Cultures derived from peripheral blood CD34+ progenitor cells of head and neck cancer patients and from cord blood are functionally different.

1999 
Abstract Patients with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) have profound immune defects mediated, in part, by an increased number of immune suppressive CD34 + progenitor cells in their peripheral blood and tumor. One means of overcoming this immune suppression is to stimulate the CD34 + cells to differentiate into more mature, nonsuppressive progeny such as dendritic cells or monocytes. This study determined that CD34 + cells from the peripheral blood of HNSCC patients have the same potential to differentiate into dendritic cells as do human umbilical cord blood CD34 + cells following 12–16 days of culture with a cytokine cocktail. When compared functionally, the cultures that developed from CD34 + cells of cord blood were able to induce an allostimulatory response in naive T-cells, while the cultures that developed from patient CD34 + cells lacked allostimulatory ability. Both cultures expressed class II MHC (HLA-DR), but the proportion of cells expressing the costimulatory molecules CD80 and CD86 was significantly less in cultures that developed from HNSCC-patient CD34 + cells. Therefore, although the CD34 + cells from the peripheral blood of HNSCC patients can differentiate into dendritic cells, their allostimulatory capabilities are impaired, raising the question of their potential effectiveness in stimulating antitumor immune responses.
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