Cell-mediated cytotoxicity to porcine aortic endothelial cells is not dependent on galactosyl residues when baboon peripheral blood lymphocytes are previously primed with pig xenoantigens

被引:3
作者
Dehoux, JP [1 ]
Nizet, Y [1 ]
de la Parra, B [1 ]
Lecuivre, C [1 ]
Vergauwen, M [1 ]
Bazin, H [1 ]
Latinne, D [1 ]
Gianello, P [1 ]
机构
[1] Catholic Univ Louvain, Expt Surg Lab, Fac Med, B-1200 Brussels, Belgium
关键词
D O I
10.1097/01.TP.0000093833.02551.0B
中图分类号
R392 [医学免疫学]; Q939.91 [免疫学];
学科分类号
100102 ;
摘要
Background. In the pig-to-baboon model, acute vascular rejection remains the main hurdle for successful long-term xenograft survival. The production of galactosyl knockout pigs could solve concomitantly the problem of hyperacute and acute vascular rejection. This work studies in vitro the cell-mediated cytotoxicity of natural killer (NK) and T cells after priming of baboon peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBLs) with pig antigens to evaluate whether cytotoxicity is galactosyl-dependent. Material and Methods. PBLs from naive and primed baboons were used as effectors on primary porcine aortic endothelial cells (PAECs) to assess cytotoxicity. Untreated or galactosidase-digested PAECs were used to evidence the role of galactosyl residues on cell-mediated cytotoxicity. Two rat-anti baboon monoclonal antibodies were tested to inhibit either T+NK cells (LO-CD2b) or NK cells alone (LO-CD94). Results. When using PBLs from naive animals, spontaneous lysis occurred and was inhibited by both LOCD-2b and LO-CD94. In comparison, lysis of PAECs was significantly higher when baboon PBLs were first primed in vivo with pig xenoantigens. In this case, cytotoxicity was completely inhibited by LO-CD2b but only partially by LO-CD94. Reduction of galactosyl residues by galactosidase digestion showed that PAEC lysis almost completely disappeared with naive baboon PBLs but not with primed baboon PBLs, thereby indicating that anti-pig T-cell response is not dependent on galactosyl residues. Conclusion. Galactosyl knockout pigs could solve hyperacute rejection and also prevent the activation of NK cells even after xenogeneic priming. T cells will then be the next hurdle for the success of xenografting.
引用
收藏
页码:1675 / 1680
页数:6
相关论文
共 29 条
[1]   Target cell susceptibility to lysis by human natural killer cells is augmented by α(1,3)-galactosyltransferase and reduced by α(1,2)-fucosyltransferase [J].
Artrip, JH ;
Kwiatkowski, P ;
Michler, RE ;
Wang, SF ;
Tugulea, S ;
Ankersmit, J ;
Chisholm, L ;
McKenzie, IFC ;
Sandrin, MS ;
Itescu, S .
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, 1999, 274 (16) :10717-10722
[2]   Transgenic pigs expressing human CD59 and decay-accelerating factor produce an intrinsic barrier to complement-mediated damage [J].
Byrne, G ;
McCurry, KR ;
Martin, MJ ;
McClellan, SM ;
Platt, JL ;
Logan, JS .
TRANSPLANTATION, 1997, 63 (01) :149-155
[3]   Human NK cell-mediated cytotoxicity triggered by CD86 and Galα1,3-Gal is inhibited in genetically modified porcine cells [J].
Costa, C ;
Barber, DF ;
Fodor, WL .
JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY, 2002, 168 (08) :3808-3816
[4]   Human and non-human primate anti-galactosyl response after injection of rat monoclonal antibody bearing galactosyl epitopes [J].
Dehoux, JP ;
de la Parra, B ;
Latinne, D ;
Bazin, H ;
Squifflet, JP ;
Gianello, P .
XENOTRANSPLANTATION, 2000, 7 (02) :109-117
[5]   Effects on human and nonhuman primate immune response of a new rat anti-CD2 monoclonal antibody [J].
Dehoux, JP ;
Talpe, S ;
Dewolf, N ;
Otsuka, M ;
Oike, F ;
Jamar, F ;
de la Parra, B ;
Latinne, D ;
Bazin, H ;
Gianello, P .
TRANSPLANTATION, 2000, 69 (12) :2622-2633
[6]   Effect in vitro and in vivo of a rat anti-CD2 monoclonal antibody (LO-CD2b) on pig-to-baboon xenogeneic cellular (T and natural killer cells) immune response [J].
Dehoux, JP ;
de la Parra, B ;
Latinne, D ;
Bazin, H ;
Gianello, P .
XENOTRANSPLANTATION, 2001, 8 (03) :193-201
[7]   Direct activation of porcine endothelial cells by human natural killer cells [J].
Goodman, DJ ;
VonAlbertini, M ;
Willson, A ;
Millan, MT ;
Bach, FH .
TRANSPLANTATION, 1996, 61 (05) :763-771
[8]   Human natural killer lymphocytes directly recognize evolutionarily conserved oligosaccharide ligands expressed by xenogeneic tissues [J].
Inverardi, L ;
Clissi, B ;
Stolzer, AL ;
Bender, JR ;
Sandrin, MS ;
Pardi, R .
TRANSPLANTATION, 1997, 63 (09) :1318-1330
[9]   Role of natural killer cells, macrophages, and accessory molecule interactions in the rejection of pig-to-primate xenografts beyond the hyperacute period [J].
Itescu, S ;
Kwiatkowski, P ;
Artrip, JH ;
Wang, SF ;
Ankersmit, J ;
Minanov, OP ;
Michler, RE .
HUMAN IMMUNOLOGY, 1998, 59 (05) :275-286
[10]   Acute cellular xenograft rejection [J].
Korsgren, O .
XENOTRANSPLANTATION, 1997, 4 (01) :11-19