Enhanced de novo alloantibody and antibody-mediated injury in rhesus macaques.


Autoria(s): Page, EK; Page, AJ; Kwun, J; Gibby, AC; Leopardi, F; Jenkins, JB; Strobert, EA; Song, M; Hennigar, RA; Iwakoshi, N; Knechtle, SJ
Data(s)

01/09/2012

Formato

2395 - 2405

Identificador

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22776408

Am J Transplant, 2012, 12 (9), pp. 2395 - 2405

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/10061

1600-6143

Relação

Am J Transplant

10.1111/j.1600-6143.2012.04074.x

Palavras-Chave #Animals #Graft Rejection #Graft Survival #Immunohistochemistry #Immunologic Memory #Immunosuppressive Agents #Isoantibodies #Lymphocyte Depletion #Macaca mulatta #Male
Tipo

Journal Article

Cobertura

United States

Resumo

Chronic allograft rejection is a major impediment to long-term transplant success. Humoral immune responses to alloantigens are a growing clinical problem in transplantation, with mounting evidence associating alloantibodies with the development of chronic rejection. Nearly a third of transplant recipients develop de novo antibodies, for which no established therapies are effective at preventing or eliminating, highlighting the need for a nonhuman primate model of antibody-mediated rejection. In this report, we demonstrate that depletion using anti-CD3 immunotoxin (IT) combined with maintenance immunosuppression that included tacrolimus with or without alefacept reliably prolonged renal allograft survival in rhesus monkeys. In these animals, a preferential skewing toward CD4 repopulation and proliferation was observed, particularly with the addition of alefacept. Furthermore, alefacept-treated animals demonstrated increased alloantibody production (100%) and morphologic features of antibody-mediated injury. In vitro, alefacept was found to enhance CD4 effector memory T cell proliferation. In conclusion, alefacept administration after depletion and with tacrolimus promotes a CD4+memory T cell and alloantibody response, with morphologic changes reflecting antibody-mediated allograft injury. Early and consistent de novo alloantibody production with associated histological changes makes this nonhuman primate model an attractive candidate for evaluating targeted therapeutics.

Idioma(s)

ENG