
Normalization of the peripheral blood T cell receptor V beta repertoire after cultured postnatal human thymic transplantation in DiGeorge syndrome.
Complete DiGeorge syndrome is an immunodeficiency disease characterized by thymic aplasia and the absence of functioning peripheral T cells. A patient with this syndrome was transplanted with cultured postnatal human thymic tissue. Within 5 weeks of transplantation, flow cytometry, T cell receptor V beta sequence analysis, and cell function studies showed the presence of oligoclonal populations of nonfunctional clonally expanded peripheral T cells that were derived from pretransplantation T cells present in the skin. However, at 3 months posttransplantation, a biopsy of the transplanted thymus showed normal intrathymic T cell maturation of host T cells with normal TCR V beta expression on thymocytes. By 9 months postransplantation, peripheral T cell function was restored and the TCR V beta repertoire became polyclonal, coincident with the appearance of normal T cell function. These data suggest that the transplanted thymus was responsible for the establishment of a new T cell repertoire via thymopoiesis in the chimeric thymic graft.
Duke Scholars
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Related Subject Headings
- Thymus Gland
- Sequence Alignment
- Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell, alpha-beta
- Organ Transplantation
- Molecular Sequence Data
- Immunology
- Humans
- DiGeorge Syndrome
- Base Sequence
- 3204 Immunology
Citation

Published In
DOI
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Location
Related Subject Headings
- Thymus Gland
- Sequence Alignment
- Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell, alpha-beta
- Organ Transplantation
- Molecular Sequence Data
- Immunology
- Humans
- DiGeorge Syndrome
- Base Sequence
- 3204 Immunology