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Interruption of OX40L signaling prevents costimulation blockade–resistant allograft rejection
William H. Kitchens, Ying Dong, David V. Mathews, Cynthia P. Breeden, Elizabeth Strobert, Maria E. Fuentes, Christian P. Larsen, Mandy L. Ford, Andrew B. Adams
William H. Kitchens, Ying Dong, David V. Mathews, Cynthia P. Breeden, Elizabeth Strobert, Maria E. Fuentes, Christian P. Larsen, Mandy L. Ford, Andrew B. Adams
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Research Article Immunology Transplantation

Interruption of OX40L signaling prevents costimulation blockade–resistant allograft rejection

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Abstract

The potential of costimulation blockade to serve as a novel transplant immunosuppression strategy has been explored for over 20 years, culminating in the recent clinical approval of belatacept for renal transplant patients. Despite improving long-term graft function and survival compared with calcineurin inhibitors, clinical acceptance of belatacept has been hindered by elevated rates of acute rejection. We examined the signaling pathways required to activate costimulation blockade–resistant alloreactive T cells and identified the OX40/OX40L secondary costimulatory pathway as a promising target. We next sought to improve the clinical efficacy of traditional costimulation blockade using belatacept by coupling it with anti-OX40L. Using a murine transplant model, we demonstrate that combined blockade enhances the suppression of alloreactive T cell proliferation and effector functions including both cytokine release and cytotoxic degranulation. We also show that anti-OX40L may be particularly useful in targeting alloreactive memory T cell responses that are relatively unaffected by traditional costimulation blockade regimens. Finally, we translated this therapy to a clinically relevant nonhuman primate renal transplant model, validating the efficacy of this regimen in a potentially novel steroid- and calcineurin inhibitor–free immunosuppression regimen.

Authors

William H. Kitchens, Ying Dong, David V. Mathews, Cynthia P. Breeden, Elizabeth Strobert, Maria E. Fuentes, Christian P. Larsen, Mandy L. Ford, Andrew B. Adams

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Figure 5

Combined blockade impacts gene expression of donor-specific memory T cells compared with costimulatory blockade (CoB) alone.

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Combined blockade impacts gene expression of donor-specific memory T cel...
Magnet-assisted sorted OT-I cells recovered from draining lymph nodes (dLNs) of mOVA skin graft recipients administered different immunosuppression regimens were subjected to gene expression analysis after sacrifice on postoperative day 10. For controls, naive OT-I cells and memory OT-I cells (Tmem) from untransplanted mice were also analyzed. The heatmap of gene expression in recipients treated with CoB alone rather than combined CoB + anti-OX40L is shown. RNASeq transcriptome data was expressed in reads per million kilobases (RPKM) for normalization, and within each gene (i.e., row), gene expression within each treatment group is graphically depicted from lowest expression (low RPKM, white bars) to highest expression (high RPKM, dark blue bars).

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