Antw: Re: CD45RO minus individuals

From: Gregor Rothe (gregor.rothe@klinik.uni-regensburg.de)
Date: Tue May 22 2001 - 03:42:27 EST


Hello to all,

The papers on the splicing defect which Mario mentions are from the group of Reinhard
Schwinzer at Hannover:

- Eur J Immunol 1995 Jul;25(7):2101-6
- Eur J Immunol 1992 Apr;22(4):1095-8

Gregor Rothe

>>> Mario Roederer <Roederer@drmr.com> 18.05.2001 20:13:33 >>>

Yes, about 1% of individuals have a mutation which prevents the
splicing of the CD45 RNA into the RO form; thus, all the cells
express CD45RA.  There's actually a publication on this in the
literature, about 10 years ago, but I can't for the life of me
remember where or what.

In a clinical trial we ran some years ago, where we quantitated the
relative expression of naive and memory T cells, we put an exclusion
criteria for entry into the clinical trial to eliminate individuals
with this genetic variant (I wouldn't call it a "defect"--they have
no apparent immunological or other abnormalities).  We excluded a few
out of the 800 individuals we screened.

It's definitely hereditary; one of our lab techs had this phenotype,
as did his mother and sister.

mr

At 1:02 PM -0400 5/17/01, Aki Hoji wrote:
>Dear all,
>
>Does anybody know if there is a hereditary defect in CD45RO expression (due
>to splicing error ?) in human ?  I have one individual whose PBMC are
>negative for CD45RO, and they are either CD45RA dim and bright.
>
>
>Aki Hoji
>University of Pittsburgh
>Department of Infectious Diseases and Microbiology
>Rm522 Parran Hall, GSPH-IDM
>130 Desoto Street, Pittsburgh PA 15261
>tel: (412) 624-3072/0776
>fax: (412) 624-4953



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