TREATMENT WITH THE HUMANIZED CD154-SPECIFIC MONOCLONAL ANTIBODY, hu5C8, PREVENTS ACUTE REJECTION OF PRIMARY SKIN ALLOGRAFTS IN NONHUMAN PRIMATES1
- 1 November 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Transplantation
- Vol. 72 (9) , 1473-1478
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00007890-200111150-00001
Abstract
Allogeneic skin transplantation remains a rigorous test of any immune intervention designed to prevent allograft rejection. To date, no single, clinically available immunosuppressant has been reported to induce long-term primary skin allograft survival in primates. We have previously shown that treatment with the humanized CD154-specific monoclonal antibody, humanized 5C8 (hu5C8), induces long-term renal allograft survival in nonhuman primates. In this study, we evaluated the efficacy of hu5C8 in preventing primary skin allograft rejection in rhesus monkeys. Ten rhesus monkeys were transplanted with full-thickness skin allografts mismatched at both class I and class II major histocompatibility loci. Of these, two were given no treatment, five were treated with hu5C8 alone, and three received hu5C8 combined with whole blood donor-specific transfusion (DST). All recipients also received skin autografts for comparison. Animals were followed by inspection, serial biopsy, mixed lymphocyte culture, and alloantibody determination. Treatment with hu5C8 alone or hu5C8 plus DST greatly prolonged allograft survival. Rejection occurred in the untreated group within 7 days. Mean allograft survival in the monotherapy hu5C8 group was >236 days and in the DST group was >202 days; these differences were not significant. Rejection eventually occurred in most animals. Allograft survival was not correlated with the development of T cell hyporesponsiveness in mixed lymphocyte culture. Rejection was not predicted by the development of donor-specific alloantibody. These results show that treatment with the CD154-specific monoclonal antibody, hu5C8, greatly delays the onset of acute skin allograft rejection.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Treatment of Allograft Recipients with Donor-Specific Transfusion and Anti-CD154 Antibody Leads to Deletion of Alloreactive CD8+ T Cells and Prolonged Graft Survival in a CTLA4-Dependent MannerThe Journal of Immunology, 2000
- Blocking both signal 1 and signal 2 of T-cell activation prevents apoptosis of alloreactive T cells and induction of peripheral allograft toleranceNature Medicine, 1999
- Long-term survival and function of intrahepatic islet allografts in rhesus monkeys treated with humanized anti-CD154Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1999
- Long-term survival and function of intrahepatic islet allografts in baboons treated with humanized anti-CD154.Diabetes, 1999
- Treatment with humanized monoclonal antibody against CD154 prevents acute renal allograft rejection in nonhuman primatesNature Medicine, 1999
- Blockade of CD40L/CD40 costimulatory pathway in a DST presensitization model of islet allograft leads to a state of Allo-Ag specific tolerance and permits subsequent engraftment of donor strain islet or heart allograftsTransplantation Proceedings, 1999
- Transplantation Tolerance: A Look at the Nonhuman Primate Literature in the Light of Modern Tolerance TheoriesCritical Reviews in Immunology, 1999
- An open proposal for clinical composite tissue allotransplantationTransplantation Proceedings, 1998
- Long-term survival of skin allografts induced by donor splenocytes and anti-CD154 antibody in thymectomized mice requires CD4(+) T cells, interferon-gamma, and CTLA4.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1998
- Long-term acceptance of skin and cardiac allografts after blocking CD40 and CD28 pathwaysNature, 1996