Reactivity of human natural antibodies to endothelial cells from Galα(1,3) gal-deficient pigs

被引:59
作者
Baumann, Bettina C.
Stussi, Georg
Huggel, Aatja
Rieben, Robert
Seebach, Joerg D.
机构
[1] Univ Zurich Hosp, Dept Internal Med, Lab Transplantat Immunol, CH-8091 Zurich, Switzerland
[2] Univ Bern, Dept Clin Res, CH-3012 Bern, Switzerland
关键词
natural antibodies; xenotransplantation; endothelial cells;
D O I
10.1097/01.tp.0000250478.00567.e5
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. Xenoreactive human natural antibodies (NAb) are predominantly directed against galactose-alpha(1,3) galactose (Gal). Binding of immunoglobulin (Ig) G and IgM NAb activates porcine endothelial cells (pEC) and triggers complement lysis responsible for hyperacute xenograft rejection. In vitro, IgG NAb induce human natural killer (NK) cell-mediated lysis of pEC by antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC). The present study examined the levels of anti-porcine NAb in a large number of individuals and addressed the functional role of non-Gal anti-porcine NAb. Methods. Sera from 120 healthy human blood donors were analyzed for the presence of anti-porcine NAb by flow cytometry using porcine red blood cells (pRBC), lymphoblastoid cells (pLCL), and pEC derived from control or Gal-deficient pigs. Xenogeneic complement lysis was measured by flow cytometry using human serum and rabbit complement. ADCC was analyzed by (51)chromium-release assays using human serum and freshly isolated NK cells. Results. Human IgM binding to pRBC was found in 93% and IgG binding in 86% of all samples. Non-Gal NAb comprised 13% of total IgM and 36% of total IgG binding to pEC. NAb/complement-induced lysis and ADCC of Gal-deficient compared to Gal-positive pEC were 21% and 29%, respectively. The majority of anti-Gal and non-Gal IgG NAb were of the IgG(2) subclass. Conclusions. The generation of Gal-deficient pigs has overcome hyperacute anti-Gal-mediated xenograft rejection in nonhuman primates. Non-Gal anti-porcine NAb represent a potentially relevant immunological hurdle in a subgroup of individuals by inducing endothelial damage in xenografts.
引用
收藏
页码:193 / 201
页数:9
相关论文
共 41 条
[1]   Endothelial cells derived from pigs lacking Galα(1,3)Gal:: no reduction of human leukocyte adhesion and natural killer cell cytotoxicity [J].
Baumann, BC ;
Schneider, MKJ ;
Lilienfeld, BG ;
Antsiferova, MA ;
Rhyner, DM ;
Hawley, RJ ;
Seebach, JD .
TRANSPLANTATION, 2005, 79 (09) :1067-1072
[2]   Lack of galactose-α-1,3-galactose expression on porcine endothelial cells prevents complement-induced lysis but not direct xenogeneic NK cytotoxicity [J].
Baumann, BC ;
Forte, P ;
Hawley, RJ ;
Rieben, R ;
Schneider, MKJ ;
Seebach, JD .
JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY, 2004, 172 (10) :6460-6467
[3]   Administration of GAS914 in an orthotopic pig-to-baboon heart transplantation model [J].
Brandl, U ;
Michel, S ;
Erhardt, M ;
Brenner, P ;
Bittmann, I ;
Rössle, M ;
Baschnegger, H ;
Bauer, A ;
Hammer, C ;
Schmoeckel, M ;
Reichart, B .
XENOTRANSPLANTATION, 2005, 12 (02) :134-141
[4]   Quantitation and characterization of anti-Galα1-3Gal antibodies in sera of 200 healthy persons [J].
Buonomano, R ;
Tinguely, C ;
Rieben, R ;
Mohacsi, PJ ;
Nydegger, UE .
XENOTRANSPLANTATION, 1999, 6 (03) :173-180
[5]   The immunological barrier to xenotransplantation [J].
Cascalho, M ;
Platt, JL .
IMMUNITY, 2001, 14 (04) :437-446
[6]   Acute rejection is associated with antibodies to non-Gal antigens in baboons using Gal-knockout pig kidneys [J].
Chen, G ;
Qian, H ;
Starz, T ;
Sun, HT ;
Garcia, B ;
Wang, XM ;
Wise, Y ;
Liu, YQ ;
Xiang, Y ;
Copeman, L ;
Liu, WH ;
Jevnikar, A ;
Wall, W ;
Cooper, DKC ;
Murase, N ;
Dai, YF ;
Wang, WY ;
Xiong, YL ;
White, DJ ;
Zhong, R .
NATURE MEDICINE, 2005, 11 (12) :1295-1298
[7]   Will the pig solve the transplantation backlog? [J].
Cooper, DKC ;
Gollackner, B ;
Sachs, DH .
ANNUAL REVIEW OF MEDICINE, 2002, 53 :133-147
[8]   Xenoantigens and xenoantibodies [J].
Cooper, DKC .
XENOTRANSPLANTATION, 1998, 5 (01) :6-17
[9]   α1,3-galactosyltransferase gene-knockout miniature swine produce natural cytotoxic anti-gal antibodies [J].
Dor, FJMF ;
Tseng, YL ;
Cheng, J ;
Moran, K ;
Sanderson, TM ;
Lancos, CJ ;
Shimizu, A ;
Yamada, K ;
Awwad, M ;
Sachs, D ;
Hawley, RJ ;
Schuurman, HJ ;
Cooper, DKC .
TRANSPLANTATION, 2004, 78 (01) :15-20
[10]   ONE PERCENT OF HUMAN CIRCULATING B-LYMPHOCYTES ARE CAPABLE OF PRODUCING THE NATURAL ANTI-GAL ANTIBODY [J].
GALILI, U ;
ANARAKI, F ;
THALL, A ;
HILLBLACK, C ;
RADIC, M .
BLOOD, 1993, 82 (08) :2485-2493