BACKGROUND: Failure of costimulatory molecule-deficient donor dendritic cells (DCs) to induce indefinite allograft acceptance may be a result of the 'late" up-regulation of these molecules on the DCs after interaction with host T cells. Ligation of CD40 on antigen-presenting cells by its cognate ligand CD40L is thought to induce expression of CD80 (B7-1) and CD86 (B7-2). We examined the influence of anti-CD40L monoclonal antibody (mAb) on the capacity of donor-derived DC progenitors to induce long-term allograft survival. METHODS: High purity DC progenitors were grown from B10 (H2b) mouse bone marrow in granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor and transforming growth factor beta1 (TGFbeta1). Mature DC were propagated in granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor and interleukin-4. Their phenotype was characterized by flow cytometric analysis and their function by mixed leukocyte reactivity. Anti-donor cytotoxic T lymphocyte activity in grafts and spleens of vascularized heart allograft recipients was also assessed. RESULTS: The TGFbeta3-cultured cells were (1) DEC 205-positive, MHC class II-positive, CD80dim, CD86dim, and CD40dim, (2) poor stimulators of naive allogeneic T-cell proliferation, and (3) able to prolong significantly B10 cardiac allograft survival in C3H (H2k) recipients when given (2 x 10[6] i.v.) 7 days before organ transplantation (median survival time [MST] 26 days vs. 12 days in controls, and 5 days in interleukin-4 DC-treated animals). Their allostimulatory activity was further diminished by addition of anti-CD40L mAb at the start of the mixed leukocyte cultures. Anti-CD40L mAb alone (250 microg/mouse, i.p.; day -7) did not prolong cardiac graft survival (MST 12 days). In contrast, TGFbeta-cultured DCs + anti-CD40L mAb extended graft survival to a MST of 77 days, and inhibited substantially the anti-donor cytotoxic T lymphocyte activity of graft-infiltrating cells and host spleen cells assessed 8 days after transplant. CONCLUSIONS: The CD40-CD40L pathway appears important in regulation of allogeneic DC-T-cell functional interaction in vivo; its blockade increases markedly the potential of costimulatory molecule-deficient DCs of donor origin to induce long-lasting allograft survival.
BACKGROUND: Failure of costimulatory molecule-deficient donor dendritic cells (DCs) to induce indefinite allograft acceptance may be a result of the 'late" up-regulation of these molecules on the DCs after interaction with host T cells. Ligation of CD40 on antigen-presenting cells by its cognate ligand CD40L is thought to induce expression of CD80 (B7-1) and CD86 (B7-2). We examined the influence of anti-CD40L monoclonal antibody (mAb) on the capacity of donor-derived DC progenitors to induce long-term allograft survival. METHODS: High purity DC progenitors were grown from B10 (H2b) mouse bone marrow in granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor and transforming growth factor beta1 (TGFbeta1). Mature DC were propagated in granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor and interleukin-4. Their phenotype was characterized by flow cytometric analysis and their function by mixed leukocyte reactivity. Anti-donor cytotoxic T lymphocyte activity in grafts and spleens of vascularized heart allograft recipients was also assessed. RESULTS: The TGFbeta3-cultured cells were (1) DEC 205-positive, MHC class II-positive, CD80dim, CD86dim, and CD40dim, (2) poor stimulators of naive allogeneic T-cell proliferation, and (3) able to prolong significantly B10 cardiac allograft survival in C3H (H2k) recipients when given (2 x 10[6] i.v.) 7 days before organ transplantation (median survival time [MST] 26 days vs. 12 days in controls, and 5 days in interleukin-4 DC-treated animals). Their allostimulatory activity was further diminished by addition of anti-CD40L mAb at the start of the mixed leukocyte cultures. Anti-CD40L mAb alone (250 microg/mouse, i.p.; day -7) did not prolong cardiac graft survival (MST 12 days). In contrast, TGFbeta-cultured DCs + anti-CD40L mAb extended graft survival to a MST of 77 days, and inhibited substantially the anti-donor cytotoxic T lymphocyte activity of graft-infiltrating cells and host spleen cells assessed 8 days after transplant. CONCLUSIONS: The CD40-CD40L pathway appears important in regulation of allogeneic DC-T-cell functional interaction in vivo; its blockade increases markedly the potential of costimulatory molecule-deficient DCs of donor origin to induce long-lasting allograft survival.
Authors: N S Kenyon; M Chatzipetrou; M Masetti; A Ranuncoli; M Oliveira; J L Wagner; A D Kirk; D M Harlan; L C Burkly; C Ricordi Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Date: 1999-07-06 Impact factor: 11.205
Authors: Sherrie J Divito; Zhiliang Wang; William J Shufesky; Quan Liu; Olga A Tkacheva; Angela Montecalvo; Geza Erdos; Adriana T Larregina; Adrian E Morelli Journal: Blood Date: 2010-06-24 Impact factor: 22.113
Authors: M B Ezzelarab; D Raich-Regue; L Lu; A F Zahorchak; A Perez-Gutierrez; A Humar; M Wijkstrom; M Minervini; R W Wiseman; D K C Cooper; A E Morelli; A W Thomson Journal: Am J Transplant Date: 2017-02-02 Impact factor: 8.086