Maruyama S, Cantu E, DeMartino C, Wang C Y, Chen J, Al-Mohanna F, Nakeeb S M, D'Agati V, Pernis B, Galili U, Godman G, Stern D M, Andres G
Department of Physiology, College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia University, New York, New York, USA.
Am J Pathol. 1999 Nov;155(5):1635-49. doi: 10.1016/s0002-9440(10)65479-x.
As barriers to xenotransplantation are surmounted, such as suppression of hyperacute rejection allowing improved graft survival, it becomes important to define longer-term host-xenograft interactions. To this end we have prepared in baboons high titer anti-alpha-Galactosyl (alphaGal) and anti-porcine aortic endothelial cell antibodies, similar to human natural xenoantibodies and reactive with epitopes of thyroglobulin, laminin, and heparan sulfate proteoglycans. When injected into pigs with a protocol similar to that used in the rat to show the nephritogenic potential of heterologous anti-laminin and anti-heparan sulfate proteoglycan antibodies, baboon immunoglobulins bound first to renal vascular endothelium, and later to interstitial cells, especially fibroblasts and macrophages, and to antigens in basement membranes and extracellular matrix, where they colocalized with laminin- and heparan sulfate proteoglycan-antibodies, and with bound Griffonia simplicifolia B4. A similar binding was observed in other organs. The pigs did not develop an acute complement-dependent inflammation, but rather chronic lesions of the basement membranes and the extracellular matrix. Incubation of renal fibroblasts with baboon anti-alpha-Galactosyl antibodies resulted in increased synthesis of transforming growth factor-beta and collagen, suggesting a possible basis for the fibrotic response. The results demonstrate that in this experimental model a consequence of alphaGal antibody interaction with porcine tissues, is immunoreactivity with alphaGal on matrix molecules and interstitial cells, priming mechanisms leading to fibrosis resembling that in chronic allograft rejection. The possibility that similar lesions may develop in long-surviving pig xenografts is discussed.
随着异种移植障碍的克服,比如抑制超急性排斥反应从而提高移植物存活率,明确宿主与异种移植物的长期相互作用变得很重要。为此,我们在狒狒体内制备了高滴度的抗α-半乳糖(αGal)抗体和抗猪主动脉内皮细胞抗体,这些抗体类似于人类天然异种抗体,能与甲状腺球蛋白、层粘连蛋白和硫酸乙酰肝素蛋白聚糖的表位发生反应。当按照与在大鼠中使用的方案类似的方式将这些抗体注射到猪体内,以显示异种抗层粘连蛋白和抗硫酸乙酰肝素蛋白聚糖抗体的致肾炎潜力时,狒狒免疫球蛋白首先结合到肾血管内皮,随后结合到间质细胞,尤其是成纤维细胞和巨噬细胞,以及基底膜和细胞外基质中的抗原,在这些部位它们与层粘连蛋白和硫酸乙酰肝素蛋白聚糖抗体以及结合的单叶豆凝集素B4共定位。在其他器官也观察到了类似的结合。猪没有发生急性补体依赖性炎症,而是出现了基底膜和细胞外基质的慢性病变。用狒狒抗α-半乳糖抗体孵育肾成纤维细胞导致转化生长因子-β和胶原蛋白的合成增加,这提示了纤维化反应的可能基础。结果表明,在这个实验模型中,αGal抗体与猪组织相互作用的一个后果是与基质分子和间质细胞上的αGal发生免疫反应,引发类似于慢性同种异体移植排斥反应中的纤维化机制。文中讨论了在长期存活的猪异种移植物中可能出现类似病变的可能性。