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Stem Cells. 2006 Oct;24(10):2192-201. Epub 2006 Jun 22.

Immunogenicity and engraftment of mouse embryonic stem cells in allogeneic recipients.

Author information

1
Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa, USA.

Abstract

Embryonic stem cells (ESCs) are pluripotent and therefore able to differentiate both in vitro and in vivo into specialized tissues under appropriate conditions, a property that could be exploited for cellular therapies. However, the immunological nature of these cells in vivo has not been well understood. In vitro, mouse-derived ESCs fail to stimulate T cells, but they abrogate ongoing alloresponses by a process that requires cell-cell contact. We further show that despite a high expression of the NKG2D ligand retinoic acid early inducible-1 by mouse ESCs, they remain resistant to natural killer cell lysis. In vivo, allogeneic mouse ESCs populate the thymus, spleen, and liver of sublethally irradiated allogeneic host mice, inducing apoptosis to T cells and establishing multilineage mixed chimerism that significantly inhibits alloresponses to donor major histocompatibility complex antigens. Immunohistochemical imaging revealed a significant percentage of ESC-derived cells in the splenic marginal zones, but not in the follicles. Taken together, the data presented here reveal that nondifferentiated mouse embryonic stem cells are non-immunogenic and appear to populate lymphoid tissues in vivo, leading to T-cell deletion by apoptosis.

PMID:
16794265
DOI:
10.1634/stemcells.2006-0022
[Indexed for MEDLINE]
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