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Extensive intrathecal T cell renewal following hematopoietic transplantation for multiple sclerosis
Kristina M. Harris, Noha Lim, Paul Lindau, Harlan Robins, Linda M. Griffith, Richard A. Nash, Laurence A. Turka, Paolo A. Muraro
Kristina M. Harris, Noha Lim, Paul Lindau, Harlan Robins, Linda M. Griffith, Richard A. Nash, Laurence A. Turka, Paolo A. Muraro
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Research Article Immunology

Extensive intrathecal T cell renewal following hematopoietic transplantation for multiple sclerosis

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Abstract

A recent study of autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (AHSCT) for active relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) showed efficacy in preventing disease worsening. However, the immunologic basis for efficacy remains poorly defined. Multiple sclerosis pathology is known to be driven by inflammatory T cells that infiltrate the CNS. Therefore, we hypothesized that the preexisting T cell repertoire in the intrathecal compartment of active RRMS participants was ablated and replaced with new clones following AHSCT. T cell repertoires were assessed using high-throughput TCRβ chain sequencing in paired cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and peripheral blood CD4+ and CD8+ T cells from participants that underwent AHSCT, before and up to 4 years following transplantation. More than 90% of the preexisting CSF repertoire in participants with active RRMS was removed following AHSCT and replaced with clonotypes predominantly generated from engrafted autologous stem cells. Of the preexisting clones in CSF, approximately 60% were also detected in blood before therapy, and concordant treatment effects were observed for clonotypes in both compartments following AHSCT. These results indicate that replacement of the preexisting TCR repertoire in active RRMS is a mechanism for AHSCT efficacy and suggest that peripheral blood could serve as a surrogate for CSF to define mechanisms associated with efficacy in future studies of AHSCT.

Authors

Kristina M. Harris, Noha Lim, Paul Lindau, Harlan Robins, Linda M. Griffith, Richard A. Nash, Laurence A. Turka, Paolo A. Muraro

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Figure 4

Longitudinal evaluation in blood of clonotypes detected in both CSF and CD4+ or CD8+ T cells in blood.

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Longitudinal evaluation in blood of clonotypes detected in both CSF and ...
Clonotypes classified as (A) preexisting in CSF before therapy and undetectable in CSF at month 24, referred to as removed from CSF, (B) new in CSF at month 24 after transplant, and (C) persisting in CSF at month 24 after transplant. Proportions were aggregated per subject within circulating CD4+ or CD8+ T cell repertories before-to-after transplant and then log transformed. Black triangles represent participants that met the primary endpoint for the HALT-MS study before month 60 after transplant, and white circles represent participants that stayed in remission from active MS until the last follow-up. The line represents the mean of participants evaluated. *P < 0.05, between month 0 before therapy versus months indicated after transplant using mixed model for repeated measures.

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ISSN 2379-3708

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