Adoptive Cell Therapy in Mice Sensitized to a Grass Pollen Allergen
Anna Marianne Weijler, Lisa Prickler, Verena Kainz, Eva Bergmann, Barbara Bohle, Heinz Regele, Rudolf Valenta, Birgit Linhart, Thomas Wekerle

TL;DR
This study shows that cell therapy struggles to reverse existing allergies in mice, highlighting the need for early preventive treatments.
Contribution
The study demonstrates the difficulty of modulating established allergic immune responses using cell therapy in pre-immunized mice.
Findings
Cell therapy did not reduce allergen-specific IgE and IgG1 levels in pre-immunized mice.
Prolonged skin graft survival was observed with high Phl p 5+ BMC and no sensitization.
Pre-existing immune responses significantly hinder tolerization through cell therapy.
Abstract
The proportion of patients with type I allergy in the world population has been increasing and with it the number of people suffering from allergic symptoms. Recently we showed that prophylactic cell therapy employing allergen-expressing bone marrow (BM) cells or splenic B cells induced allergen-specific tolerance in naïve mice. Here we investigated if cell therapy can modulate an established secondary allergen-specific immune response in pre-immunized mice. We sensitized mice against the grass pollen allergen Phl p 5 and an unrelated control allergen, Bet v 1, from birch pollen before the transfer of Phl p 5-expressing BM cells. Mice were conditioned with several combinations of low-dose irradiation, costimulation blockade, rapamycin and T cell-depleting anti-thymocyte globulin (ATG). Levels of allergen-specific IgE and IgG1 in serum after cell transfer were measured via ELISA and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAllergic Rhinitis and Sensitization · Food Allergy and Anaphylaxis Research · Contact Dermatitis and Allergies
