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* Institute for Cellular Therapeutics and
James Graham Brown Cancer Center, University of Louisville, Louisville, KY 40202
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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The original studies of nonmyeloablative conditioning were performed using mouse models. The most common immunosuppressive regimens shown to promote engraftment with reduced myelotoxic intensity include the following: 1) Abs to target host immune-reactive cells, including antilymphocyte globulin, anti-CD4, anti-CD8, anti-
β-TCR, and anti-NK1.1; 2) Abs for costimulatory blockade, such as anti-CD154, CTLA4 Ig, and anti-OX40L; and 3) immunosuppressive drugs, including cyclophosphamide, rapamycin, mycophenolate mofetil, fludarabine, and cyclosporine A. The combined use of these treatments has significantly decreased the dose of total body irradiation (TBI) required for engraftment, with the findings successfully translating to larger animals (dogs and pigs) and humans (9, 10, 11).
We previously demonstrated in a mouse model that conditioning with 700 cGy of TBI is required to achieve engraftment in MHC-disparate allogeneic recipients (12). The minimum TBI dose can be significantly reduced by targeting recipient T cells with T cell-specific mAbs (13, 14), and/or when immunosuppressive drugs (15, 16), or agents that block costimulatory molecule interactions (15, 17) are added to the conditioning approach. In a recent report, stable engraftment was achieved in an allogeneic mouse model without irradiation using a combination of costimulation blockade plus rapamycin (18). These promising mechanistically based nonmyeloablative conditioning strategies have been successfully translated to the clinic (4, 8, 19, 20). One limitation to reduced-intensity conditioning is that there is an increased rate of failure of engraftment.
In the present studies, we used a mouse model of BMT to study the impact of the approach for primary conditioning in recipients who failed engraftment after BMT and require retransplantation. We found that the dominant mechanism for secondary BMT failure is due to sensitization and the generation of an adaptive humoral response. Our data demonstrate that TBI alone at primary BMT does not promote engraftment of secondary BMT in the recipients who failed primary BMT. Recipient T cell lymphodepletion also does not prevent sensitization if engraftment failure results at primary BMT. Costimulatory blockade with anti-CD154 alone or in combination with anti-
β-TCR at the time of primary BMT prevents allosensitization and promotes allogeneic engraftment in secondary BMT after engraftment failure in primary BMT. Conditioning of BMT recipients with anti-CD154 alone or combined with anti-
β-TCR prevents generation of anti-donor MHC Ab after failed primary BMT. In contrast, significantly higher Ab titers resulted in mice conditioned with anti-
β-TCR or without mAb treatment at primary BMT. Pre-existing anti-donor Abs represent the critical mechanism for secondary graft rejection, because >98% of donor cells were eliminated within 30 min in in vivo cytotoxicity assay in the sensitized recipients after first BMT. Our data suggest that the prevention of sensitization, especially generation of anti-donor Ab by agents used in conditioning for first BMT, is critical for successful secondary BMT in nonmyeloablative conditioning. This finding may significantly benefit candidates for BMT with otherwise untreatable chronic disease states.
| Materials and Methods |
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Male C57BL/6 (B6; H-2b) and BALB/cJ (BALB/c; H-2d) mice were obtained from The Jackson Laboratory. Animals were housed at the Institute for Cellular Therapeutics under specific pathogen-free conditions, and cared for according to National Institutes of Health guidelines.
Preconditioning and BMT
Primary BMT was performed to mimic BMT with insufficient conditioning (Fig. 1A). Recipient B6 mice were conditioned with 0–700 cGy of TBI (
-cell 40; Nordion). In the mAb-treated groups, B6 mice were pretreated i.p. with anti-
β-TCR (H57-597: hamster anti-mouse IgG; generated in our laboratory) and anti-CD154 (MR-1: hamster anti-mouse IgG3; Bioexpress) alone or in combination. Anti-
β-TCR mAb (30 µl per mouse) was injected on day –3 before BMT, and anti-CD154 mAb was given (0.5 mg/mouse) on days 0 and +3 with respect to BMT. Anti-
β-TCR mAb was unpurified and concentrated by ammonia sulfite precipitation. A dose titration for in vivo depletion of
β-TCR+ cells was previously performed (14). For the secondary BMT, recipients were ablatively conditioned with 950 cGy of TBI (Fig. 1B) or nonmyeloablative conditioning comprised of anti-
β-TCR, anti-CD154, rapamycin (3 mg/kg, days 0, +1, +2, +3, and +4; LC Laboratories), and 300 cGy of TBI (Fig. 1C). Conditioned mice were transplanted with 15 x 106 untreated donor bone marrow cells (BMC) via lateral tail vein injection at least 4–6 h after TBI, as previously described. Briefly, tibias and femurs were harvested from donors. Bone marrow was expelled from the bones with medium 199 (Life Technologies) containing 10 µg/ml gentamicin (Life Technologies) and gently processed into a single-cell suspension, as previously described (21).
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Recipients were characterized for chimerism using flow cytometry to determine the relative percentages of donor-derived PBL at 4 wk, as previously described (21). Peripheral blood was stained with Abs specific for MHC class I Ags of donor (FITC-conjugated anti-H-2Kd, 36-7-5, mouse IgG2a) and recipient (PE-conjugated anti-H-2Kb, AF6-88.5, mouse IgG2a) origin. Multilineage production was assessed by four-color staining for FITC-conjugated, anti-donor-specific Ab, and different fluorochrome (PE, PerCP, and allophycocyanin)-conjugated lineage markers, including T cells (anti-CD4, RM4-5; anti-CD8
, 53-6.7; and anti-
β-TCR, H57-597), B cells (anti-B220, RA3-6B2), NK cells (anti-DX5, DX5), dendritic cells (DC, anti-CD11c, HL3), and myeloid cells (anti-GR-1, RB6-8C5; and anti-MAC-1, M1/70) (all Abs were obtained from BD Pharmingen). Nonspecific background staining was controlled using isotype control Abs directed against irrelevant Ag conjugated with the same fluorochrome.
Characterization of residual host cell populations after TBI and anti-CD154 treatment
To assess the changes in cell subpopulations in recipient marrow and spleen after TBI and anti-CD154 treatment, the absolute number of T (CD4+ and CD8+), B (CD19+), NK (NK1.1+), NK/T (
β/
-TCR+/NK1.1+), and DC (CD11c+) cells in each mouse was determined. Briefly, recipient B6 mice were irradiated with 100, 300, and 600 cGy of TBI, and bone marrow and spleens were harvested 1 day after TBI. Anti-CD154 treatment was performed on days 0 and +3, and bone marrow and spleens were harvested 2 days after the final dose of mAb. Naive mice served as controls. Single-cell suspensions were incubated with ammonium chloride lysing buffer to eliminate erythrocytes and were washed twice. A total of 1 x 106 cells was stained and analyzed by FACS (LSR II system, BD Biosciences). The phenotypic analysis was performed by four-color flow cytometry using anti-CD19, anti-
β-TCR, anti-
-TCR, anti-CD4, anti-CD8, anti-NK1.1, and anti-CD11c.
Flow cross-match assay (FCXM)
Sera were taken from mice 4 wk after BMT. A total of 0.5 x 106 splenocytes from naive BALB/c mice was incubated with 10 µl of sera for 30 min. The cells were washed and incubated with FITC-conjugated polyclonal goat anti-mouse Ig (Immunology Consultants Laboratory), followed by a third incubation with PE-conjugated anti-mouse CD4 plus CD8 (BD Pharmingen). Levels of circulating alloantibodies were determined by FACSCalibur or LSR (BD Biosciences), gating on the CD4+ and CD8+ T cell fraction, and were reported as mean fluorescence intensity (MFI).
CD8+ effector/memory T cell enumeration
BMT was performed (day 0) from BALB/c to B6 mice with or without anti-CD154 mAb treatment (days 0 and +3). Recipient peripheral blood was collected at selected time points up to 30 days after BMT. Cells were stained with anti-CD44 FITC (IM7), anti-CD62L PE (MEL-14), anti-CD4 PerCP, and anti-CD8 allophycocyanin (all from BD Pharmingen). Flow cytometry was performed using a FACSCalibur and/or LSR flow cytometry system (BD Biosciences) and analyzed using CellQuest software (BD Biosciences). Percentages of CD8+/CD44high/CD62Llow/– effector/memory T cells were measured.
Flow cytometric analysis of TCR Vβ families
BALB/c mice express superantigen I-E, resulting in the clonal deletion of superantigen-specific Vβ5.1/2+ and Vβ11+ T cells. Because recipient B6 mice do not express I-E, they do not delete these two Vβ subfamilies. To investigate whether clonal deletion is operational in our model, peripheral blood (8–100 µl) from mixed chimeras and naive control mice was stained with anti-Vβ5.1/2 FITC (MR9-4), Vβ6 FITC (RR4-7), Vβ8.1/2 FITC (MR-5-2), or Vβ11 FITC (RR3-15) vs anti-host H2Kb-PE, anti-CD8 PerCP, and anti-CD4 allophycocyanin (all from BD Pharmingen) for 30 min at 4°C. A minimum of 50,000 gated events was collected within the total lymphoid gate. Background staining was determined by FITC-conjugated isotype mAbs. Relative expression indicates the percentage of Vβ-positive cells within the CD8+ or CD4+ T cell subsets of the host (H2Kb) lymphoid gate in peripheral blood.
In vivo cytotoxicity assay
Single splenocyte suspensions were prepared by gently crushing the spleens and filtering through nylon mesh (30 µm; BD Biosciences). Target and internal control splenocytes (100 x 106/ml in PBS) were then incubated with 4.0 or 0.2 µM CFSE (Molecular Probes), respectively, at room temperature for 10 min. Equal volume of FBS (Life Technologies) was added to quench the reaction. After washing, cells were mixed in a 1:1 ratio and resuspended in PBS, and 20 x 106 cells from each were injected i.v. Peripheral blood was collected from individual mice at selected time points after cell infusion, as follows: 0.5 h, 1 h, 3 h, day 1, day 2, and day 3. After lysis of RBC, PBLs were analyzed for CFSE expression by FACS. The percentage of killing was determined by calculating the ratio between target and internal control cells.
Statistical analysis
Data are presented as the average ± SD. Students two-tailed t test (two-sample, assuming unequal variances) was used to evaluate statistical differences. The difference between groups was considered significant at p < 0.05.
| Results |
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For primary transplantation, recipient B6 mice were conditioned with 0–700 cGy of TBI and transplanted with BALB/c BMC. Engraftment occurred in 53.3 and 20% of mice that received 700 and 600 cGy of TBI, respectively (Fig. 2A). Engraftment failed in all mice conditioned with 0, 100, and 300 cGy of TBI. All mice survived. Those who failed to engraft exhibited endogenous hematopoiesis. FCXM assay was performed in sera collected 4 wk after BMT to detect donor-specific Abs (Fig. 2B). Donor-specific Ab levels were not significantly increased (p > 0.05) in groups conditioned with 600 (MFI: 5.4 ± 3.8) or 700 cGy of TBI (5.2 ± 0.8) compared with serum from naive controls (4.6 ± 0.7; p > 0.05). There was also no difference in serum MFI between mice that engrafted and those that did not in the groups conditioned with 600 or 700 cGy of TBI (data not shown). Significantly higher Ab titers were detected in recipients conditioned with 100 (218.8 ± 69.8; p = 0.00005) or 300 cGy of TBI (149.9 ± 108.2; p = 0.006) compared with sera from naive controls, and their values were similar to the control B6 mice (197.6 ± 102.1) who received BMT, but no TBI.
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Secondary BMT was performed 5–7 wk after the primary BMT in the mice that failed to engraft to evaluate the effect of TBI at primary BMT on secondary transplant. B6 recipients were conditioned with 950 cGy of TBI and transplanted with 15 x 106 BALB/c BMC (Fig. 2E). Naive B6 mice served as controls. Engraftment did not occur in mice treated with 0, 100, or 300 cGy of TBI alone at the first BMT, as expected, due to sensitization from the first BMC infusion. Interestingly, significantly less engraftment occurred than was expected in recipients that had received 600 or 700 cGy of TBI conditioning at first BMT, even though no anti-donor Ab was detected in these animals. Only 20.0 and 12.5% of mice conditioned with 700 or 600 cGy of TBI engrafted, respectively.
Costimulatory blockade of CD154:CD40 alone or combined with T cell depletion at primary BMT prevents allosensitization after the failure at first BMT
We next examined whether blockade of CD154/CD40 interactions with or without T cell lymphodepletion enhanced prevention of allosensitization in primary BMT candidates who failed to engraft. Primary BMT was performed to mimic the insufficient conditioning in BMT. B6 mice were conditioned with the following: 1) anti-
β-TCR alone; 2) anti-CD154 mAb alone; or 3) a combination of both mAbs, and transplanted with 15 x 106 BALB/c BMC. The effect of anti-CD154 treatment on host cell populations was analyzed 2 days after the last dose of anti-CD154 without irradiation or donor BMC infusion. There were no significant differences detected in B, T, NK, NK-T, and DC subpopulations in the spleens (Fig. 3A) of anti-CD154-treated vs naive mice. The levels of anti-donor Ab were measured 4 wk after primary BMT (Fig. 3B). As expected, none of the recipients treated with anti-
β-TCR alone, anti-CD154 alone, or both Abs in combination engrafted at primary BMT (data not shown). Ab titers in mice treated with anti-CD154 mAb alone (MFI: 5.5 ± 1.6; p > 0.05) or in combination with anti-
β-TCR (5.3 ± 2.7; p > 0.05) were not significantly different from naive mice (4.6 ± 0.7). In contrast, mice treated with anti-
β-TCR mAb alone produced anti-donor Ab at significantly higher levels (47.8 ± 59.7; p = 0.03) compared with naive mice, but significantly lower levels (p = 0.0002) than the positive controls that received BMC only without conditioning (148.9 ± 72.3).
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To evaluate the influence of conditioning at primary BMT on the success of secondary BMT, secondary BMT was performed in B6 recipients (used in Fig. 3B) 5–7 wk after primary BMT. Recipients were conditioned with 950 cGy of TBI and transplanted with 15 x 106 BALB/c BMC (Fig. 3C). Engraftment occurred in 22.2% of mice (n = 9) treated with anti-
β-TCR mAb alone at first BMT, and these two engrafted recipients had low level of anti-donor Ab (MFI: 6.5 and 7.0). All mice with no treatment at first BMT failed engraftment after secondary BMT. In contrast, 100% of mice treated with anti-
β-TCR plus anti-CD154 engrafted, and 81.8% of mice treated with anti-CD154 alone engrafted. Engraftment was stable up to 6 mo follow-up (data not shown) and multilineage (Table I, group A). TCR Vβ repertoire could not be assessed in these chimeras because the levels of donor chimerism approached 100%.
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β-TCR (MFI: 4.9 ± 0.4) after primary BMT. In secondary BMT, recipients were conditioned with anti-
β-TCR, anti-CD154, rapamycin, and 300 cGy of TBI, and transplanted with 15 x 106 BALB/c BMC (Fig. 1C). Engraftment occurred in all mice treated with anti-CD154 alone or anti-
β-TCR plus anti-CD154 at primary BMT (Fig. 3C). The levels of donor chimerism were similar to naive recipients who only received the nonmyeloablative conditioning (Fig. 3D). Twenty percent of mice (n = 5) treated with anti-
β-TCR mAb alone at first BMT and none without treatment at first BMT engrafted after secondary BMT. This engrafted recipient with anti-
β-TCR mAb at first BMT had relative low level of anti-donor Ab (MFI: 6.1) compared with other four without engraftment (MFI: 13.1, 15.1, 44.8, and 26.5). Moreover, the engraftment was stable for up to 6 mo follow-up (data not shown) and multilineage (Table I, group B). Moreover, all chimeric mice demonstrated deletion of Vβ5(1/2) and Vβ11 in host-derived CD4 and CD8 T cells (Fig. 4A), a critical marker for the mechanism of central tolerance to donor alloantigens.
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The success of engraftment in secondary BMT correlated inversely with generation of anti-donor Ab detected in the recipient serum posttransplantation. To determine the effect of donor-specific Ab on rejection of donor cells, in vivo cytotoxicity assays were performed in mice treated with anti-CD154 and/or anti-
β-TCR at the first BMT to define the mechanism for our observation. A total of 20 x 106 CFSE-labeled naive donor BALB/c splenocytes (as target cells) and naive recipient B6 splenocytes (as internal controls) was infused into mice previously transplanted 5–7 wk after primary BMT (Fig. 4B). Recipients of only BMC infusion at first BMT and naive B6 mice served as controls. B6 mice initially infused with BALB/c BMC only rapidly eliminated almost all CFSE-labeled BALB/c splenocytes within 0.5 h (98.1 ± 1.41%), and the anti-donor Ab titer was 164.7 ± 82 in these, as per the in vivo cytotoxicity assay. The dramatically increased cytotoxicity strongly suggests that Ab-mediated killing represents the predominant barrier for alloreactivity in sensitized recipients. Mice previously conditioned with anti-
β-TCR eliminated 78.5 ± 14.0% and 92.5 ± 10.0% CFSE-labeled BALB/c cells at 1 and 3 h, respectively. In contrast, B6 mice treated with anti-CD154 or both mAb displayed in vivo cytotoxicity similar to the naive mice, confirming that anti-CD154 mAb treatment prevents the generation of Ab-mediated cytotoxicity by functionally impairing sensitization in vivo.
CD154 blockade inhibits the generation of CD44high/CD62Llow/– effector/memory CD8+ T cells
CD8+ effector/memory T cells are generated in adaptive immune responses and identified as CD44high/CD62Llow/– (22, 23, 24). To investigate the role of CD154:CD40 interactions in generating memory T cells, B6 mice were treated with anti-CD154 mAb at primary BMT, and CD44high/CD62Llow/– effector/memory T cells were enumerated at 11–13 days after BMT (Fig. 5A). CD8+ effector/memory T cells were detected in non-mAb-treated controls, and the percentage of CD8+ effector/memory T cells in CD8+ cell gate was significantly higher than in naive mice (11.0 ± 1.6 vs 2.7 ± 1.5%, respectively; p < 0.000001). Blockade of CD154 completely inhibited the generation of CD8+ effector/memory T cells, and the percentage of CD8+ effector/memory T cells in CD8+ cell gate (3.1 ± 2.2%) was similar as naive controls (p = 0.59).
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T cell depletion leads to lymphopenia-induced homeostatic proliferation of T cells, driving naive T cells to differentiate directly into memory T cells (25, 26). As shown in Fig. 5B, more CD8+ effector/memory T cells (22.7 ± 10.8%, p = 0.02) were detected at day +11 to +13 in mice treated with anti-
β-TCR (day –3) and BMC infusion (day 0) compared with mice that received BMC only (11.0 ± 1.6%; Fig. 5A). The level of CD8+ effector/memory T cells remained higher even 30 days after BMT (7.2 ± 1.0%) in mice treated with anti-
β-TCR. The expression of T cells of CD8+ effector/memory phenotype in the context of homeostatic proliferation and alloresponse was decreased by CD154 blockade. The levels of CD8+ effector/memory T cells were significantly lower in the mice treated with anti-
β-TCR plus anti-CD154 at day +11 to +13 (11.9 ± 8.1, p = 0.04) or day +30 (2.6 ± 1.0, p = 0.005; Fig. 5B) compared with CD8+ effector/memory T cells in mice treated with anti-
β-TCR alone.
| Discussion |
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We first evaluated the effect of TBI conditioning alone on outcome in secondary BMT. In our current study, 600 TBI significantly decreased the major cell populations of B, T, NK, NKT, and DC cells in B6 recipients within 1 day after administration. The proportion of these cell populations on the various doses of TBI directly correlated with sensitization. Coincident with this observation, the production of anti-donor Ab inversely correlated with TBI doses from 0 to 700 cGy used at BMC infusion. We hypothesize that when host B and T cells, especially CD4+ cells, decreased to a certain level with a given TBI dose (
600 cGy), there are not enough viable B and Th cells to initiate the adaptive humoral immune response. The residual radiation-resistant NK, NK-T, and even CTLs after 600 cGy of TBI are sufficient to induce cellular immunoresponse evidenced by the BMC rejection in the majority of recipients. When irradiation doses increased to 700 cGy, more cell populations responsible for initiating cellular immune responses are eliminated. Thus, both cellular and humoral immune responses are inhibited, and allogeneic engraftment occurs in a higher proportion of recipients. When lower doses of TBI (
300 cGy) are used, they only partially decreased the B and T cell populations, and there were still significant cells remaining to initiate cellular and humoral immune responses, as evidenced by the generation of donor-specific Ab and BMC rejection. As expected, engraftment did not occur in recipients conditioned with 100 or 300 cGy of TBI at primary BMT and 950 cGy following secondary BMT due to the generation of Ab against donor after primary BMC infusion. However, we were surprised to find superior engraftment was not achieved in secondary BMT in recipients with ablative conditioning after failed primary BMT with 600 and 700 cGy of TBI (Fig. 2E), even though a humoral response was not generated the first BMT. In considering the relatively high combined TBI dose used at primary and secondary BMT with a short interval (5–7 wk), we hypothesize that the failure of engraftment observed in these recipients might be due to the accumulation of toxicity from irradiation.
It has been well known that T cell depletion combined with other conditioning strategies enhances allogeneic bone marrow engraftment (31, 32). T cell depletion alone without TBI or other myelotoxic agents is not sufficient to achieve allogeneic bone marrow engraftment (13, 33, 34). Our data further demonstrate that the remaining T cells after
β-TCR T cell depletion are still able to initiate humoral and cellular immune responses, as evidenced by the generation of Ab against donor MHC Ags and the rejection of BMC at primary BMT (Fig. 3B). In this light, it is not unexpected that the mice treated with anti-
β-TCR mAb at first BMT failed to engraft at secondary BMT. These results also confirm a dominant role for the humoral immune barrier in rejection of transplanted BMC in sensitized recipient.
Costimulatory blockade of CD154:CD40 interactions induces acceptance of murine skin, heart, and islet grafts (13, 35, 36, 37) when combined with T cell depletion in vivo. CD154 (CD40L) is rapidly up-regulated on recently activated T cells (38, 39). CD40, the receptor for CD154, is constitutively expressed on APC, including B cells (40). Approaches that target the CD40-CD154 costimulation components of T cell activation have shown promise in development of tolerance-based transplantation protocols in both rodent and nonhuman primate models (41) by induction of apoptosis or deletion of Ag-activated T cells (42). Anti-CD154 is a nondepleting mAb, because no significant changes in T cell populations are detected after anti-CD154 treatment (Fig. 3A). In contrast with these other grafts, the present studies show that anti-CD154 alone or combined with T cell depletion did not induce tolerance to allogeneic BMC without irradiation at primary BMT. The disparity in outcomes between solid organ and BMT may be related to the systemic nature of the infused BMC, which circulate in the blood and come in contact with recipient immune cells. Moreover, the donor hematopoietic stem cells need to overcome the recipient immune system for successful engraftment to occur. Therefore, BMC may face stronger immune barriers than solid organ grafts and require more conditioning for alloengraftment. Our data have confirmed a previous report that the interaction between CD154 and CD40 is primarily for B cell development and function, and contributes only a modest degree in adaptive T cell immune responses (43, 44). Our findings indicate that with proper management, patients who have failed the first BMC grafts may still be capable of accepting another BMT.
Blockade of the CD40 costimulatory pathway is known to abort the generation of Ag-specific Ab (45, 46, 47). Another possible mechanism for anti-CD154 mAb treatment leading to the inhibition of humoral immune responses is an ability to inhibit T cell activation by affecting the interaction between APCs and T cells. As shown in Fig. 5A, CD154 blockade totally inhibited the generation of effector/memory CD8+ T cells after allogeneic BMC infusion. This result confirms previous findings in response to alloantigens after skin graft (21). The relevant new finding is that CD154 blockade impaired generation of CD8+ effector/memory T cells induced by both alloantigen exposure by BMC and lymphopenia by T cell depletion (Fig. 5). T cell depletion has been recently reported to lead to lymphopenia-induced homeostatic proliferation of T cells, driving naive T cells to differentiate directly into memory T cells, sharing not only phenotype, but also function (25, 48). Our data showed that CD154 blockade was enough to block the anti-donor Ag generation in the context of both alloantigen and lymphopenia.
Sensitization to MHC Ags is among the most critical challenges to clinical transplantation (49, 50, 51). Sensitization significantly increases the risk of rejection of solid organ and BMC. The dominance of the humoral immune barrier in sensitized recipients is reflected by the fact that allogeneic donor marrow engraftment was abrogated in naive mice with the passive transfer of as little as 25 µl of serum from sensitized recipients (50). This observation has been further demonstrated using GFP-labeled BMC and bioluminescence imaging showing that the rejection mediated by preformed Ab occurs within 3 h of transplantation (51). Our current data extend these observations and point to the dominance of humoral sensitization as a barrier to successful transplantation. The BMC-primed recipients rapidly eliminated a moderate donor splenocyte dose in less than 30 min after infusion in an in vivo cytotoxicity assay (Fig. 4B). Therefore, it is almost impossible to achieve allogeneic bone marrow engraftment in sensitized recipients (50). Fortunately, sensitization can be prevented with two treatments of anti-CD154 mAb given at the same time as exposure to alloantigens from BMC. Even when engraftment failed in anti-CD154 mAb-treated recipients, no anti-donor MHC Ab were detected. In addition, there was a marked abrogation of rapid cytotoxicity of donor-specific cells. Strategies to simultaneously prevent sensitization in nonmyeloablative conditioning regimens at the time of transplant would have the potential to benefit a secondary transplant when in the event of failed engraftment. Our current findings suggest that the agents used at primary BMT have a critical influence on the outcome of second BMT and an approach should be selected to prevent the generation of donor-specific Ab. Costimulatory blockade of CD154:CD40 interactions with anti-CD154 at the time of primary BMT is one approach that serves very well for this purpose. These observations have confirmed our recent work that costimulatory blockade of CD154 results in prevention of allogeneic sensitization with skin graft (21). The CD154 blockade can inhibit allogeneic humoral immune response not only to high antigenic skin tissue, but also to whole BMC containing heterogeneous populations. BMC have been used in the current study to establish a more clinically relevant mouse model to study secondary BMT after failure in first BMT. With anti-CD154 mAb preconditioning alone or combined anti-CD154 and anti-
β-TCR mAbs at the time of first failed BMT, allogeneic engraftment was readily achieved with ablative conditioning at subsequent secondary BMT, a result that cannot occur without the anti-CD154 mAb treatment. We then explored whether nonmyeloablative conditioned secondary transplant recipients would also engraft in presensitized recipients. We found that with anti-
β-TCR, anti-CD154, rapamycin, and as low as 300 cGy of TBI at secondary BMT, engraftment occurred in all mice treated with anti-CD154 alone or anti-
β-TCR plus anti-CD154 at primary BMT. The mixed chimerism observed in these recipients had similar features in durability of donor chimerism and TCR Vβ clonal deletion, suggesting a deletional mechanism.
In conclusion, the results of our study demonstrate that CD154:CD40 costimulatory blockade at the time of primary BMT promotes allogeneic engraftment in secondary BMT after the first engraftment failure. The mechanism by which anti-CD154 enhances the engraftment of secondary BMT is to inhibit B cell activation to generate alloantibody. The prevention of anti-donor Ab generation by agents used at first BMT is critical for successful secondary BMT. These findings could have a significant impact in the clinic on management of BMT in presensitized recipients exposed to allogeneic MHC via a previous, failed transplant.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Disclosures |
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| Footnotes |
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1 This work was supported in part by National Institutes of Health Grants R01 DK069766 and 5RO1 HL063442; Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation Grants 1-2005-1037 and 1-2006-1466; Department of the Navy, Office of Naval Research; Department of the Army, Office of Army Research; Commonwealth of Kentucky Research Challenge Trust Fund; W. M. Keck Foundation; and Jewish Hospital Foundation. ![]()
This research was supported in part by National Institutes of Health Grants R01 DK52294 and HL63442; Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation; Department of Defense: Department of the Navy, Office of Naval Research; Department of Defense: Office of Army Research; W. M. Keck Foundation; Commonwealth of Kentucky Research Challenge Trust Fund; Jewish Hospital Foundation; and University of Louisville Hospital, National Foundation to Support Cell Transplant Research.
2 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Suzanne T. Ildstad, Director, Institute for Cellular Therapeutics, Jewish Hospital Distinguished Professor of Transplantation, Professor of Surgery, University of Louisville, 570 South Preston Street, Suite 404, Louisville, KY 40202-1760. E-mail address: stilds01{at}louisville.edu ![]()
3 Abbreviations used in this paper: BMT, bone marrow transplantation; BMC, bone marrow cell; DC, dendritic cell; FCXM, flow cross-match assay; MFI, mean fluorescence intensity; TBI, total body irradiation. ![]()
Received for publication April 4, 2008. Accepted for publication August 16, 2008.
| References |
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β-TCR+, and 
-TCR+ cells in the recipient hematopoietic environment mediate resistance to engraftment of allogeneic donor bone marrow. J. Immunol. 168: 1636-1643.
β TCR+ T cells play a nonredundant role in the rejection of heart allografts in mice. Surgery 126: 121-126. [Medline]
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