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Immune Cell Reconstitution After Exposure to Potentially Lethal Doses of Radiation in the Nonhuman Primate
39
Citations
38
References
2013
Year
Cell TherapyRadiation EffectImmunologyRadiation ExposureRadiation BiologyImmunotherapyNonhuman PrimateRadiation ProtectionRadiation MedicinePotentially Lethal DosesBone Marrow FailureStem Cell TransplantationHematologyBone MarrowImmune Cell ReconstitutionCell TransplantationRadiation OncologyHealth SciencesMedicineTolerance InductionRadiation EffectsLethal IrradiationStem Cell Transplant
Delayed immune reconstitution remains a major cause of morbidity associated with myelosuppression induced by cytotoxic therapy or myeloablative conditioning for stem cell transplant, as well as potentially lethal doses of total- or partial-body irradiation. Restoration of a functional immune cell repertoire requires hematopoietic stem cell reconstitution for all immune cells and effective thymopoiesis for T cell recovery. There are no medical countermeasures available to mitigate damage consequent to high-dose, potentially lethal irradiation, and there are no well characterized large animal models of prolonged immunosuppression to assess efficacy of potential countermeasures. Herein, the authors describe a model of T and B cell reconstitution following lethal doses of partial-body irradiation with 5% bone marrow sparing that includes full exposure of the thymus. Rhesus macaques (n = 31 male, 5.5-11.3 kg body weight) were exposed to midline tissue doses of 9.0-12.0 Gy using 6 MV LINAC-derived photons at a dose rate of 0.80 Gy min, sparing approximately 5% of bone marrow (tibiae, ankles, and feet). All animals received medical management and were monitored for myeloid and lymphoid suppression and recovery through 180 d post-exposure. Myeloid recovery was assessed by neutrophil and platelet-related hematological parameters. Reconstitution of B and T cell subsets was assessed by flow cytometric immunophenotyping, and recent thymic emigrants were identified by RT-PCR of T cell receptor excision circles. Mortality was recorded through 180 d post-exposure. Acute myelo-suppression was characterized by severe neutropenia and thrombocytopenia, followed by recovery 30-60 d post-exposure. Total T (CD3+) and B (CD20+) cells were reduced significantly following exposure and exhibited differential recovery patterns post-exposure. Both CD4+ and CD8+ subsets of naïve T cells and total CD4+ T cell counts remained significantly lower than baseline through 180 d post-exposure. The failure of recent thymic emigrants and naïve T cell subsets to recover to normal baseline values reflects the severe radiation effects on the recovery of marrow-derived stem and early thymic progenitor cells, their mobilization and seeding of receptive thymic niches, and slow endogenous thymic regeneration.
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