Therapeutic Blockade of LIGHT Interaction With Herpesvirus Entry Mediator and Lymphotoxin β Receptor Attenuates In Vivo Cytotoxic Allogeneic Responses.


Autoria(s): Del Rio M.L.; Fernandez-Renedo C.; Scheu S.; Pfeffer K.; Shintani Y.; Kronenberg M.; Chaloin O.; Schneider P.; Rodriguez-Barbosa J.I.
Data(s)

2014

Resumo

BACKGROUND: Tumor necrosis factor/tumor necrosis factor receptor superfamily members conform a group of molecular interaction pathways of essential relevance during the process of T-cell activation and differentiation toward effector cells and particularly for the maintenance phase of the immune response. Specific blockade of these interacting pathways, such as CD40-CD40L, contributes to modulate the deleterious outcome of allogeneic immune responses. We postulated that antagonizing the interaction of LIGHT expression on activated T cells with its receptors, herpesvirus entry mediator and lymphotoxin β receptor, may decrease T cell-mediated allogeneic responses. METHODS: A flow cytometry competition assay was designed to identify anti-LIGHT monoclonal antibodies capable to prevent the interaction of mouse LIGHT with its receptors expressed on transfected cells. An antibody with the desired specificity was evaluated in a short-term in vivo allogeneic cytotoxic assay and tested for its ability to detect endogenous mouse LIGHT. RESULTS: We provide evidence for the first time that in mice, as previously described in humans, LIGHT protein is rapidly and transiently expressed after T-cell activation, and this expression was stronger on CD8 T cells than on CD4 T cells. Two anti-LIGHT antibodies prevented interactions of mouse LIGHT with its two known receptors, herpesvirus entry mediator and lymphotoxin β receptor. In vivo administration of anti-LIGHT antibody (clone 10F12) ameliorated host antidonor short-term cytotoxic response in wild type B6 mice, although to a lesser extent than that observed in LIGHT-deficient mice. CONCLUSION: The therapeutic targeting of LIGHT may contribute to achieve a better control of cytotoxic responses refractory to current immunosuppressive drugs in transplantation.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_355F76D51F83

isbn:1534-6080 (Electronic)

pmid:25226173

doi:10.1097/TP.0000000000000417

isiid:000345972500011

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Transplantation, vol. 98, no. 11, pp. 1165-1174

Palavras-Chave #HVEM (TNFRSF14); LIGHT (TNFSF14); LT beta R (TNFRSF3); DcR3 (TNFRSF6b); Costimulation; Transplantation; Alloreactivity; Graft rejection; Graft versus host disease; Cytotoxicity
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article