| Literature DB >> 29159187 |
Kannan P Samy1, James R Butler1, Ping Li1, David K C Cooper2, Burcin Ekser1.
Abstract
Pig-to-human xenotransplantation offers a potential bridge to the growing disparity between patients with end-stage organ failure and graft availability. Early studies attempting to overcome cross-species barriers demonstrated robust humoral immune responses to discordant xenoantigens. Recent advances have led to highly efficient and targeted genomic editing, drastically altering the playing field towards rapid production of less immunogenic porcine tissues and even the discussion of human xenotransplantation trials. However, as these humoral immune barriers to cross-species transplantation are overcome with advanced transgenics, cellular immunity to these novel xenografts remains an outstanding issue. Therefore, understanding and optimizing immunomodulation will be paramount for successful clinical xenotransplantation. Costimulation blockade agents have been introduced in xenotransplantation research in 2000 with anti-CD154mAb. Most recently, prolonged survival has been achieved in solid organ (kidney xenograft survival > 400 days with anti-CD154mAb, heart xenograft survival > 900 days, and liver xenograft survival 29 days with anti-CD40mAb) and islet xenotransplantation (>600 days with anti-CD154mAb) with the use of these potent experimental agents. As the development of novel genetic modifications and costimulation blocking agents converges, we review their impact thus far on preclinical xenotransplantation and the potential for future application.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29159187 PMCID: PMC5660816 DOI: 10.1155/2017/8415205
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol Res ISSN: 2314-7156 Impact factor: 4.818
Timeline for application of evolving techniques for genetic engineering of pigs employed in xenotransplantation.
| Year | Technique |
|---|---|
| 1992 | Microinjection of randomly integrating transgenes |
| 2000 | Somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) |
| 2002 | Homologous recombination |
| 2011 | Zinc finger nucleases (ZFNs) |
| 2013 | Transcription activator-like effector nucleases (TALENs) |
| 2014 | CRISPR/Cas9 |
CRISPR/Cas9: clustered randomly interspaced short palindromic repeats and the associated protein 9 (table adopted from Cooper et al.) [9].
Figure 1Costimulation pathways in T cell regulation. Upon MHC-antigen interaction with the TCR, costimulation pathways can augment or suppress the activation of the T cell. From left to right, CD28 is activated by CD80/CD86; however, after T cell activation, CTLA-4 is upregulated and with higher affinity than CD80/CD86 and binds to CD28 inhibiting the signal. CTLA-4Ig and belatacept work by taking advantage of their higher affinity to CD28 over CD80/CD86 and thereby block CD80/CD86 activation of CD28. CD154 and CD40 are other potent activators of T cells; monoclonal antibodies against either of these surface proteins have potential for application in transplant immunosuppression. PD-1 is expressed on T cells, and interaction with PD-1 Ligand (PD-L1) produces a suppressive signal to the T cell.
Selected studies using anti-CD154mAb in pig-to-nonhuman primate xenotransplantation.
| First author (year) | Donor pig | Recipient NHP | Immunosuppressive regimen | Longest survival (days) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Buhler (2000) [ | WT | Baboon | TBI, TI, splenectomy, IA, ATG, CVF, CSA, or anti-CD154mAb, MMF +/− pig stem cells | N.A |
| Houser (2004) [ | CD55 | Baboon | ATG, anti-CD2mAb, TI, CVF, anti-CD154mAb, MMF, CS | 139 |
| Dor (2005) [ | GTKO | Baboon | ATG, anti-CD154mAb, MMF, CS | 179 |
| Kuwaki (2005) [ | GTKO | Baboon | ATG, anti-CD2mAb, TI, CVF, anti-CD154mAb | 179 |
| Wu (2005) [ | CD46 | Baboon | ATG, anti-CD154mAb, +/− anti-CD20mAb +/− CTLA4-Fc | 11 |
| Wu (2007) [ | CD46 | Baboon | ATG, anti-CD154mAb, GAS194 or TPC, +/− IA | 36 |
| Ezzelarab (2009) [ | GTKO | Baboon | ATG, CVF, anti-CD154mAb, MMF, CS | 56 |
| Mohiuddin (2012) [ | GTKO.CD46 | Baboon | ATG, anti-CD20mAb, anti-CD154mAb, MMF, CS | 236 |
| Kim (2013) [ | GTKO | Cynomolgus | ATG, anti-CD20mAb, anti-CD154mAb, tacrolimus, CS | 24 |
| Ezzelarab (2015) [ | GTKO | Baboon | ATG, anti-CD154mAb, MMF | 56 |
| Iwase (2015) [ | GTKO.CD46.TBM | Baboon | ATG, anti-CD20mAb, anti-CD154mAb, MMF, CS | 52 |
|
| ||||
| Buhler (2000) [ | WT | Baboon | TBI, TI, splenectomy, IA, ATG, CVF, CSA, or anti-CD154mAb, MMF +/− pig stem cells | N.A |
| Buhler (2001) [ | CD55 | Baboon | TBI, TI, splenectomy, IA, ATG, CVF, anti-CD154mAb, MMF, CS | 29 |
| Barth (2003) [ | CD55 | Baboon | Thymokidneys, anti-CD2mAb, ATG, anti-CD154mAb, CyP, CVF, MMF, CS | 229 |
| Gollackner (2003) [ | CD55 | Baboon | TI, splenectomy, IA, ATG, anti-CD154mAb, CyP, CVF, MMF, CS | 13 |
| Knosalla (2003) [ | CD55 | Baboon | TI, splenectomy, IA, ATG, anti-CD154mAb, CyP, CVF, MMF, CS | 29 |
| Yamada (2005) [ | GTKO | Baboon | Vascularized thymic lobe, WBI, anti-CD2mAb, anti-CD154mAb, MMF, CS, CVF | 68 |
| Shimizu (2005) [ | CD55 | Baboon | Thymokidneys, splenectomy, IA, anti-CD3mAb, ATG, anti-CD154mAb, CyP, CVF, MMF | 30 |
| Griesemer (2009) [ | GTKO | Baboon | Thymectomy, splenectomy, TBI, ATG, anti-CD2mAb, anti-CD154mAb, tacrolimus, MMF, anti-CD20mAb | 83 |
| Lin (2010) [ | GTKO.CD46 | Baboon | ATG, antiCD154mAb, MMF, CVF, CS | 16 |
| Nishimura (2011) [ | GTKO | Baboon | Thymokidney, thymectomy, splenectomy, anti-CD3, antiCD2mAb, ATG, anti-CD20mAb, tacrolimus, MMF, anti-CD154mAb | 15 |
| Ezzelarab (2015) [ | GTKO | Baboon | ATG, anti-CD154mAb, MMF | 10 |
| Higginbotham (2015) [ | GTKO.CD55 | Rhesus | Anti-CD4, anti-CD8, anti-CD154mAb, MMF, CS | 310 |
| Kim (2017) [ | GTKO.CD55 | Rhesus | Anti-CD4, anti-CD8, anti-CD154mAb, MMF, CS | 405 |
|
| ||||
| Kim (2002) [ | GTKO | Baboon | ATG, LoCD2b, CVF, anti-CD154mAb, azathioprine, tacrolimus, CS | 9 |
| Navarro-Alvarez (2016) [ | GTKO | Baboon | ATG, LoCD2b, CVF, anti-CD154mAb, tacrolimus, CS | 6 |
|
| ||||
| Buhler (2002) [ | WT | Baboon | Splenectomy, IA, TBI, ATG, CVF, anti-CD154mAb, CSA, MMF, CS | 28 |
| Hering (2006) [ | WT | Cynomolgus | Anti-CD25mAb, FTY720, rapamycin, anti-CD154mAb | 187 |
| Cardona (2006) [ | WT | Rhesus | Anti-CD25mAb, anti-CD154mAb, CTLA4-Ig | >260 |
| Rood (2007) [ | GTKO | Cynomolgus | ATG, CVF, anti-CD154mAb, MMF, tacrolimus | >58 |
| Casu (2008) [ | WT | Cynomolgus | ATG, anti-CD154mAb, MMF | >60 |
| van der Windt (2009) [ | CD46 | Cynomolgus | ATG, anti-CD154mAb, MMF | 396 |
| Thompson (2011) [ | GTKO | Rhesus | Anti-CD154mAb, anti-LFA1mAb, MMF, belatacept | 249 |
| Bottino (2014) [ | GTKO.CD46. TFPI.CTLA4Ig.CD39 | Cynomolgus | ATG, MMF, anti-CD154mAb, CS | 365 |
| Shin (2015) [ | WT | Rhesus | Anti-CD154mAb, ATG, rapamycin, CVF, adalimumab | >603 |
ATG: antithymocyte globulin; CS: corticosteroids; CSA: cyclosporine A; CVF: cobra venom factor; CyP: cyclophosphamide; NHP: nonhuman primate; TBI: total body irradiation; TI: thymus irradiation; mAb: monoclonal antibody; MMF: mycophenolate mofetil; mAb: monoclonal antibody; GTKO: α1,3-galactosyltransferase gene knockout; GAS914: a soluble glycoconjugate comprising Gal on poly-L-lysine backbone; N.A: not applicable; TBM: thrombomodulin; TPC: an aGal-polyethylene glycol polymer conjugate; WT: wild-type.
Selected studies using anti-CD40mAb in pig-to-nonhuman primate xenotransplantation.
| First author (year) | Donor pig | Recipient NHP | Immunosuppressive regimen | Longest survival (days) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Iwase (2015) [ | GTKO.CD46.TBM | Baboon | ATG, belatacept, anti-CD40mAb, tacrolimus, MMF, CS | 130 |
| Mohiuddin (2016) [ | GTKO.CD46.TBM | Baboon | ATG, anti-CD20mAb, anti-CD40mAb, CS | >900 |
|
| ||||
| Iwase (2015) [ | GTKO.CD46.CD55 TBM.EPCR.CD39 | Baboon | ATG, anti-CD20mAb, anti-CD40mAb, rapamycin, tocilizumab, etanercept | 136 |
|
| ||||
| Shah (2017) [ | GTKO | Baboon | ATG, anti-CD40mAb, tacrolimus, CVF, CS | 29 |
|
| ||||
| Thompson (2011) [ | WT | Rhesus | Anti-CD25mAb, anti-CD40mAb, rapamycin, belatacept | 203 |
NHP: nonhuman primate; WT: wild-type; ATG: antithymocyte globulin; CVF: cobra venom factor; MMF: mycophenolate mofetil; mAb: monoclonal antibody; CS: corticosteroids; GTKO: α1,3-galactosyltransferase gene knockout; TBM: thrombomodulin; EPCR: endothelial cell protein C receptor.
Selected studies using CTLA4-Ig in pig-to-nonhuman primate xenotransplantation.
| First author (year) | Donor pig | Recipient NHP | Immunosuppressive regimen | Longest survival (days) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Iwase (2015) [ | GTKO.CD46.CD55 | Baboon | ATG, anti-CD20mAb, abatacept, MMF, CS | 23 |
| Iwase (2015) [ | GTKO.CD46.TBM | Baboon | ATG, belatacept, anti-CD40mAb, tacrolimus, MMF, CS | 130 |
|
| ||||
| Shah (2017) [ | GTKO | Baboon | ATG, belatacept, tacrolimus, CVF, CS | 25 |
|
| ||||
| Cordona (2006) [ | WT | Rhesus | Anti-CD25mAb, anti-CD154mAb, CTLA4-Ig | >260 |
| Hecht (2009) [ | Fetal pancreatic fragments | Cynomolgus | Anti-CD25mAb, anti-CD154mAb, FTY720, rapamycin, CTLA4-Ig | 380 |
| Thompson (2011) [ | WT | Rhesus | Anti-CD25mAb, anti-CD40mAb, rapamycin, belatacept | 203 |
| Thompson (2011) [ | GTKO | Rhesus | Anti-CD154mAb, anti-LFA1mAb, MMF, belatacept | 249 |
| Thompson (2012) [ | WT | Rhesus | MMF, belatacept, alefacept, anti-LFA1mAb, tacrolimus | 114 |
| Graham (2013) [ | WT | Cynomolgus | Anti-CD25mAb, abatacept, tacrolimus, rapamycin | >180 |
NHP: nonhuman primate; WT: wild-type; ATG: anti-thymocyte globulin; CVF: cobra venom factor; MMF: mycophenolate mofetil; mAb: monoclonal antibody; CS: corticosteroids; GTKO: α1,3-galactosyltransferase gene knockout; TBM: thrombomodulin.