Literature DB >> 15203122

Prolonged survival of mouse skin allografts after transplantation of fetal liver cells transduced with hIL-10 gene.

Rachel Sembeil1, Kamel Sanhadji, Geneviève Vivier, Jamel Chargui, Jean-Louis Touraine.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Interleukin-10 (IL-10) is a cytokine with a moleculary weight of 18 kDa, that was first identified as being produced by Th2 cells. It appears to have anti-inflammatory action by diminishing the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines produced by Th1 cells. IL-10 also regulates the differentiation and proliferation of several immune cells such as T cells, B cells, natural killer cells, antigen-presenting cells, mast cells and granulocytes. Recent data suggest, however, that IL-10 also has immunostimulatory properties with important consequences on the prognosis of disease. In this study, we demonstrate the importance of injection of hematopoietic fetal liver cells transduced with the human IL-10 (hIL-10) gene into an allogenic recipient subsequently transplanted with allogenic skin grafts. The immaturity of stem cells and precursor cells from fetal liver and their transient survival in the host, due to the production of hIL-10, may afford 'prope' tolerance. It also explains the lack of graft-vs.-host reaction (GvHR) and the delay in rejection of the specific donor skin grafts after virtual disappearance of donor hematopoietic cells.
OBJECTIVES: Transduction of CBA hematopoietic fetal cells with the human IL-10 gene was used with the aim of inducing tolerance to donor antigen in recipient BALB/c mice. The observed effects were prolonged IL-10 production, donor cell chimerism in the host and delayed rejection of skin grafts from the specific donor strain.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: To prevent or delay rejection of highly incompatible skin allografts, we used IL-10 gene transfer to establish chimerism with donor hematopoietic cells. Fetal liver cells from CBA mice were transduced with the human IL-10 gene and injected into BALB/c mice.
RESULTS: Human IL-10, which is active in mice but does not cross-react with murine IL-10 in ELISA, was produced in vivo for 3 weeks. Donor cells were identified in the recipients during the same time period, on the basis of presence of the H-2 k gene and human IL-10 intracellular protein. Skin allografts from CBA or C57BL/6 mice survived for a mean of 9.5 days in recipient mice injected with non-transduced cells. In contrast, survival of CBA allograft was extended to 18.9+/-1.8 days in recipients injected with hIL-10-transduced fetal liver cells from CBA mice. Human IL-10 alone, without donor hematopoietic cell engraftment, did not prolong graft survival (9.6+/-1.2 days).
CONCLUSIONS: IL-10 transduction of donor hematopoietic stem cells resulted in production of IL-10, cell engraftment and chimerism. Although full tolerance was not obtained at this level of donor cell development in the host, a specific and highly significant (P<0.001) prolongation of the survival of donor skin allografts was observed.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15203122     DOI: 10.1016/j.trim.2003.12.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Transpl Immunol        ISSN: 0966-3274            Impact factor:   1.708


  6 in total

1.  Efficacy of In Vivo Electroporation-Mediated IL-10 Gene Delivery on Survival of Skin Flaps.

Authors:  S Morteza Seyed Jafari; Maziar Shafighi; Helmut Beltraminelli; Benedikt Weber; Ralph A Schmid; Thomas Geiser; Amiq Gazdhar; Robert E Hunger
Journal:  J Membr Biol       Date:  2017-08-03       Impact factor: 1.843

2.  Twisting immune responses for allogeneic stem cell therapy.

Authors:  Shengwen Calvin Li; Jiang F Zhong
Journal:  World J Stem Cells       Date:  2009-12-31       Impact factor: 5.326

3.  Knockdown of core 1 beta 1, 3-galactosyltransferase prolongs skin allograft survival with induction of galectin-1 secretion and suppression of CD8+ T cells: T synthase knockdown effects on galectin-1 and CD8+ T cells.

Authors:  Hai-Dan Chen; Xia Zhou; Gang Yu; Ying-Lan Zhao; Yushan Ren; Yi-Dan Zhou; Qiao Li; Xiao-Lian Zhang
Journal:  J Clin Immunol       Date:  2012-03-06       Impact factor: 8.317

4.  Hepatocyte-induced CD4+ T cell alloresponse is associated with major histocompatibility complex class II up-regulation on hepatocytes and suppressible by regulatory T cells.

Authors:  Daphne E DeTemple; Felix Oldhafer; Christine S Falk; Chen Chen-Wacker; Constanca Figueiredo; Moritz Kleine; Wolf Ramackers; Kai Timrott; Frank Lehner; Juergen Klempnauer; Michael Bock; Florian W R Vondran
Journal:  Liver Transpl       Date:  2018-03       Impact factor: 5.799

Review 5.  Immunological challenges associated with artificial skin grafts: available solutions and stem cells in future design of synthetic skin.

Authors:  Saurabh Dixit; Dieudonné R Baganizi; Rajnish Sahu; Ejowke Dosunmu; Atul Chaudhari; Komal Vig; Shreekumar R Pillai; Shree R Singh; Vida A Dennis
Journal:  J Biol Eng       Date:  2017-12-13       Impact factor: 4.355

6.  Engrafting fetal liver cells into multiple tissues of healthy adult mice without the use of immunosuppressants.

Authors:  Adas Darinskas; Renata Gasparaviciute; Mantas Malisauskas; Kristina Wilhelm; Jurij A Kozhevnikov; Evaldas Liutkevicius; Audrone Pilinkiene; Ludmilla A Morozova-Roche
Journal:  Cell Mol Biol Lett       Date:  2007-05-10       Impact factor: 5.787

  6 in total

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