Anti-LFA-1 Improves Pig Islet Xenograft Function in Diabetic Mice When Long-Term Acceptance Is Induced by CTLA4Ig/Anti-CD40L.

Makiko Kumagai-Braesch, Henrik Ekberg, Feng Wang, Cecilia Osterholm, Cecilia Ehrnfelt, Amit Sharma, Ellinor Lindeborg, Jan Holgersson, Matthias Corbascio

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Background. It has been previously demonstrated that addition of anti-LFA-1 to a combination of CTLA4Ig and anti-CD40L induces the permanent acceptance of dopaminergic fetal pig xenografts when transplanted into the brain of wild-type mice. The purpose of this study was to test whether this costimulation blockade also can induce acceptance of adult pig islets transplanted to C5713L/6 mice with streptozotocin-induced diabetes. Methods. Recipients were treated with CTLA4Ig/anti-CD40L +/- anti-LFA-1 or isotype control antibodies during the first week after transplantation. Half of the costimulation blockade-treated recipients had their grafts removed after 8 weeks. The other half was observed up to 5 months. Results. Recipients treated with CTLA4Ig/anti-CD40L/anti-LFA-1 had significantly lower blood glucose and gained more weight than CTLA4Ig/anti-CD40L-treated recipients. CTLA4Ig/anti-CD40L-treated recipients exhibited unstable blood glucose. IPGTT of these recipients revealed a slow recovery to normal blood glucose levels at week 4. In comparison, CTLA4Ig/anti-CD40L/anti-LFA-1 treated recipients exhibited a significantly superior glucose clearance. CTLA4Ig/anti-CD40L +/- anti-LFA-1 treated recipients did not produce anti-pig IgG, whereas control antibody-treated mice did. CD4+ T cells from costimulation blockade-treated recipients proliferated less than CD4+ T cells from control antibody-treated mice when co-cultured with syngeneic antigen presenting cells loaded with pig islet antigens. Conclusions. CTLA4Ig/anti-CD40L/anti-LFA-1-treated recipients had superior islet function compared with CTLA4Ig/anti-CD40L-treated recipients. However, both costimulation blockade regimens led to islet graft acceptance up to 5 months after a 1-week treatment.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)1259-1267
    JournalTransplantation
    Volume83
    Issue number9
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2007

    Bibliographical note

    The information about affiliations in this record was updated in December 2015.
    The record was previously connected to the following departments: Renal Research Unit (013242210), Emergency medicine/Medicine/Surgery (013240200)

    Subject classification (UKÄ)

    • Surgery

    Free keywords

    • CTLA4Ig
    • anti-CD40L
    • anti-LFA-1
    • pig islet transplantation
    • costimulatory blockade

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