stéphanie mailto [Université de Liège - ULg > > GIGA-R : Hématologie >]
Kipp, K. [ > > ]
Chae, K. [ > > ]
Ellmeier, W. [ > > ]
Witte, O. N. [ > > ]
Rawlings, D. J. [ > > ]
2004
Blood
American Society of Hematology
104
5
1281-90
International
0006-4971
1528-0020
Washington
DC
[en] X-linked agammaglobulinemia (XLA) is a human immunodeficiency caused by mutations in Bruton tyrosine kinase (Btk) and characterized by an arrest in early B-cell development, near absence of serum immunoglobulin, and recurrent bacteria infections. Using Btk- and Tec-deficient mice (BtkTec-/-) as a model for XLA, we determined if Btk gene therapy could correct this disorder. Bone marrow (BM) from 5-fluorouracil (5FU)-treated BtkTec-/- mice was transduced with a retroviral vector expressing human Btk and transplanted into BtkTec-/- recipients. Mice engrafted with transduced hematopoietic cells exhibited rescue of both primary and peripheral B-lineage development, revocery of peritoneal B1 B cells, and correction of serum immunoglobulin M (IgM) and IgG3 levels. Gene transfer also restored T-independent type II immune responses, and B-cell antigen receptor (BCR) proliferative responses. B-cell progenitors derived from Btk-transduced stem cells exhibited higher levels of Btk expression than non-B cells; and marking studies demonstrated a selective advantage for Btk-transduced B-lineage cells. BM derived from primary recipients also rescued Btk-dependent function in secondary hosts that had received a transplant. Together, these data demonstrate that gene transfer into hematopoietic stem cells can reconstitute Btk-dependent B-cell development and function in vivo, and strongly support the feasibility of pursuing Btk gene transfer for XLA.
http://hdl.handle.net/2268/110134

File(s) associated to this reference

Fulltext file(s):

FileCommentaryVersionSizeAccess
Open access
Humblet-Blood 1281-2004.pdfPublisher postprint598.46 kBView/Open

Bookmark and Share SFX Query

All documents in ORBi are protected by a user license.