Yamada Kazuhiko, Tasaki Masayuki, Sekijima Mitsuhiro, Wilkinson Robert A, Villani Vincenzo, Moran Shannon G, Cormack Taylor A, Hanekamp Isabel M, Hawley Robert J, Arn J Scott, Fishman Jay A, Shimizu Akira, Sachs David H
Transplantation Biology Research Center, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Cambridge, MA. 1 Address correspondence to: Kazuhiko Yamada, M.D., Ph.D., Organ Transplantation Tolerance and Xenotransplantation Laboratory, Transplantation Biology Research Center, Massachusetts General Hospital, MGH-East, Bldg. 149-9019, 13th Street, Boston, MA, 02129.
Transplantation. 2014 Aug 27;98(4):411-8. doi: 10.1097/TP.0000000000000232.
Recent survivals of our pig-to-baboon kidney xenotransplants have been markedly shorter than the graft survivals we previously reported. The discovery of high levels of porcine cytomegalovirus (pCMV) in one of the rejected xenografts led us to evaluate whether this reduction in graft survival might be because of the inadvertent introduction of pCMV into our α1,3-galactosyltransferase gene knockout swine herd.
Archived frozen sections of xeno-kidney grafts over the past 10 years were analyzed for the presence of pCMV, using real-time polymerase chain reaction. Three prospective pig-to-baboon renal transplants using kidneys from swine delivered by cesarean section (C-section) and raised in isolation were likewise analyzed.
Kidney grafts, from which 8 of the 18 archived samples were derived were found to be pCMV-negative, showed a mean graft survival of 48.3 days and were from transplants performed before 2008. None showed signs of disseminated intravascular coagulopathy and were lost because of proteinuria or infectious complications. In contrast, 10 of the archived samples were pCMV positive, were from kidney transplants with a mean graft survival of 14.1 days, had been performed after 2008, and demonstrated early vascular changes and decreased platelet counts. Three prospective xenografts from swine delivered by C-section were pCMV negative and survived an average of 53.0 days.
Decreased survivals of α1,3-galactosyltransferase gene knockout renal xenografts in this laboratory correlate temporally with latent pCMV in the donor animals and pCMV in the rejected xeno-kidneys. Transmission of pCMV to swine offspring may be avoided by C-section delivery and scrupulous isolation of donor animals.
我们最近进行的猪到狒狒的肾脏异种移植的存活时间明显短于我们之前报道的移植物存活时间。在一个被排斥的异种移植物中发现高水平的猪巨细胞病毒(pCMV),这促使我们评估移植物存活时间的缩短是否可能是由于pCMV意外引入了我们的α1,3-半乳糖基转移酶基因敲除猪群中。
使用实时聚合酶链反应分析过去10年中存档的异种肾脏移植物的冷冻切片中是否存在pCMV。同样对使用剖宫产(C-section)分娩并单独饲养的猪的肾脏进行的3例前瞻性猪到狒狒的肾移植进行了分析。
18个存档样本中有8个来源的肾脏移植物被发现为pCMV阴性,其平均移植物存活时间为48.3天,来自2008年之前进行的移植。没有一个显示弥散性血管内凝血的迹象,并且因蛋白尿或感染并发症而丧失功能。相比之下,10个存档样本为pCMV阳性,来自平均移植物存活时间为14.1天的肾移植,这些移植在2008年之后进行,并表现出早期血管变化和血小板计数下降。3例来自剖宫产分娩猪的前瞻性异种移植物为pCMV阴性,平均存活53.0天。
本实验室中α1,3-半乳糖基转移酶基因敲除肾异种移植物存活时间的缩短在时间上与供体动物中的潜伏pCMV以及被排斥的异种肾脏中的pCMV相关。通过剖宫产分娩和严格隔离供体动物可以避免pCMV传播给猪后代。