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Laboratory of Immunology and Virology, Division of Cellular and Gene Therapies, Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, Food and Drug Administration, Bethesda, MD 20892
Evidence suggests that NK cells contribute to the pathogenesis of
delayed rejection of vascularized xenografts, and NK cells have been
suggested to participate in hyperacute xenograft rejection. Endothelial
cells have been shown to be the primary target of the recipients
immune responses that mediate both hyperacute and delayed xenograft
rejection. Under conditions of oxidative stress induced by thiol
deprivation, but not under normal conditions, pretreatment of porcine
aortic endothelial cells (PAECs) with the NO donor,
S-nitroso-N-acetyl-penicillamine,
dramatically inhibited killing of PAEC target cells by IL-2-activated
human NK cells. This same combined treatment reduced both surface
expression and mRNA levels of E-selectin. Moreover, anti-E-selectin
mAb, but not Ab to VCAM-1, protected PAEC from lysis by human
IL-2-activated NK cells in a dose-dependent manner. These findings
suggest that expression of porcine E-selectin is important for the
cytotoxicity of PAEC mediated by activated human NK cells and may be
involved in the redox-mediated modulation of that cytotoxicity. It is
known that NF-
B activation is required for transcription of
E-selectin, and the current data show that the suppression of
E-selectin expression by
S-nitroso-N-acetyl-penicillamine
pretreatment and thiol deprivation was associated with reduced NF-
B
DNA-binding activity in PAEC. These data suggest that the regulation of
porcine E-selectin may be important for modulating delayed xenograft
rejection and that manipulation of cellular redox systems may provide a
means to protect xenogeneic endothelial cells from NK cell-mediated
cytotoxicity.
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