Neutralizing BAFF/APRIL with atacicept prevents early DSA formation and AMR development in T cell depletion induced nonhuman primate AMR model.


Autoria(s): Kwun, J; Page, E; Hong, JJ; Gibby, A; Yoon, J; Farris, AB; Villinger, F; Knechtle, S
Data(s)

01/03/2015

Formato

815 - 822

Identificador

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25675879

Am J Transplant, 2015, 15 (3), pp. 815 - 822

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/10054

1600-6143

Relação

Am J Transplant

10.1111/ajt.13045

Tipo

Journal Article

Cobertura

United States

Resumo

Depletional strategies directed toward achieving tolerance induction in organ transplantation have been associated with an increased incidence and risk of antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) and graft injury. Our clinical data suggest correlation of increased serum B cell activating factor/survival factor (BAFF) with increased risk of antibody-mediated rejection in alemtuzumab treated patients. In the present study, we tested the ability of BAFF blockade (TACI-Ig) in a nonhuman primate AMR model to prevent alloantibody production and prolong allograft survival. Three animals received the AMR inducing regimen (CD3-IT/alefacept/tacrolimus) with TACI-Ig (atacicept), compared to five control animals treated with the AMR inducing regimen only. TACI-Ig treatment lead to decreased levels of DSA in treated animals at 2 and 4 weeks posttransplantation (p < 0.05). In addition, peripheral B cell numbers were significantly lower at 6 weeks posttransplantation. However, it provided only a marginal increase in graft survival (59 ± 22 vs. 102 ± 47 days; p = 0.11). Histological analysis revealed a substantial reduction in findings typically associated with humoral rejection with atacicept treatment. More T cell rejection findings were observed with increased graft T cell infiltration in atacicept treatment, likely secondary to the graft prolongation. We show that BAFF/APRIL blockade using concomitant TACI-Ig treatment reduced the humoral portion of rejection in our depletion-induced preclinical AMR model.

Idioma(s)

ENG

Palavras-Chave #B cell biology #alloantibody #animal models: nonhuman primate #basic (laboratory) research/science #immunosuppression/immune modulation #kidney transplantation/nephrology #rejection: antibody-mediated (ABMR) #translational research/science #Animals #Antibodies, Neutralizing #Antibody Formation #B-Cell Activating Factor #Graft Survival #Humans #Kidney Transplantation #Lymphocyte Depletion #Macaca mulatta #Male #Models, Animal #Recombinant Fusion Proteins #T-Lymphocytes #Tumor Necrosis Factor Ligand Superfamily Member 13