The Journal of immunology : official journal of the American Association of Immunologists
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Recent advances in the prevention of graft-vs-host disease (GVHD) have allowed the use of haploidentical bone marrow cells for correction of lethal genetic defects of the immune system. Sequential analyses of blood lymphocyte phenotypes and functions were done before and after transplantation of haploidentical marrow stem cells into 17 infants with severe primary T cell deficiencies. The marrow was depleted of post-thymic T cells and most other mature marrow cells by soy lectin agglutination and sheep erythrocyte rosetting. ⋯ Failure to engraft was correlated with some pre-transplant lymphocyte responses to mitogens and allogeneic cells (three cases), but not with the presence of pre-transplant natural killer cell function (five cases) nor with the presence of purine salvage pathway enzyme deficiencies (four cases). The latter, however, was associated with poor lymphoid function in two patients. These studies indicate that the thymic microenvironment of most infants with severe combined immunodeficiency disease is capable of differentiating donor stem cells to mature and functioning T lymphocytes which can cooperate with apparently normal host B cells for antibody production.