Long-term survival of transplanted allogeneic cells engineered to express a T cell chemorepellent

Alloantigen specific T cells have been shown to be required for allograft rejection. The chemokine, stromal cell derived factor-1 (SDF-1) at high concentration, has been shown to act as a T-cell chemorepellent and abrogate T-cell infiltration into a site of antigen challenge in vivo via a mechanism...

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Veröffentlicht in:Transplantation 2007-01, Vol.83 (2), p.174-183
Hauptverfasser: PAPETA, Natalia, TAO CHEN, YOON, Victor, SYKES, Megan, SACHS, David, IACOTNINI, John, POZNANSKY, Mark C, VIANELLO, Fabrizio, GERERTY, Lyle, MALIK, Ashish, MOK, Ying-Ting, THARP, William G, BAGLEY, Jessamyn, GUILING ZHAO, STEVCEVA, Liljana
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Alloantigen specific T cells have been shown to be required for allograft rejection. The chemokine, stromal cell derived factor-1 (SDF-1) at high concentration, has been shown to act as a T-cell chemorepellent and abrogate T-cell infiltration into a site of antigen challenge in vivo via a mechanism termed fugetaxis or chemorepulsion. We postulated that this mechanism could be exploited therapeutically and that allogeneic cells engineered to express a chemorepellent protein would not be rejected. Allogeneic murine insulinoma beta-TC3 cells and primary islets from BALB/C mice were engineered to constitutively secrete differential levels of SDF-1 and transplanted into allogeneic diabetic C57BL/6 mice. Rejection was defined as the permanent return of hyperglycemia and was correlated with the level of T-cell infiltration. The migratory response of T-cells to SDF-1 was also analyzed by transwell migration assay and time-lapse videomicroscopy. The cytotoxicity of cytotoxic T cell (CTLs) against beta-TC3 cells expressing high levels of SDF-1 was measured in standard and modified chromium-release assays in order to determine the effect of CTL migration on killing efficacy. Control animals rejected allogeneic cells and remained diabetic. In contrast, high level SDF-1 production by transplanted cells resulted in increased survival of the allograft and a significant reduction in blood glucose levels and T-cell infiltration into the transplanted tissue. This is the first demonstration of a novel approach that exploits T-cell chemorepulsion to induce site specific immune isolation and thereby overcomes allograft rejection without the use of systemic immunosuppression.
ISSN:0041-1337
1534-6080
DOI:10.1097/01.tp.0000250658.00925.c8