Publications by authors named "Yael Keren-Zur"

Background: T-cell vaccination (TCV) for multiple sclerosis (MS) refers to treatment with autologous anti-myelin T-cells, attenuated by irradiation. Previously published clinical trials have been all open-labeled.

Aim: To evaluate the safety and efficacy of TCV in progressive MS, in a double-blind, controlled clinical trial.

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We studied HIV-positive and -negative subjects for T-cell reactivity to rCD4, and found that 80% of 25 tested HIV-infected patients and 25% of controls manifested T-cell proliferation responses to rCD4. We mapped the major CD4 immunogenic epitopes among the CD4+ responders of both groups by testing T-cell proliferation responses to 31 synthetic overlapping peptides from the human CD4 molecule. Such responses to p1, p4, p14, p21, p28 and p29 were significantly higher in the eight infected patients and, with the exception of p14, these peptides differed from those found in three HIV-negative controls (p11, p14 and p27).

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This study is an extended clinical trial of the one initiated and reported in the Journal of Clinical Virology 2004;31S:S48-54. Thirteen HIV-1 patients (eight subtype B and five subtype C) that manifested T-cell autoimmunity to recombinant human CD4 (rCD4) were treated with T-cell vaccine composed of glutaraldehyde-treated autologous anti-CD4 reactive T-cells and compared to historical seven non-vaccinated HIV-1-infected subjects. This study proved to be feasible and safe.

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Background: Highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) is frequently associated with only partial restoration of CD4 T-cell levels. Autoimmunity to CD4 T-cells may account for the persistence of the CD4 T-cell lymphopenia in such cases.

Objective: To document T-cell autoimmunity to CD4 in HIV-infected patients and to determine if T-cell vaccination against CD4 autoimmunity is feasible and safe.

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