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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0019045 (
hemoglobinopathies
)
2,704
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Reconstitution of lethally irradiated mice with a mixture of syngeneic and allogeneic (A+B-->A) bone marrow results in multilineage mixed allogeneic chimerism, donor-specific transplantation tolerance, superior immunocompetence and resistance to graft-vs-host disease. However, the morbidity and mortality associated with lethal irradiation would be a major limitation to the clinical application of chimerism to induce tolerance for solid organ grafts or treat other nonmalignant hematologic diseases. We report here that durable multilineage mixed allogeneic chimerism and donor-specific transplantation tolerance for skin and primarily vascularized allografts can be achieved across multiple histocompatibility barriers using a nonmyeloablative radiation-based approach. The percentage of B10 mouse recipients that engrafted directly correlated with the degree of disparity between donor and recipient and the dose of total body irradiation administered. Although the occurrence of engraftment following conditioning with doses of total body irradiation of > or = 600 cGy was similar for animals receiving bone marrow disparate at
MHC
or
MHC
, minor and hematopoietic (Hh-1) loci (67% vs 78%), the level of donor chimerism was significantly less when multiple histocompatibility barriers were present (94.6 +/- 3.8% vs 37.5 +/- 12.5%). Treatment of the recipient with cyclophosphamide 2 days following allogeneic bone marrow transplantation reduced the dose of radiation sufficient for reliable engraftment to only 500 cGy of total body irradiation, regardless of
MHC
and Hh-1 disparity. Donor chimerism was stable and present in all lineages, with production of lymphoid (T and B cell), NK, and myeloid (erythrocyte, platelet, granulocyte, and macrophage) cells. Mixed chimeras exhibited donor-specific tolerance in vitro, as assessed by mixed lymphocyte culture (MLR) and cytotoxicity (CML) assays, and in vivo to skin and primarily vascularized cardiac allografts. The observation that engraftment and tolerance can be achieved across multiple histocompatibility barriers using nonmyeloablative recipient conditioning may allow allogeneic bone marrow transplantation to be applied to nonmalignant disease states in which lethal conditioning cannot be justified, including the induction of donor-specific tolerance for solid organ transplantation and the treatment of
hemoglobinopathies
and enzyme deficiency states.
...
PMID:A nonlethal conditioning approach to achieve durable multilineage mixed chimerism and tolerance across major, minor, and hematopoietic histocompatibility barriers. 759 73
Bone marrow transplantation (BMT) results in hematopoietic chimeras that demonstrate donor specific tolerance to tissue and cellular grafts. The clinical application of chimerism to induce tolerance is limited by the morbidity associated with human BMT: failure of engraftment, graft-versus-host disease (GVHD), and toxic host conditioning. BMT in an immunologically mature host has until recently been believed to require complete ablation of the host's immune system to allow donor engraftment. Lethal conditioning is associated with significant morbidity and mortality. Stable multilineage mixed allogeneic chimerism has more recently been achieved in mice using partial myeloablation prior to BMT. Chimeras prepared in this fashion exhibit donor specific tolerance in vitro and in vivo similar to lethally-conditioned recipients. A second factor that has limited the widespread application of BMT to nonmalignant disease, including attempts to induce tolerance, is GVHD. Although T-cell depletion of donor marrow reduces the incidence of GVHD, engraftment is often jeopardized. Although highly purified stem cells (SC) engraft at relatively low doses in syngeneic recipients, they do not durably engraft in
MHC
-disparate recipients. It has recently become clear that a second cell (facilitating cell) that enhances bone marrow engraftment and minimizes the occurrence of GVHD is required for SC to engraft in
MHC
-disparate recipients. Methods to optimize engraftment yet minimize GVHD may provide an approach to apply BMT clinically. With decreased morbidity through incomplete recipient conditioning and the ability to engineer a bone marrow graft to contain only the desired cells to optimize engraftment, BMT may provide a reasonable strategy to treat nonmalignant diseases including enzyme deficiencies,
hemoglobinopathies
, autoimmune diseases, and species-specific viral infections such as HIV. BMT-induced donor specific tolerance may benefit recipients of solid organ transplants by eliminating the need for nonspecific immunosuppression and by preventing chronic rejection. This review will focus on approaches to enable BMT yet minimize recipient morbidity and mortality.
...
PMID:Chimerism and tolerance: from freemartin cattle and neonatal mice to humans. 907 64
Bone marrow transplantation (BMT) has the potential to treat
hemoglobinopathies
(sickle cell and thalassemia) autoimmunity (diabetes, lupus, multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn's colitis) and enzyme deficiency states. Graft versus host disease (GVHD) is a major complication and limitation to the therapeutic application of BMT. There have been many clinical trials and experimental animal models that have attempted to control GVHD through the engineering of the donor bone marrow cells (BMC). Historically, several methods have demonstrated effectiveness in controlling GVHD; however they were also associated with a marked increase in the rate of graft failure. Highly purified hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) engraft quite readily in genetically-matched recipients while they do not engraft as easily in
MHC
-disparate recipients. The numbers of HSC must be increased 100-200 fold in order to overcome the allogeneic barrier. We were the first to phenotypically and to functionally characterize a novel cell in the bone marrow that enables engraftment of highly purified HSC in allogeneic recipients. The discovery of graft facilitating cell populations has resulted in the restoration of the engraftment-potential of purified HSC between genetically-disparate individuals. The addition of facilitating cells (FC) to T cell-depleted BMC grafts results in allogeneic engraftment without GVHD or graft failure. New strategies of BMC engineering that retain FC and HSC but avoid GVHD have allowed successful engraftment in mismatched and older recipients. These techniques have expanded the therapeutic potential of BMT to virtually every candidate as well as to non-malignant diseases in which the morbidity associated with conventional BMT could not be accepted. This article reviews the transition of the FC technology from bench to bedside and discuss the potentially broad-reaching applications of BMT and mixed chimerism.
...
PMID:Bone marrow cell graft engineering: from bench to bedside. 1134 54
Iron is an essential trace element subject to tight regulation to ensure adequate running of biological processes. In sub-Saharan Africa where
hemoglobinopathies
are common, iron homeostasis is likely to be impaired by these conditions. Here, we assessed and compared key serum proteins associated with iron metabolism between sub-Saharan African children with sickle cell disease (SCD) and their unaffected siblings. Complete blood counts and serum concentrations of four key proteins involved in iron regulation (ferritin, transferrin, sTfR, and hepcidin) were measured for 73 children with SCD and 68 healthy siblings in Benin, West Africa. We found significant differences in concentration of transferrin, sTfR, and ferritin between the two groups. Hepcidin concentrations were found at unusually high concentrations but did not differ among the two groups. We found a significant negative correlation between hepcidin levels and both MCH and MCV in the SCD group and report that sTfR concentrations show a correlation with MCV and
MHC
in opposite directions in the two groups. These results highlight the unusually high levels of hepcidin in the Beninese population and the patterns of differential iron homeostasis taking place under SCD status. These results lay the foundation for a systematic evaluation of the underlying mechanisms deregulating iron homeostasis in populations with SCD or high prevalence of iron deficiency.
...
PMID:Comparative Analysis of Iron Homeostasis in Sub-Saharan African Children with Sickle Cell Disease and Their Unaffected Siblings. 2694 67