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American Society of Hematology, Blood, 4(121), p. 573-584, 2013

DOI: 10.1182/blood-2012-05-431718

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IL-7 and IL-15 instruct the generation of human memory stem T cells from naive precursors

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Long-living memory stem T cells (T(SCM)) with the ability to self-renew and the plasticity to differentiate into potent effectors could be valuable weapons in adoptive T-cell therapy against cancer. Nonetheless, procedures to specifically target this T-cell population remain elusive. Here we show that it is possible to differentiate in vitro, expand and gene modify in clinically compliant conditions CD8(+) T(SCM) lymphocytes starting from naïve precursors. Requirements for the generation of this T-cell subset, described as CD62L(+)CCR7(+)CD45RA(+)CD45R0(+)IL-7Rα(+)CD95(+), are CD3/CD28 engagement and culture with IL-7 and IL-15. Accordingly T(SCM) accumulates early after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. The gene expression signature and functional phenotype define this population as a distinct memory T lymphocyte subset, intermediate between naïve and central memory cells. When transplanted in immunodeficient mice, gene-modified naïve-derived T(SCM) prove superior to other memory lymphocytes for the ability to expand and differentiate into effectors able to mediate a potent xenogeneic GvHD. Furthermore, gene-modified T(SCM) are the only T-cell subset able to expand and mediate GvHD upon serial transplantation, suggesting self-renewal capacity in a clinically relevant setting. These findings provide novel insights into the origin and requirements for T(SCM) generation and pave the way for their clinical rapid exploitation in adoptive cell therapy.