Abstract
Introduction: Viral infections and reactivations still remain a cause of morbidity and mortality after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation due to immunodeficiency and immunosuppression. Transfer of unmanipulated donor-derived lymphocytes (DLI) represents a promising strategy for improving cellular immunity but carries the risk of graft versus host disease (GvHD). Depleting alloreactive naïve T cells (T<sub>N</sub>) from DLIs was implemented to reduce the risk of GvHD induction while preserving antiviral memory T-cell activity. Here, we compared two T<sub>N</sub> depletion strategies via CD45RA and CD62L expression and investigated the presence of antiviral memory T cells against human adenovirus (AdV) and Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) in the depleted fractions in relation to their functional and immunophenotypic characteristics. Methods: T-cell responses against ppEBV_EBNA1, ppEBV_Consensus and ppAdV_Hexon within T<sub>N</sub>-depleted (CD45RA<sup>−</sup>/CD62L<sup>−</sup>) and T<sub>N</sub>-enriched (CD45RA<sup>+</sup>/CD62L<sup>+</sup>) fractions were quantified by interferon-gamma (IFN-γ) ELISpot assay after short- and long-term in vitro stimulation. T-cell frequencies and immunophenotypic composition were assessed in all fractions by flow cytometry. Moreover, alloimmune T-cell responses were evaluated by mixed lymphocyte reaction. Results: According to differences in the phenotype composition, antigen-specific T-cell responses in CD45RA<sup>−</sup> fraction were up to 2 times higher than those in the CD62L<sup>−</sup> fraction, with the highest increase (up to 4-fold) observed after 7 days for ppEBV_EBNA1-specific T cells. The CD4<sup>+</sup> effector memory T cells (T<sub>EM</sub>) were mainly responsible for EBV_EBNA1- and AdV_Hexon-specific T-cell responses, whereas the main functionally active T cells against ppEBV_Consensus were CD8<sup>+</sup> central memory T cells (T<sub>CM</sub>) and T<sub>EM</sub>. Moreover, comparison of both depletion strategies indicated that alloreactivity in CD45RA<sup>−</sup> was lower than that in CD62L<sup>−</sup> fraction. Conclusion: Taken together, our results indicate that CD45RA depletion is a more suitable strategy for generating T<sub>N</sub>-depleted products consisting of memory T cells against ppEBV_EBNA1 and ppAdV_Hexon than CD62L in terms of depletion effectiveness, T-cell functionality and alloreactivity. To maximally exploit the beneficial effects mediated by antiviral memory T cells in T<sub>N</sub>-depleted products, depletion methods should be selected individually according to phenotype composition and CD4/CD8 antigen restriction. T<sub>N</sub>-depleted DLIs may improve the clinical outcome in terms of infections, GvHD, and disease relapse if selection of pathogen-specific donor T cells is not available.
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