αLFA-1 Monotherapy Induced Tolerance Is Dependent on Indirect CD8 T-Cells and Augments a Population of CD8 Cells with a Suppressor Phenotype.
1Division of Pulmonary Sciences and Critical Care Medicine, University of Colorado, Aurora, CO
2Department of Surgery, University of Colorado, Aurora, CO
3Division of Pediatric Cardiology, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL.
Meeting: 2016 American Transplant Congress
Abstract number: 86
Keywords: Graft survival, Heart, T cells, Tolerance
Session Information
Session Name: Concurrent Session: Allograft Tolerance 1: Animal Models
Session Type: Concurrent Session
Date: Sunday, June 12, 2016
Session Time: 4:30pm-6:00pm
Presentation Time: 5:06pm-5:18pm
Location: Room 306
We sought to investigate some of the requirements for tolerance induction to cardiac allografts utilizing αLFA-1 mAb monotherapy. Having previously demonstrated that CD8 T-cells are required for induction but not maintenance of tolerance, we investigated the possibility that CD8+CD28– suppressor T-cells might be involved and that there might be an associated increase of immunoglobulin like transcript 3 (ILT3) expression on antigen presenting cells (APCs).
Methods: BALB/c hearts were transplanted into B6 mice and were untreated or treated with αLFA-1 or αLFA-1 and αCD8. Draining lymph nodes were analyzed by flow cytometry for CD8 T-cell phenotype and expression of ILT3 on APCs on POD7, while those tissues harvested for in-vivo proliferation studies were observed on POD10 (day 5 post transfer of eFluor labeled TCR Tg 4C [direct CD4 anti-BALB/c] cells).
Results: αLFA-1 treated B6 recipients demonstrated significant increases in CD8+CD44hiCD28– cells compared to controls (64.6+/-1.6% vs. 25.5+/-1.7%). APCs from the draining lymph node showed an increased expression of ILT3 from 17.3+/-4.9% in controls to 31.1+/-0.6% when treated with αLFA-1. When CD8 cells were depleted from αLFA-1 treated animals ILT3 expression returned to control levels (17.5+/-0.5%). There was a significant decrease in the proportion (control; 31.7+/-4.7 % vs. 26.1+/-1.7%) and number (6390+/-1949 vs. 659+/-381) of anti-BALB/c CD4+Vβ13+ cells under αLFA-1 administration, which was reversed when CD8 cells were depleted (31.9+/-4.7%, and 1729+/-434). There was also a significant decrease in in-vivo proliferation of these cells with αLFA-1 administration (47.7+/-12.2% for control vs. 21.0+/-4.9% for αLFA-1 mAb monotherapy). Interestingly, this was not reversed by depletion of CD8 cells.
Conclusion: αLFA-1 mAb monotherapy produces potent tolerance-induction in recipients of fully vascularized cardiac allografts. CD8 T-cells (via host MHC class I expression) are critical for the induction of this tolerance. We have found that this is associated with a significant increase in T-cells of a suppressor (CD8+CD28–) phenotype, an increase in ILT3 expression on host derived APCs and a decrease in BALB/c-reactive CD4 T-cells.
CITATION INFORMATION: Plenter R, Coulombe M, Grazia T, Gill R, Zamora M, Pietra B. αLFA-1 Monotherapy Induced Tolerance Is Dependent on Indirect CD8 T-Cells and Augments a Population of CD8 Cells with a Suppressor Phenotype. Am J Transplant. 2016;16 (suppl 3).
To cite this abstract in AMA style:
Plenter R, Coulombe M, Grazia T, Gill R, Zamora M, Pietra B. αLFA-1 Monotherapy Induced Tolerance Is Dependent on Indirect CD8 T-Cells and Augments a Population of CD8 Cells with a Suppressor Phenotype. [abstract]. Am J Transplant. 2016; 16 (suppl 3). https://atcmeetingabstracts.com/abstract/lfa-1-monotherapy-induced-tolerance-is-dependent-on-indirect-cd8-t-cells-and-augments-a-population-of-cd8-cells-with-a-suppressor-phenotype/. Accessed November 22, 2024.« Back to 2016 American Transplant Congress