| Literature DB >> 23801629 |
Sean R Stowell1, Kate L Henry, Nicole H Smith, Krystalyn E Hudson, Greg R Halverson, Jaekeun C Park, Ashley M Bennett, Kathryn R Girard-Pierce, C Maridith Arthur, Silvia T Bunting, James C Zimring, Jeanne E Hendrickson.
Abstract
Exposure to nonself red blood cell (RBC) antigens, either from transfusion or pregnancy, may result in alloimmunization and incompatible RBC clearance. First described as a pregnancy complication 80 years ago, hemolytic disease of the fetus and newborn (HDFN) is caused by alloimmunization to paternally derived RBC antigens. Despite the morbidity/mortality of HDFN, women at risk for RBC alloimmunization have few therapeutic options. Given that alloantibodies to antigens in the KEL family are among the most clinically significant, we developed a murine model with RBC-specific expression of the human KEL antigen to evaluate the impact of maternal/fetal KEL incompatibility. After exposure to fetal KEL RBCs during successive pregnancies with KEL-positive males, 21 of 21 wild-type female mice developed anti-KEL alloantibodies; intrauterine fetal anemia and/or demise occurred in a subset of KEL-positive pups born to wild type, but not agammaglobulinemic mothers. Similar to previous observations in humans, pregnancy-associated alloantibodies were detrimental in a transfusion setting, and transfusion-associated alloantibodies were detrimental in a pregnancy setting. This is the first pregnancy-associated HDFN model described to date, which will serve as a platform to develop targeted therapies to prevent and/or mitigate the dangers of RBC alloantibodies to fetuses and newborns.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23801629 PMCID: PMC3750342 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2013-03-488874
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113