An in vitro culture system has been developed for the long-term maintenance of primary, human peripheral blood and umbilical cord blood T lymphocytes, which does not rely on the use of stimulatory cytokines, antigen, or mitogens. In these cultures, a monolayer of adherent cells, some spindle-shaped and some resembling macrophages, developed within a week. All adherent cells were positive for the extracellular matrix proteins laminin and fibronectin, the intermediate filament vimentin, and for the surface markers major histocompatibility complex class II, platelet-endothelial cell adhesion molecule l (CD31), and E-Selectin (ELAM-1; CD62E). They were negative for the leukocyte common antigen (CD45), the macrophage marker MO-2 (CD14), muscle-specific actin, and Factor VIII-related antigen. These monolayers supported the maintenance of nonadherent, resting, mature T cells for up to 3 months, and these cells retained their ability to respond to mitogens and allogeneic cells. Both CD4+ and CD8+ cells were supported. The proportion of CD4+ and CD8+ cells remained unchanged after 3 months in culture. We have also used T cells from 2-month-old cultures as target cells for retroviral vector-mediated gene transfer. Up to 30% of the long-term T cells expressed the transferred lacZ gene after infection with a retroviral vector. The infection efficiency was similar to that obtained for fresh peripheral blood T cells, indicating that the long-term-cultured cells might be suitable for certain gene therapy applications.

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