| Literature DB >> 24213880 |
Emma M Salisbury1, David S Game, Robert I Lechler.
Abstract
Although transplantation has been a standard medical practice for decades, marked morbidity from the use of immunosuppressive drugs and poor long-term graft survival remain important limitations in the field. Since the first solid organ transplant between the Herrick twins in 1954, transplantation immunology has sought to move away from harmful, broad-spectrum immunosuppressive regimens that carry with them the long-term risk of potentially life-threatening opportunistic infections, cardiovascular disease, and malignancy, as well as graft toxicity and loss, towards tolerogenic strategies that promote long-term graft survival. Reports of "transplant tolerance" in kidney and liver allograft recipients whose immunosuppressive drugs were discontinued for medical or non-compliant reasons, together with results from experimental models of transplantation, provide the proof-of-principle that achieving tolerance in organ transplantation is fundamentally possible. However, translating the reconstitution of immune tolerance into the clinical setting is a daunting challenge fraught with the complexities of multiple interacting mechanisms overlaid on a background of variation in disease. In this article, we explore the basic science underlying mechanisms of tolerance and review the latest clinical advances in the quest for transplantation tolerance.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24213880 PMCID: PMC4212135 DOI: 10.1007/s00467-013-2659-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Nephrol ISSN: 0931-041X Impact factor: 3.714
The current range of tolerogenic strategies in experimental and clinical settings (reproduced from Page et al. 2012 [30], used with permission)
| Category | Therapeutic | Mechanism |
|---|---|---|
| T cell depletion | Anti-thymocyte globulin (ATG) | Depleting polyclonal antibodies to thymocytes that express multiple target antigens; possible induction of regulatory T cells |
| Alemtuzumab | Depleting mAb to CD52, on T, B, NK cells, some monocytes | |
| Costimulation blockade | Abatacept | CTLA-4 lg, blockade of CD28:CD80/60 costimulatory pathway |
| Belatacept | CTLA-4 lg, blockade of CD28:CD80/60 costimulatory pathway | |
| Efalizumab | Blockade of LFA-1:ICAM-1 costimulatory pathway | |
| Other T cell therapies | Basiliximab | Blockade of CD25 (interleukin 2 receptor α chain) |
| Aldesleukin + rapamycin | Interleukin 2 + rapamycin, to increase regulatory T cell proliferation and survival, and stabilize the expression of Forkhead box P3(FoxP3) | |
| B cell therapeutics | Rituximab | Depleting mAb to CD20 |
| Belimumab | Blockade of B cell activating factor (BAFF), causing depletion of follicular and alloreactive B cells, decrease in alloantibody response, and promotion of immature/transitional B cell phenotype a regulatory cytokine environment. | |
| Atacicept | Blockade of BAFF and APRIL | |
| BR3-Fc | Blockade of BAFF, causing decrease in peripheral, marginal zone, and follicular B cells | |
| Bortezomib | Proteasome inhibitor, causing apoptosis of mature plasma cells | |
| Eculizumab | Blockade of complement protein C5, to prevent complement-mediated injury due to circulating alloantibody | |
| Cellular therapy | Mixed chimerism | Infusion of donor bone marrow into myoablated/immune-conditioned recipient, to produce co-existence of donor and recipient cells |
| Regulatory T cells | Infusion of expanded regulatory T cells, to inhibit inflammatory cytokine production, down-regulate costimulatory and adhesion molecules, promote energy and cell death, convert effector | |
| T cells to a regulatory phenotype, and produce suppressive cytokines IL-10, TGFβ, and IL35 | ||
| Regulatory T cells + IL-2 | As above, plus the addition of IL-2 to promote Treg survival, development, and expansion | |
| Dendritic cells | Immunomodulatory effects include their ability to acquire and present antigen, expand and respond to antigen-specific Tregs, constitutively express low levels of MHC and costimulatory molecules, produce high IL-10 and TGFβ and lowIL-12, resist activation by danger signals and CD40 ligation, resist killing by natural killer of T cells, and promote apoptosis of effector T cells | |
| Macrophages | Immune suppression mediated through the enrichment of CD4+ CD25+ Foxp3 cells and cell contact-and caspase-dependent depletion of activated T cells | |
| Mesenchymal stromal cells | Inhibition of T cell activation and proliferation, potentially due to production of IL-10, NO, and IDO, and suppression of IFNγ and IL-17 |
CTLA-4, Cytotoxic T Lymphocyte antigen 4; IDO, indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase; IFNγ, interferon γ; IL-10, interleukin 10; LFA-1, lymphocyte function-associated antigen 1
Fig. 1Cross-platform biomarker signature of kidney transplant recipients determined by the Indices of Tolerance consortium (reproduced from Heidt and Wood 2012 [68], used with permission). The signature is dominated by B cell features, such as elevated expression of mainly B cell-specific genes, the absence of donor-specific HLA antibodies in the serum and elevated levels of (naive and transitional) peripheral B cells. Other markers that make up the tolerance signature are the ratio of FOXP3 to α-1,2-mannosidase gene expression, a low donor-specific direct T cell response and decreased levels of activated T cells.