Tracy Gentry
Duke University
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Featured researches published by Tracy Gentry.
Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation | 2011
Kristin Page; Lijun Zhang; Adam Mendizabal; Stephen Wease; Shelly L. Carter; Tracy Gentry; Andrew E. Balber; Joanne Kurtzberg
Graft failure occurs in approximately 20% of patients after unrelated umbilical cord blood transplantation (UCBT). This could be because of inadequate potency of the cord blood unit (CBU). To this end, we investigated the impact of graft characteristics on engraftment and survival of 435 primarily pediatric (median age: 5.3 years) patients receiving a single-unit unrelated UCBT after myeloablative conditioning from 2000 to 2008. Pre-cryopreservation (pre-cryo) graft characteristics were provided by the banks. Post-thaw parameters were measured on dextran/albumin-washed grafts. Post-thaw recovery of the colony-forming unit (CFU), a biological assay reflecting functional viability of the cord blood cells was the lowest percent age (median 21.2%, mean 36.5%) of the pre-cryo value, regardless of the bank of origin. The cumulative incidences of neutrophil and platelet engraftment were 76.9% (95%, confidence interval [CI], 71.3%-82.5%) and 55% (95% CI, 49.3%-60.7%), respectively. Univariate and separate multivariate models using pre-cryo and post-thaw datasets including clinical parameters identified predictors of engraftment and survival. In multivariate modeling, higher CFU dosing was the only pre-cryo graft characteristic predictive of neutrophil (P = .0024) and platelet engraftment (P = .0063). In the post-thaw model, CFU dose best predicted neutrophil and platelet engraftment (both P < .0001). Comparatively, CD34(+) and total nucleated cell (TNC) were only weakly predictive in post-thaw neutrophil and platelet engraftment models, respectively. In conclusion, CFU dose is a strong independent predictor of engraftment after unrelated UCBT and should be used to assess potency when selecting CBUs for transplantation.
Cytotherapy | 2007
Tracy Gentry; S.J. Foster; L. Winstead; E. Deibert; M. Fiordalisi; Andrew E. Balber
BACKGROUND ALDH(br) cells express high aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) activity and have progenitor cell activity in several contexts. We characterized human BM ALDH(br) cells to determine whether cell sorting based on ALDH activity isolates potentially useful populations for cell therapy. METHOD We measured the expression of ALDH and cell-surface Ag by flow cytometry and compared the ability of sorted ALDH(br), and BM populations remaining after ALDH(br) cells were removed (ALDH(dim) populations), to develop into several cell lineages in culture. RESULTS The ALDH(br) population comprised 1.2+/-0.8% (mean+/-SD, n=30) nucleated cells and was enriched in cells expressing CD34, CD117, CD105, CD127, CD133 and CD166, and in primitive CD34(+) CD38(-) and CD34(+) CD133(+) progenitors. Most of the CD34(+) and CD133(+) cells were ALDH(dim). ALDH(br) populations had 144-fold more hematopoietic colony-forming activity than ALDH(dim) cells and included all megakaryocyte progenitors. ALDH(br) populations readily established endothelial cell monolayers in cultures. Cells generating endothelial colonies in 7 days were 435-fold more frequent in ALDH(br) than ALDH(dim) populations. CFU-F were 9.5-fold more frequent in ALDH(br) than ALDH(dim) cells, and ALDH(br) cells gave rise to multipotential mesenchymal cell cultures that could be driven to develop into adipocytes, osteoblasts and chondrocytes. DISCUSSION Hematopoietic, endothelial and mesenchymal progenitor cells can be isolated simultaneously from human BM by cell sorting based on ALDH activity. BM ALDH(br) populations may be useful in several cell therapy applications.
British Journal of Haematology | 2003
Paul Fallon; Tracy Gentry; Andrew E. Balber; David Boulware; William Janssen; Renee Smilee; Robert W. Storms; Clay Smith
Summary. We have developed an approach for identifying primitive mobilized peripheral blood cells (PBSC) that express high levels of aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH). PBSC were stained with a fluorescent ALDH substrate, termed BODIPY™‐aminoacetaldehyde (BAAA), and then analysed using flow cytometry. A population of cells with a low side scatter (SSC) and a high level of BAAA staining, termed the SSCloALDHbr population, was readily discriminated and comprised a mean of 3 ± 5% of leukapheresis samples. A mean of 73 ± 11% of the SSCloALDHbr population expressed CD34 and 56 ± 25% of all the mobilized CD34+ cells resided within the SSCloALDHbr population. The SSCloALDHbr population was largely depleted of cells with mature phenotypes and enriched for cells with immature phenotypes. Sorted SSCloALDHbr and SSCloALDHbr CD34+ PBSC were enriched for progenitors with the ability to (1) generate colony‐forming units (CFU) and long‐term culture (LTC)‐derived CFU, (2) expand in primary and secondary LTC, and (3) generate multiple cell lineages. In 21 cancer patients who had undergone autologous PBSC transplantation, the number of infused SSCloALDHbr cells/kg highly correlated with the time to neutrophil and platelet engraftment (P < 0·015 and P < 0·003 respectively). In summary, peripheral blood SSCloALDHbr cells have the phenotypic and functional properties of primitive haematopoietic cells and their number correlates with engraftment following autologous transplantation.
Transfusion | 2013
Kristin Page; Adam Mendizabal; Brigid Betz-Stablein; Stephen Wease; Kevin Shoulars; Tracy Gentry; Vinod K. Prasad; Jessica Sun; Shelly L. Carter; Andrew E. Balber; Joanne Kurtzberg
Banked unrelated donor umbilical cord blood (CB) has improved access to hematopoietic stem cell transplantation for patients without a suitably matched donor. In a resource‐limited environment, ensuring that the public inventory is enriched with high‐quality cord blood units (CBUs) addressing the needs of a diverse group of patients is a priority. Identification of donor characteristics correlating with higher CBU quality could guide operational strategies to increase the yield of banked high‐quality CBUs.
Cytotherapy | 2007
Tracy Gentry; E. Deibert; S.J. Foster; R. Haley; Joanne Kurtzberg; Andrew E. Balber
BACKGROUND ALDH-bright (ALDH(br)) cell populations sorted from freshly collected umbilical cord blood (UCB) on the basis of their high aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) activity are highly enriched for HPC. HPC with low ALDH activity (ALDH(dim)) are primarily short-term progenitors, whereas progenitors that initiate long-term cultures or establish long-term grafts in xenograft models are ALDH(br). We examined the multilineage hematopoietic and platelet progenitor activities of ALDH(br) cells recovered from cryopreserved UCB units typically employed in the practice of clinical transplantation. METHODS Frozen UCB units were thawed, washed, immunomagnetically depleted of cells expressing glycophorin A and CD14, reacted for flow cytometric detection of ALDH, and sorted to yield ALDH(br) and ALDH(dim) populations. We measured surface Ag expression and viability of cells in the ALDH(br) and ALDH(dim) populations by flow cytometry and hematopoietic (CFC-H) and megakaryocytic (CFC-Mk) colony-forming cells in each population. RESULTS ALDH(br) populations isolated from thawed UCB cells were highly enriched for CD34(+) and CD133(+) cells. Flow-sorted ALDH(br) populations were enriched 1116-fold in CFC-H, 10-fold in multilineage GEMM colonies and 2015-fold in CFC-Mk compared with the ALDH(dim) population. All progenitors giving rise to large Mk colonies were derived from ALDH(br) populations. DISCUSSION ALDH(br) populations recovered from thawed, banked UCB with the method we describe have HPC activity and may be useful in the clinic to facilitate reconstitution of erythroid, myeloid and megakaryocytic blood elements.
Transfusion | 2012
Kristin Page; Lijun Zhang; Adam Mendizabal; Stephen Wease; Shelly L. Carter; Kevin Shoulars; Tracy Gentry; Andrew E. Balber; Joanne Kurtzberg
BACKGROUND: Engraftment failure and delays, likely due to diminished cord blood unit (CBU) potency, remain major barriers to the overall success of unrelated umbilical cord blood transplantation (UCBT). To address this problem, we developed and retrospectively validated a novel scoring system, the Cord Blood Apgar (CBA), which is predictive of engraftment after UCBT.
Cytotherapy | 2011
Elisabeth T. Tracy; Claire Y. Zhang; Tracy Gentry; Kevin Shoulars; Joanne Kurtzberg
BACKGROUND AIMS Oligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPC) hold promise as a cellular therapy for demyelinating diseases. The feasibility of using OPC-based therapies in humans depends upon a reliable, readily available source. We have previously described the isolation, expansion and characterization of oligodendrocyte-like cells from fresh human umbilical cord blood (UCB). We now describe the isolation and expansion of OPC from thawed, cryopreserved UCB. METHODS We thawed cryopreserved UCB units employing a standard clinical protocol, then isolated and plated mononuclear cells under previously established culture conditions. All OPC cultures were trypsinized at 21 days, counted, then characterized by flow cytometry after fixation, permeablization and labeling with the following antibodies: anti-oligodendrocyte marker 4 (O4), anti-oligodendrocyte marker 1 (O1) and anti-myelin basic protein (MBP). OPC were also placed in co-culture with shiverer mouse neuronal cells then stained in situ for beta tubulin III (BT3) and MBP as a functional assay of myelination. RESULTS The average OPC yield per cryopreserved UCB unit was 64% of that seen with fresh UCB. On flow cytometric analysis, 74% of thawed UCB units yielded cells with an O4-expression level of at least 20% of total events, compared with 95% of fresh UCB units. We observed myelination of shiverer neurons in our functional assay, which could be used as a potency assay for release of OPC cells in phase I human clinical trials. CONCLUSIONS Our results demonstrate that OPC can be derived reliably from thawed, cryopreserved UCB units, and support the feasibility of using these cells in human clinical trials.
Developmental Neuroscience | 2015
Alexander Drobyshevsky; C. Michael Cotten; Zhongjie Shi; Kehuan Luo; Rugang Jiang; Matthew Derrick; Elizabeth T. Tracy; Tracy Gentry; Ronald N. Goldberg; Joanne Kurtzberg; Sidhartha Tan
Cerebral palsy (CP) has a significant impact on both patients and society, but therapy is limited. Human umbilical cord blood cells (HUCBC), containing various stem and progenitor cells, have been used to treat various brain genetic conditions. In small animal experiments, HUCBC have improved outcomes after hypoxic-ischemic (HI) injury. Clinical trials using HUCBC are underway, testing feasibility, safety and efficacy for neonatal injury as well as CP. We tested HUCBC therapy in a validated rabbit model of CP after acute changes secondary to HI injury had subsided. Following uterine ischemia at 70% gestation, we infused HUCBC into newborn rabbit kits with either mild or severe neurobehavioral changes. Infusion of high-dose HUCBC (5 × 106 cells) dramatically altered the natural history of the injury, alleviating the abnormal phenotype including posture, righting reflex, locomotion, tone, and dystonia. Half the high dose showed lesser but still significant improvement. The swimming test, however, showed that joint function did not restore to naïve control function in either group. Tracing HUCBC with either MRI biomarkers or PCR for human DNA found little penetration of HUCBC in the newborn brain in the immediate newborn period, suggesting that the beneficial effects were not due to cellular integration or direct proliferative effects but rather to paracrine signaling. This is the first study to show that HUCBC improve motor performance in a dose-dependent manner, perhaps by improving compensatory repair processes.
Blood | 2016
Kevin Shoulars; Pamela Noldner; Jesse D. Troy; Lynn Cheatham; Amanda Parrish; Kristin Page; Tracy Gentry; Andrew E. Balber; Joanne Kurtzberg
Banked, unrelated umbilical cord blood provides access to hematopoietic stem cell transplantation for patients lacking matched bone marrow donors, yet 10% to 15% of patients experience graft failure or delayed engraftment. This may be due, at least in part, to inadequate potency of the selected cord blood unit (CBU). CBU potency is typically assessed before cryopreservation, neglecting changes in potency occurring during freezing and thawing. Colony-forming units (CFUs) have been previously shown to predict CBU potency, defined as the ability to engraft in patients by day 42 posttransplant. However, the CFU assay is difficult to standardize and requires 2 weeks to perform. Consequently, we developed a rapid multiparameter flow cytometric CBU potency assay that enumerates cells expressing high levels of the enzyme aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH bright [ALDH(br)]), along with viable CD45(+) or CD34(+) cell content. These measurements are made on a segment that was attached to a cryopreserved CBU. We validated the assay with prespecified criteria testing accuracy, specificity, repeatability, intermediate precision, and linearity. We then prospectively examined the correlations among ALDH(br), CD34(+), and CFU content of 3908 segments over a 5-year period. ALDH(br) (r = 0.78; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.76-0.79), but not CD34(+) (r = 0.25; 95% CI, 0.22-0.28), was strongly correlated with CFU content as well as ALDH(br) content of the CBU. These results suggest that the ALDH(br) segment assay (based on unit characteristics measured before release) is a reliable assessment of potency that allows rapid selection and release of CBUs from the cord blood bank to the transplant center for transplantation.
Cytotherapy | 2015
Joanne Kurtzberg; Susan Buntz; Tracy Gentry; Pamela K. Noeldner; April Ozamiz; Benjamin Rusche; Robert W. Storms; Amy Wollish; David A. Wenger; Andrew E. Balber
BACKGROUND AIMS Cord blood (CB) transplantation slows neurodegeneration during certain inherited metabolic diseases. However, the number of donor cells in the brain of patients does not appear to be sufficient to provide benefit until several months after transplant. We developed the cell product DUOC-01 to provide therapeutic effects in the early post-transplant period. METHODS DUOC-01 cultures initiated from banked CB units were characterized by use of time-lapse photomicroscopy during the 21-day manufacturing process. Antigen expression was measured by means of flow cytometry and immunocytochemistry; transcripts for cytokines and enzymes by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction; activities of lysosomal enzymes by direct biochemical analysis; alloreactivity of DUOC-01 and of peripheral blood (PB) mononuclear cells (MNC) to DUOC-01 by mixed lymphocyte culture methods; and cytokine secretion by Bioplex assays. RESULTS DUOC-01 cultures contained highly active, attached, motile, slowly proliferating cells that expressed common (cluster of differentiation [CD]11b, CD14 and Iba1), M1 type (CD16, inducible nitric oxide synthase), and M2-type (CD163, CD206) macrophage or microglia markers. Activities of 11 disease-relevant lysosomal enzymes in DUOC-01 products were similar to those of normal PB cells. All DUOC-01 products secreted interleukin (IL)-6 and IL-10. Accumulation of transforming growth factor-β, IL-1β, interferon-γ and TNF-α in supernatants was variable. IL-12, IL-2, IL-4, IL-5 and IL-13 were not detected at significant concentrations. Galactocerebrosidase, transforming growth factor-β and IL-10 transcripts were specifically enriched in DUOC-01 relative to CB cells. PB MNCs proliferated and released cytokines in response to DUOC-01. DUOC-01 did not proliferate in response to mismatched MNC. CONCLUSIONS DUOC-01 has potential as an adjunctive cell therapy to myeloablative CB transplant for treatment of inherited metabolic diseases.