Importance of CD49d- VCAM interactions in human monocyte adhesion to porcine endothelium
- 1 February 1998
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Xenotransplantation
- Vol. 5 (1) , 67-74
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1399-3089.1998.tb00011.x
Abstract
By using a primate model of natural antibody depletion, we have previously shown that delayed rejection of porcine cardiac xenografts in unmodified primate recipients resulted from xenograft infiltration with monocyte/macrophage lineage cells. In the present study, we initially showed that human monocytes/macrophages demonstrated significantly greater adherence to unstimulated pig aortic endothelial cells (PAEC) than to human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC). Human TNF-alpha augmented monocyte adhesion to HUVEC by 5-fold higher levels than to PAEC. This effect could not be explained on the basis of incompatibility between human TNF-alpha and its receptor on PAEC since porcine VCAM expression increased by 75-85% after stimulation with TNF-alpha. TNF-augmented monocyte adherence was abrogated by either treatment of PAEC with an anti-VCAM Mab or monocytes with an anti-CD49d Mab. These results suggest that VCAM-CD49d interactions are important in adhesion of human monocytes to PAEC but may not be as effective as those between human monocytes and allogeneic endothelium, perhaps because of structural differences across species. Other interactions, as yet undefined, must explain the relative increase in adhesiveness of human monocytes for unstimulated PAEC versus HUVEC. In experiments investigating the functional consequences of this enhanced monocyte adherence, PAEC stimulation induced 10-fold higher levels of macrophage-derived IL-1 beta and 3-fold higher levels of T cell proliferation compared with HUVEC. Using an anti-DR Mab to interrupt antigen presentation by autologous macrophages markedly reduced the T cell proliferative response to PAEC. Together, these results indicate that the enhanced adherence of human monocytes to PAEC contributes to xenograft rejection beyond the hyperacute period by leading to tissue infiltration, elaboration of cytokines, and an augmented indirect pathway of T cell xenoantigen recognition.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- CIRCULATING HUMAN MONONUCLEAR CELLS EXHIBIT AUGMENTED LYSIS OF PIG ENDOTHELIUM AFTER ACTIVATION WITH INTERLEUKIN 21Transplantation, 1996
- IN VITRO ACCOMMODATION OF IMMORTALIZED PORCINE ENDOTHELIAL CELLSTransplantation, 1996
- PORCINE VASCULAR CELL ADHESION MOLECULE (VCAM) MEDIATES ENDOTHELIAL CELL ADHESION TO HUMAN T CELLSTransplantation, 1995
- EVIDENCE OF NONINVOLVEMENT OF SWINE MHC CLASS II IN THE IN VITRO PROLIFERATIVE RESPONSE OF HUMAN LYMPHOCYTES TO PORCINE ENDOTHELIAL CELLSTransplantation, 1995
- EVIDENCE THAT ACTIVATION OF HUMAN T CELLS BY PORCINE ENDOTHELIUM INVOLVES DIRECT RECOGNITION OF PORCINE SLA AND COSTIMULATION BY PORCINE LIGANDS FOR LFA-1 AND CD2Transplantation, 1994
- Porcine aortic endothelial cells activate human T cells: Direct presentation of MHC antigens and costimulation by ligands for human CD2 and CD28Immunity, 1994
- Activation-independent binding of human memory T cells to adhesion molecule ELAM-1Nature, 1991
- Direct expression cloning of vascular cell adhesion molecule 1, a cytokine-induced endothelial protein that binds to lymphocytesCell, 1989
- Identification of an inducible endothelial-leukocyte adhesion molecule.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1987
- POTENTIATION OF THE T-LYMPHOCYTE RESPONSE TO MITOGENSThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1972