Yasmine Van Caeneghem
Ghent University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Yasmine Van Caeneghem.
Haematologica | 2015
Stijn Vanhee; Katrien De Mulder; Yasmine Van Caeneghem; Greet Verstichel; Nadine Van Roy; Björn Menten; Imke Velghe; Jan Philippé; Dominique De Bleser; Bart N. Lambrecht; Tom Taghon; Georges Leclercq; Tessa Kerre; Bart Vandekerckhove
Although hematopoietic precursor activity can be generated in vitro from human embryonic stem cells, there is no solid evidence for the appearance of multipotent, self-renewing and transplantable hematopoietic stem cells. This could be due to short half-life of hematopoietic stem cells in culture or, alternatively, human embryonic stem cell-initiated hematopoiesis may be hematopoietic stem cell-independent, similar to yolk sac hematopoiesis, generating multipotent progenitors with limited expansion capacity. Since a MYB was reported to be an excellent marker for hematopoietic stem cell-dependent hematopoiesis, we generated a MYB-eGFP reporter human embryonic stem cell line to study formation of hematopoietic progenitor cells in vitro. We found CD34+ hemogenic endothelial cells rounding up and developing into CD43+ hematopoietic cells without expression of MYB-eGFP. MYB-eGFP+ cells appeared relatively late in embryoid body cultures as CD34+CD43+CD45−/lo cells. These MYB-eGFP+ cells were CD33 positive, proliferated in IL-3 containing media and hematopoietic differentiation was restricted to the granulocytic lineage. In agreement with data obtained on murine Myb−/− embryonic stem cells, bright eGFP expression was observed in a subpopulation of cells, during directed myeloid differentiation, which again belonged to the granulocytic lineage. In contrast, CD14+ macrophage cells were consistently eGFP− and were derived from eGFP-precursors only. In summary, no evidence was obtained for in vitro generation of MYB+ hematopoietic stem cells during embryoid body cultures. The observed MYB expression appeared late in culture and was confined to the granulocytic lineage.
Haematologica | 2012
Sylvia Snauwaert; Stijn Vanhee; Glenn Goetgeluk; Greet Verstichel; Yasmine Van Caeneghem; Imke Velghe; Jan Philippé; Zwi N. Berneman; Jean Plum; Tom Taghon; Georges Leclercq; Kris Thielemans; Tessa Kerre; Bart Vandekerckhove
Background Criteria for good candidate antigens for immunotherapy of acute myeloid leukemia are high expression on leukemic stem cells in the majority of patients with acute myeloid leukemia and low or no expression in vital tissues. It was shown in vaccination trials that Receptor for Hyaluronic Acid Mediated Motility (RHAMM/HMMR) generates cellular immune responses in patients with acute myeloid leukemia and that these responses correlate with clinical benefit. It is not clear however whether this response actually targets the leukemic stem cell, especially since it was reported that RHAMM is expressed maximally during the G2/M phase of the cell cycle. In addition, tumor specificity of RHAMM expression remains relatively unexplored. Design and Methods Blood, leukapheresis and bone marrow samples were collected from both acute myeloid leukemia patients and healthy controls. RHAMM expression was assessed at protein and mRNA levels on various sorted populations, either fresh or after manipulation. Results High levels of RHAMM were expressed by CD34+CD38+ and CD34- acute myeloid leukemia blasts. However, only baseline expression of RHAMM was measured in CD34+CD38- leukemic stem cells, and was not different from that in CD34+CD38- hematopoietic stem cells from healthy controls. RHAMM was significantly up-regulated in CD34+ cells from healthy donors during in vitro expansion and during in vivo engraftment. Finally, we demonstrated an explicit increase in the expression level of RHAMM after in vitro activation of T cells. Conclusions RHAMM does not fulfill the criteria of an ideal target antigen for immunotherapy of acute myeloid leukemia. RHAMM expression in leukemic stem cells does not differ significantly from the expression in hematopoietic stem cells from healthy controls. RHAMM expression in proliferating CD34+ cells of healthy donors and activated T cells further compromises RHAMM-specific T-cell-mediated immunotherapy.
Leukemia | 2014
Sylvia Snauwaert; Greet Verstichel; Sarah Bonte; Glenn Goetgeluk; Stijn Vanhee; Yasmine Van Caeneghem; Katrien De Mulder; Carlo Heirman; Hans J. Stauss; Miriam Hm Heemskerk; Tom Taghon; Georges Leclercq; Jean Plum; Anton W. Langerak; Kris Thielemans; Tessa Kerre; Bart Vandekerckhove
Peripheral blood T cells transduced with a tumor-specific T-cell receptor (TCR) face problems of auto-reactivity and lack of efficacy caused by cross-pairing of exogenous and endogenous TCR chains, as well as short term in vivo survival due to activation and growth factor-induced differentiation. We here studied an alternative strategy for the efficient generation of naive CD8+ T cells with a single TCR. TCR-transduced human postnatal thymus-derived and adult mobilized blood-derived hematopoietic progenitor cells (HPCs) were differentiated to CD4+CD8+ double-positive T cells using OP9-Delta-like 1 (OP9-DL1) cultures. Addition of the agonist peptide induced double positive cells to cross-present the peptide, leading, in the absence of co-stimulation, to cell cycle arrest and differentiation into mature CD8+ T cells. Comprehensive phenotypic, molecular and functional analysis revealed the generation of naive and resting CD8+ T cells through a process similar to thymic positive selection. These mature T cells show a near complete inhibition of endogenous TCRA and TCRB rearrangements and express high levels of the introduced multimer-reactive TCR. Upon activation, specific cytokine production and efficient killing of tumor cells were induced. Using this strategy, large numbers of high-avidity tumor-specific naive T cells can be generated from readily available HPCs without TCR chain cross-pairing.
Stem cell reports | 2016
Tamara Laskowski; Yasmine Van Caeneghem; Rasoul Pourebrahim; Chao Ma; Zhenya Ni; Zita Garate; Ana M. Crane; Xuan Shirley Li; Wei Liao; Manuel L. Gonzalez-Garay; José Segovia; David Paschon; Edward J. Rebar; Michael C. Holmes; Dan S. Kaufman; Bart Vandekerckhove; Brian R. Davis
Summary Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome (WAS) is an X-linked primary immunodeficiency disease caused by mutations in the gene encoding the WAS protein (WASp). Here, induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) were derived from a WAS patient (WAS-iPSC) and the endogenous chromosomal WAS locus was targeted with a wtWAS-2A-eGFP transgene using zinc finger nucleases (ZFNs) to generate corrected WAS-iPSC (cWAS-iPSC). WASp and GFP were first expressed in the earliest CD34+CD43+CD45− hematopoietic precursor cells and later in all hematopoietic lineages examined. Whereas differentiation to non-lymphoid lineages was readily obtained from WAS-iPSCs, in vitro T lymphopoiesis from WAS-iPSC was deficient with few CD4+CD8+ double-positive and mature CD3+ T cells obtained. T cell differentiation was restored for cWAS-iPSCs. Similarly, defects in natural killer cell differentiation and function were restored on targeted correction of the WAS locus. These results demonstrate that the defects exhibited by WAS-iPSC-derived lymphoid cells were fully corrected and suggests the potential therapeutic use of gene-corrected WAS-iPSCs.
Science immunology | 2017
Greet Verstichel; David Vermijlen; Liesbet Martens; Glenn Goetgeluk; Margreet Brouwer; Nicolas Thiault; Yasmine Van Caeneghem; Stijn De Munter; Karin Weening; Sarah Bonte; Georges Leclercq; Tom Taghon; Tessa Kerre; Yvan Saeys; Jo Van Dorpe; Hilde Cheroutre; Bart Vandekerckhove
Immature thymocytes are diverted to the agonist selection pathway before selection of conventional T cells. Surviving selection T cells walk a tight rope in fighting infection without harming the body—They respond to foreign antigens in the context of self-MHC without reacting so strongly that they attack self. Conventional T cells achieve this balance through positive and negative selection in the thymus. Verstichel et al. report that agonist-selected T cells in humans undergo a different process. A PD-1 T cell population acquired features of tissue-resident effector cells and an innate functional effector phenotype in response to self-antigen in the thymus. Immature thymocytes were diverted to this agonist selection pathway before conventional selection. This timing suggests that, rather than being by-products of failed negative selection, these cells instead follow a distinct path to survive thymic selection. The thymus plays a central role in self-tolerance, partly by eliminating precursors with a T cell receptor (TCR) that binds strongly to self-antigens. However, the generation of self-agonist–selected lineages also relies on strong TCR signaling. How thymocytes discriminate between these opposite outcomes remains elusive. Here, we identified a human agonist–selected PD-1+ CD8αα+ subset of mature CD8αβ+ T cells that displays an effector phenotype associated with agonist selection. TCR stimulation of immature post–β-selection thymocyte blasts specifically gives rise to this innate subset and fixes early T cell receptor alpha variable (TRAV) and T cell receptor alpha joining (TRAJ) rearrangements in the TCR repertoire. These findings suggest that the checkpoint for agonist selection precedes conventional selection in the human thymus.
OncoImmunology | 2017
Yasmine Van Caeneghem; Stijn De Munter; Paola Tieppo; Glenn Goetgeluk; Karin Weening; Greet Verstichel; Sarah Bonte; Tom Taghon; Georges Leclercq; Tessa Kerre; Reno Debets; David Vermijlen; Hinrich Abken; Bart Vandekerckhove
ABSTRACT Recent clinical studies indicate that adoptive T-cell therapy and especially chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy is a very potent and potentially curative treatment for B-lineage hematologic malignancies. Currently, autologous peripheral blood T cells are used for adoptive T-cell therapy. Adoptive T cells derived from healthy allogeneic donors may have several advantages; however, the expected occurrence of graft versus host disease (GvHD) as a consequence of the diverse allogeneic T-cell receptor (TCR) repertoire expressed by these cells compromises this approach. Here, we generated T cells from cord blood hematopoietic progenitor cells (HPCs) that were transduced to express an antigen receptor (AR): either a CAR or a TCR with or without built-in CD28 co-stimulatory domains. These AR-transgenic HPCs were culture-expanded on an OP9-DL1 feeder layer and subsequently differentiated to CD5+CD7+ T-lineage precursors, to CD4+ CD8+ double positive cells and finally to mature AR+ T cells. The AR+ T cells were largely naive CD45RA+CD62L+ T cells. These T cells had mostly germline TCRα and TCRβ loci and therefore lacked surface-expressed CD3/TCRαβ complexes. The CD3− AR-transgenic cells were mono-specific, functional T cells as they displayed specific cytotoxic activity. Cytokine production, including IL-2, was prominent in those cells bearing ARs with built-in CD28 domains. Data sustain the concept that cord blood HPC derived, in vitro generated allogeneic CD3− AR+ T cells can be used to more effectively eliminate malignant cells, while at the same time limiting the occurrence of GvHD.
Blood | 2015
Yasmine Van Caeneghem; Glenn Goetgeluk; Karin Weening; Greet Verstichel; Sarah Bonte; Tom Taghon; Georges Leclercq; Fritz Offner; Hinrich Abken; Tessa Kerre; Bart Vandekerckhove
Journal of Clinical Immunology | 2014
Sarah Bonte; Sylvia Snauwaert; Glenn Goetgeluk; Hans J. Stauss; R Stripecke; Mirjam H.M. Heemskerk; Yasmine Van Caeneghem; Greet Verstichel; Stijn Vanhee; Bart Vandekerckhove; Tessa Kerre
Blood | 2014
Yasmine Van Caeneghem; Glenn Goetgeluk; Sylvia Snauwaert; Fritz Offner; Reno Debets; Tessa Kerre; Bart Vandekerckhove
Experimental Hematology | 2013
Stijn Vanhee; Yasmine Van Caeneghem; Katrien De Mulder; Imke Velghe; Sylvie Taveirne; Nadine Van Roy; Björn Menten; Sylvia Snauwaert; Greet Verstichel; Melissa Dullaers; Glenn Goetgeluk; Georges Leclercq; Tom Taghon; Jean Plum; Tessa Kerre; Bart Vandekerckhove