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Press Release Source: St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

Laboratory Model of Immune System Overcomes Ethical Constraints on Studies
of Hematopoietic Stem Cells in Humans
Monday May 9, 12:21 pm ET
Models with complete human immune system derived from hematopoietic stem
cells produce functional white blood cells for studies of immune responses
against cancer and infection

MEMPHIS, Tenn., May 9 /PRNewswire/ -- Scientists at St. Jude Children's
Research Hospital have joined with colleagues at several other institutions
to develop a laboratory model of the human immune system. This model will
allow scientists to study ways for improving the results of hematopoietic
stem cell (HSC) transplantation without putting patients at risk.
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Researchers say the model will also be a valuable tool for studying how stem
cells give rise to various parts of the immune system, including T
lymphocytes; how immune cells kill cancer cells and fight infections; and
how immune cells respond to radiation and chemotherapy, two major treatments
for many cancers. A report on this work appears in the May 15 issue of
Journal of Immunology. The study was done in cooperation with The Jackson
Laboratory (Bar Harbor, ME), the University of Tennessee (Memphis), EMD
Lexigen Research Center (Billerica, MA) and the University of Massachusetts
(Worcester, MA).

The breakthrough is particularly important because it solves an ethical
dilemma facing researchers who study the human immune system, according to
Rupert Handgretinger, M.D., Ph.D., director of Stem Cell Transplantation at
St. Jude and co-leader of the Transplantation and Gene Therapy Program.

"Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation to replace a patient's own blood
system could cure many more people who have blood cancers and certain
genetic and immune disorders," Handgretinger said. "Unfortunately, this
treatment has not reached its full potential, in part because of ethical
limitations on studying stem cell transplantations in humans. Our new
laboratory model will now let researchers around the world do many important
experiments that will provide valuable insights into how the immune system
works and how to increase the success rate of HSC transplantation."

"Because this new humanized mouse model will permit studies of normal stem
cell function, it will be an important tool in research on regenerative
medicine," said Leonard D. Schultz, Ph.D., a senior staff scientist at The
Jackson Laboratory and first author of the paper. "The ability of these mice
to support development of a functional human immune system should also
facilitate the testing of experimental human vaccines and help us understand
the mechanisms underlying human autoimmune diseases."

Previous models of the human immune system were limited by relatively low
levels of success in engraftment of HSCs and the failure of the engrafted
cells to produce fully functional immune cells. Engraftment is the process
in which stem cells infused into the body are accepted, after which they
produce the various types of blood cells normally found in the body.

The model, called NOD-scid IL2Rynull, can be readily engrafted with human
HSCs, which then develop into T cells, B cells, myeloid cells, natural
killer (NK) cells and dentritic cells (DCs), Handgretinger said. NK cells
are a type of large white blood cells called lymphocytes, which kill both
infected cells and tumor cells. DCs are white blood cells that trap foreign
matter, such as bacteria, and present it to T cells, which then become
activated and orchestrate an immune response. Myeloid cells are immune cells
that include granulocytes and monocytes.

The investigators demonstrated the model's effectiveness by showing that it
could produce the wide variety of T cells needed to respond to a large
number of different potential targets; that the T cells carry a wide
diversity of receptors on their surfaces; and that the immune cells respond
normally to stimulation by multiplying. Receptors are proteins that
recognize specific molecules on bacteria, viruses, cancer cells and other
potential targets that stimulate the immune system.

A key piece of evidence showing that the model mimics the human immune
system by efficiently turning HSCs into T cells in the thymus gland was the
finding of so-called "T cell receptor excision circles" (TRECs).

Receptors are made up of protein building blocks, each of which is coded for
by a specific gene. TRECs form during a "mix-and-match" rearrangement of
these genes into any one of countless combinations. The rings represent
sections of DNA cut out of chromosomes during the mixing and matching of
genes that are chosen to build a particular receptor. Each T cell uses the
resulting combination of genes to make a receptor that lets the cell
recognize a specific target. When stimulated to multiply, each parent T cell
produces an army of identical cells against a designated target.

Previously, a team led by Handgretinger showed that a high level of TRECs in
the blood of children means that the thymus has converted a large number of
stem cells into parent T cells -- each of which targets a specific foreign
substance.

The NOD-scid IL2Rynull model combines the crucial characteristics of other
models that, by themselves, were inadequate to study HSC engraftment and the
different functions of an intact human immune system, according to Stanley
Chaleff, M.D., a postdoctoral fellow who did much of the work on the
project. "This combination of characteristics permits the successful
engraftment of HSCs," Chaleff said. "Because our models don't develop cancer
like other models do, they are more efficient tools for studying the human
immune system."

Other authors of the study include Leonard D. Shultz, Bonnie L. Lyons, Lisa
M. Burzenski and Bruce Gott (The Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, ME);
Xiaohua Chen and Stanley Chaleff (St. Jude); Malak Kotb (University of
Tennessee, Memphis); Stephen D. Gillies (EMD Lexigen Research Center,
Billerica, MA); and Marie King, Julie Mangada and Dale L. Greiner
(University of Massachusetts, Worcester, MA).

This work was supported in part by the National Institutes of Health, the
Diabetes Endocrinology Research Center (NIH), Juvenile Diabetes Research
Foundation, the Assisi Foundation of Memphis and ALSAC.

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital is internationally recognized for its
pioneering work in finding cures and saving children with cancer and other
catastrophic diseases. Founded by late entertainer Danny Thomas and based in
Memphis, Tenn., St. Jude freely shares its discoveries with scientific and
medical communities around the world. No family ever pays for treatments not
covered by insurance, and families without insurance are never asked to pay.
St. Jude is financially supported by ALSAC, its fundraising organization.
For more information, please visit http://www.stjude.org .


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