Costimulatory blockade by the induction of an endogenous xenospecific antibody response
- 1 August 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature Immunology
- Vol. 1 (2) , 163-168
- https://doi.org/10.1038/77853
Abstract
Xenogeneic tissues induce vigorous T cell immunity, reflecting the ability of costimulatory molecules to function across species barriers. We describe a strategy to inhibit costimulation that exploits species differences using the model of porcine pancreatic islet transplantation into mice. Mice were immunized with chimeric peptides that contained a known T cell epitope and selected sequences of the porcine costimulatory molecule CD86. This resulted in anti-peptide antibody responses that recognized intact porcine CD86, blocked costimulation by porcine CD86 but not murine CD86 in vitro, and prolonged the survival of porcine islet grafts in vivo. This strategy of inducing endogenous donor-specific costimulatory blockade has potential clinical applicability.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- ORTHOTOPIC HEART TRANSPLANTATION IN A TRANSGENIC PIG-TO-PRIMATE MODEL1Transplantation, 1998
- Characteristics of direct and indirect activation of human T cells against allogeneic and porcine xenogeneic cells/peptidesXenotransplantation, 1997
- Direct activation of human responder T cells by porcine stimulator cells leads to T cell proliferation and cytotoxic T cell developmentXenotransplantation, 1996
- Long-term acceptance of skin and cardiac allografts after blocking CD40 and CD28 pathwaysNature, 1996
- Cellular xenoresponses: Observation of significant primary indirect human T cell anti‐pig xenoresponses using co‐stimulator‐deficient or SLA class II‐negative porcine stimulatorsXenotransplantation, 1996
- CTLA4Ig PROLONGS ALLOGRAFT SURVIVAL WHILE SUPPRESSING CELL-MEDIATED IMMUNITYTransplantation, 1994
- Long-term acceptance of major histocompatibility complex mismatched cardiac allografts induced by CTLA4Ig plus donor-specific transfusion.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1993
- THE HUMAN ANTIPORCINE CELLULAR REPERTOIRETransplantation, 1993
- Long-Term Survival of Xenogeneic Pancreatic Islet Grafts Induced by CTLA4lgScience, 1992
- MODULATION OF TISSUE IMMUNOGENICITY BY ORGAN CULTURETransplantation, 1980