| Literature DB >> 25098626 |
Guerard W Byrne1, Agnes M Azimzadeh, Mohamed Ezzelarab, Henry D Tazelaar, Burcin Ekser, Richard N Pierson, Simon C Robson, David K C Cooper, Christopher G A McGregor.
Abstract
The histopathology of cardiac xenograft rejection has evolved over the last 20 yr with the development of new modalities for limiting antibody-mediated injury, advancing regimens for immune suppression, and an ever-widening variety of new donor genetics. These new technologies have helped us progress from what was once an overwhelming anti-Gal-mediated hyperacute rejection to a more protracted anti-Gal-mediated vascular rejection to what is now a more complex manifestation of non-Gal humoral rejection and coagulation dysregulation. This review summarizes the changing histopathology of Gal- and non-Gal-mediated cardiac xenograft rejection and discusses the contributions of immune-mediated injury, species-specific immune-independent factors, transplant and therapeutic procedures, and donor genetics to the overall mechanism(s) of cardiac xenograft rejection.Entities:
Keywords: Gal epitope; cardiac transplantation; coagulation; complement activation; orthotopic transplantation; xenotransplantation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 25098626 PMCID: PMC4126170 DOI: 10.1111/xen.12050
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Xenotransplantation ISSN: 0908-665X Impact factor: 3.907
Fig. 1Histopathology of xenograft rejection. The figure shows a comparison between anti-Gal and non-Gal antibody-mediated cardiac xenograft rejection. All panels show hematoxylin and eosin staining. A. Anti-Gal antibody-induced hyperacute rejection of a Gal-positive heart showing widespread intravascular hemorrhage characteristic of HAR. B. Anti-Gal antibody-mediated delayed xenograft rejection (DXR) of a Gal-positive heart on post-operative day 10. The rejected graft shows vascular injury, hemorrhage, and coagulative necrosis characteristic of anti-Gal-mediated DXR. C. Non-Gal antibody-mediated hyperacute rejection of a GTKO heart 90 min after reperfusion showing intravascular hemorrhage similar to that seen in Gal-mediated HAR (panel A). D. Non-Gal-mediated DXR on post-operative day 92 of a Gal-positive CD46 transgenic heart showing thrombotic microangiopathy. The recipient in panel D received chronic alpha-Gal polymer infusions to block anti-Gal antibody. Original magnification A and C 400×, B and D 200× (Panel C adapted from: McGregor CGA, et al. Cardiac xenotransplantation: progress toward the clinic. Transplantation. 2004: 78: 1569–1575.)
Histology of cardiac xenograft rejection
| Donor type | HAR | DXR | TM/CC |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wild type | • Acute rapid graft failure within minutes or hours after reperfusion | • Occurs days to weeks after transplantation | • Occurs days to weeks after transplantation |
| • Extensive vascular antibody and complement deposition | • Vascular antibody and variable complement deposition | • Vascular antibody and complement deposition is variable | |
| • Prominent vascular injury and hemorrhage | • Intravascular injury and hemorrhage | • Minimal vascular hemorrhage | |
| • Prominent diffuse platelet-rich fibrin thrombosis | • Myocyte vacuolization. | ||
| • Some platelet and fibrin thrombi may be present The expected outcome for transplantation of wild-type organs into untreated recipients | • Coagulative necrosis Requires pre-transplant therapies to limit immediate antibody- and complement-mediated graft injury | • Fibrin- and platelet-rich microvascular thrombosis. | |
| • Coagulative necrosis Requires rigorous pre- and post-transplant prevention of an anti-Gal antibody response | |||
| GTKO | Histology is comparable to wild-type donor organs, but the frequency of GTKO HAR is dramatically lower. | • Occurs days to months after transplantation. | |
| • Vascular antibody and complement deposition is variable | |||
| • Minimal intravascular hemorrhage | |||
| • Myocyte vacuolization | |||
| • Fibrin- and platelet-rich microvascular thrombi | |||
| • Coagulative necrosisTypical histopathologic picture in GTKO organs in immune-suppressed recipients with low-to-moderate levels of anti-non-Gal antibody. |
DXR and TM/CC typically show low levels of polymorphonuclear neutrophil and macrophage graft vascular adhesion and infiltration, with little apparent lymphocytic infiltrate. In TM/CC, increased levels of macrophage infiltration may accompany systemic innate cell activation.
TM and CC may occur individually or in combination. TM is localized to the graft, and CC is an intravascular process with significant recipient thrombocytopenia and systemic fibrin consumption.
Fig. 2Anti-non-Gal antibody-mediated cardiac xenograft rejection. This figure shows the immunohistopathology of anti-non-Gal antibody-mediated DXR for Gal-positive CD46 pig heart protected from anti-Gal antibody by continuous infusion of an α-Gal polymer. A. Hematoxylin and eosin stain showing ischemic injury and myocardial coagulative necrosis in a graft with ongoing rejection at 113 days. B. Immunohistochemical staining of the same graft showing positive vascular IgM deposition. The insert shows immunofluorescence staining for fibrin. C. Negative immunohistochemical staining for C5b. The insert shows a low level of positive immunofluorescence staining for CD41 platelet thrombi. All photomicrographs at 200×. (Immunohistochemical staining in panels A–C adapted from: McGregor CGA, et al. Cardiac xenotransplantation: progress toward the clinic. Transplantation. 2004: 78: 1569–1575.)
Fig. 3Histopathologic features of DXR in the absence of the effects of anti-Gal antibody. Data from three treatment groups are shown. (i) Recipient treated by plasmapheresis (Pheresis) to deplete anti-Gal antibody pre- and post-transplant; (ii) Chronic Gal-polymer-treated recipient to block anti-Gal antibody in vivo; and (iii) Transplantation of a GTKO donor heart. A. Histologic features of DXR in the absence of acute anti-Gal antibody. The intensity of major histopathologic features at explant (mean histology score ± standard error of the mean) are shown. (Abbreviations: CN, coagulative necrosis; MV, myocyte vacuolization; MT, microvascular thrombosis; CON, congestion; HM, hemorrhage.) B–D. Progressive development of DXR (H&E 400×). B. Cardiac biopsy from an apheresis-treated recipient (day 13 of 53) showing early (stage 1) DXR characterized by myocyte vacuolization with minimal microvascular thrombosis or systemic release of cardiac troponin. Insert shows a stage 1 biopsy (day 47 of 71) from a GTKO/CD55 heart (H&E 200×). C. Interim biopsy (day 15 of 21) of a heart from an apheresis-treated recipient showing progressive (stage 2) DXR, characterized by increased levels of microvascular thrombosis (arrows) and developing coagulative necrosis. Insert shows a stage 2 biopsy (day 14 of 26) of a GTKO/CD55 heart (H&E 200×). D. Representative histopathology of grafts at explant in all three groups (Portions of this figure adapted from data in Tazelaar HD, Byrne GW, McGregor CG. Comparison of Gal and non-Gal-mediated cardiac xenograft rejection. Transplantation. 2011: 91: 968–975).
Fig. 4Expression of recipient TF in cardiac xenotransplantation. Immunohistochemical staining for recipient baboon tissue factor (bTF) expression in rejected cardiac xenografts. A. Staining for bTF in pig heart grafts that rejected at day 12. B. bTF expression at 8 weeks. Both photomicrographs in A and B show strong TF staining in thrombosed vessels and less staining in the interstitium (arrows) (×600). C and D. Colocalization of bTF (red stain) and macrophages (stained for CD68, brown) in heart grafts excised on day 12 (C) and at 8 weeks (D) is indicated by arrows (×600) (Reproduced with permission from Ezzelarab M, et al. Transplantation 2009; 87: 805–812).
Factors that may influence the development of thrombotic microangiopathy in GTKO pig cardiac xenografts
| 1. Immune-mediated injury |
| Complement-mediated EC injury |
| Anti-non-Gal antibody-mediated EC activation |
| 2. Pig-specific immune-independent factors |
| Porcine vWF, TFPI, and thrombomodulin incompatibility |
| Recipient platelet/monocyte and porcine EC interactions |
| 3. Transplantation or treatment factors |
| Xenotransplant model: heterotopic vs. orthotopic |
| Complement targeting: cobra venom factor, C1 Inhibitor (C1INH) |
| Antibody depletion: plasmapheresis, extracorporeal immunoadsorption |
| Anti-CD154 mAb |
| Anti-coagulation: heparin, aspirin. |
| 4. Donor genetics |
| Antigen reduction (GTKO, Neu5Gc-KO) |
| Human complement regulatory protein transgene expression (CD46, CD55, CD59) |
| Anti-coagulation and anti-thrombotic transgene expression (TBM, EPCR, CD39, TFPI) |
Genetically modified pigs currently available for xenotransplantation researcha
| Gal antigen deletion or “masking” |
| α 1,3-galactosyltransferase gene knockout (GTKO) |
| Human H-transferase gene expression (expression of blood type O antigen) |
| Endo-β-galactosidase C (reduction in Gal antigen expression) |
| Human N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase III gene expression (GnT-III) |
| cytidine monophosphate-N-acetylneuraminic acid hydroxylase (Neu5Gc-KO) |
| Complement regulation by human complement regulatory gene expression |
| CD46 (membrane cofactor protein) |
| CD55 (decay-accelerating factor) |
| CD59 (protectin or membrane inhibitor of reactive lysis) |
| Anti-coagulation, anti-thrombotic, anti-inflammatory, and apoptosis gene expression or deletion |
| human tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI) |
| human thrombomodulin (TBM) |
| human endothelial protein C receptor (EPCR) |
| human CD39 (ectonucleoside triphosphate diphosphohydrolase-1) |
| porcine von Willebrand factor deficiency (vWF natural mutant) |
| human A20 (tumor necrosis factor-alpha-induced protein 3) |
| human HO-1 (heme oxygenase-1) |
| human TNFRI-Fc (tumor necrosis factor-alpha receptor 1-Fc) |
| Suppression of cellular immune response by gene expression or down-regulation |
| porcine cytotoxic T-lymphocyte antigen 4 expression (CTLA4-Ig) |
| human modified CTLA4-Ig expression (LEA29Y) |
| CIITA-DN expression (swine leukocyte class II knockdown) |
| human TRAIL (tumor necrosis factor-alpha-related apoptosis-induced ligand) |
| human HLA-E β2-microglobulin expression (inhibits human natural killer cells cytotoxicity) |
| human CD47 (regulates species-specific CD47-dependent macrophage interactions) |
| Human FAS ligand expression (CD95L) |
Modified from Ekser B et al. [Ref [86]].
Pigs with combinations of genetic modification, for example GTKO with added transgenes, are available.
Fig. 5Histology of orthotopic cardiac xenografts. A. Hematoxylin and eosin stain of heart explanted after 57 days. B and C Immunohistology on day 57 for vascular IgM (B) and C5b (C). Insert in B shows moderate fibrin staining. Insert in C shows minimal to negative staining for CD41 platelet thrombi.