| Literature DB >> 12507401 |
Sandrine Cappellesso1, Gilles Thibault, Cyrille Hoarau, Olivier Hérault, Sophie Iochmann, Pierre Bardos, Yvon Lebranchu.
Abstract
Graft endothelium has a key role in organ transplantation because it regulates graft infiltration by allogeneic activated T cells. Overexpression of death molecules that could induce apoptosis of alloreactive T cells might be an alternative to the immunosuppressive treatment currently used in graft transplantation. Several studies have shown that immune-privileged sites express Fas ligand (FasL) and induce apoptosis of activated T-cells. We propose that endothelial cells engineered to express FasL could inhibit alloreactive T cell-proliferation by inducing apoptosis. An expression vector was constructed with human FasL cDNA and used to transfect an endothelial cell line (ECV304 cells). We demonstrated that FasL-transfected ECV304 cells were effective in inducing apoptosis of Jurkat T cell lymphoma as an agonist anti-Fas antibody. Using a mixed lymphocyte-endothelial cell culture model we observed that FasL-transfected ECV304 cells which conserved their two principal costimulatory pathways inhibited alloreactive T cell-proliferation by inducing activated T-cell apoptosis. These results suggest that endothelial cells could be interesting candidates to convey a death signal and induce hyporesponsiveness of alloreactive T cells during organ transplantation.Entities:
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Year: 2002 PMID: 12507401 DOI: 10.1016/s0966-3274(02)00073-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transpl Immunol ISSN: 0966-3274 Impact factor: 1.708