| Literature DB >> 15661893 |
Akira Yamada1, Alan D Salama, Masayuki Sho, Nader Najafian, Toshiro Ito, John P Forman, Reshma Kewalramani, Sigrid Sandner, Hiroshi Harada, Michael R Clarkson, Didier A Mandelbrot, Arlene H Sharpe, Hideo Oshima, Hideo Yagita, Geetha Chalasani, Fadi G Lakkis, Hugh Auchincloss, Mohamed H Sayegh.
Abstract
The inability to reproducibly induce robust and durable transplant tolerance using CD28-B7 pathway blockade is in part related to the persistence of alloreactive effector/memory CD8(+) T cells that are less dependent on this pathway for their cellular activation. We studied the role of the novel T cell costimulatory pathway, CD27-CD70, in alloimmunity in the presence and absence of CD28-B7 signaling. CD70 blockade prolonged survival of fully mismatched vascularized cardiac allografts in wild-type murine recipients, and in CD28-deficient mice induced long-term survival while significantly preventing the development of chronic allograft vasculopathy. CD70 blockade had little effect on CD4(+) T cell function but prevented CD8(+) T cell-mediated rejection, inhibited the proliferation and activation of effector CD8(+) T cells, and diminished the expansion of effector and memory CD8(+) T cells in vivo. Thus, the CD27-CD70 pathway is critical for CD28-independent effector/memory CD8(+) alloreactive T cell activation in vivo. These novel findings have important implications for the development of transplantation tolerance-inducing strategies in primates and humans, in which CD8(+) T cell depletion is currently mandatory.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 15661893 DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.174.3.1357
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol ISSN: 0022-1767 Impact factor: 5.422