1. Academic Validation
  2. Monotherapy With Anti-CD70 Antibody Causes Long-Term Mouse Cardiac Allograft Acceptance With Induction of Tolerogenic Dendritic Cells

Monotherapy With Anti-CD70 Antibody Causes Long-Term Mouse Cardiac Allograft Acceptance With Induction of Tolerogenic Dendritic Cells

  • Front Immunol. 2021 Feb 19:11:555996. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.555996.
Jing Zhao 1 2 3 Weitao Que 1 Xiaoxiao Du 4 Masayuki Fujino 1 5 Naotsugu Ichimaru 2 Hisashi Ueta 6 Nobuko Tokuda 6 Wen-Zhi Guo 4 Piotr Zabrocki 7 Hans de Haard 7 Norio Nonomura 2 Xiao-Kang Li 1 4
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Division of Transplantation Immunology, National Research Institute for Child Health and Development, Tokyo, Japan.
  • 2 Department of Specific Organ Regulation (Urology), Osaka University Graduate School of Medicine, Osaka, Japan.
  • 3 Department of General Surgery, The First Affiliated Hospital of Soochow University, Suzhou, China.
  • 4 Department of Hepatobiliary and Pancreatic Surgery, The First Affiliated Hospital of Zhengzhou University, Zhengzhou, China.
  • 5 AIDS Research Center, National Institute of Infectious Diseases, Tokyo, Japan.
  • 6 Department of Anatomy (Macro), Dokkyo Medical University, Tochigi, Japan.
  • 7 argenx BV, Zwijnaarde, Belgium.
Abstract

Allograft rejection has been an obstacle for the long-term survival of patients. CD70, a tumor necrosis factor (TNF) family member critically expressed on antigen-presenting cells and strongly but transiently up-regulated during lymphocyte activation, represents an important co-stimulatory molecule that induces effective T cell responses. We used a mouse heterotopic cardiac transplantation model to evaluate the effects of monotherapy with the antibody targeting mouse CD70 (FR70) on transplantation tolerance and its immunoregulatory activity. FR70-treated C3H recipient mice permanently accepted B6 fully mismatched cardiac allografts. Consistent with the graft survival, the infiltration of CD8+ T cells in the graft was reduced, dendritic cells were differentiated into a tolerogenic status, and the number of regulatory T cells was elevated both in the graft and the recipient's spleen. In addition, naïve C3H given an adoptive transfer of spleen cells from the primary recipients with FR70 treatment accepted a heart graft from a matching B6 donor but not third-party BALB/c mice. Our findings show that treatment with FR70 induced regulatory cells and inhibited cytotoxic T cell proliferation, which led to long-term acceptance of mouse cardiac allografts. These findings highlight the potential role of anti-CD70 antibodies as a clinically effective treatment for allograft rejection.

Keywords

CD70; allograft; dendritic cell; regulatory T cell; rejection; tolerance.

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