THE EFFECTS OF NONDEPLETING CD4 TARGETED THERAPY IN PRESENSITIZED RAT RECIPIENTS OF CARDIAC ALLOGRAFTS1,2

Abstract
The immunosuppressive effects of RIB-5/2, a nondepleting anti-rat CD4 monoclonal antibody (mAb), were analyzed in a well-defined model of accelerated cardiac allograft rejection. (LEW×BN)F1 hearts are rejected within 24 hours in LEW hosts presensitized with BN skin grafts at day -7. Treatment with RIB-5/2 mAb (3.5 mg/day i.v.) at days -7 and -1, prolonged cardiac allograft survival to the median of >62 days. The long-term recipients rejected acutely third-party (Wistar-Furth) test skin grafts, without an adverse effect on the survival of the original cardiac transplants. Lymphocytes harvested from mAb-treated hosts significantly decreased proliferative responses of donor cells in mixed leukocyte reaction. The cell activation and cytokine elaboration patterns were evaluated at the mRNA and protein levels by competitive template reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction and immunohistochemistry, respectively. Cardiac allografts in CD4 mAb-treated rats at 24 hours displayed reduced CD3, CD25, tumor necrosis factor-α, interleukin (IL)-1β, IL-2, interferon (IFN)-γ, and IL-10 mRNA levels as compared to those in rejecting grafts. Equal amounts of IL-4 mRNA were detected throughout in both animal groups; the expression of IL-10 mRNA increased progressively in the treated hosts. In contrast, IFN-γ was consistently depressed after mAb therapy. The mRNA levels coding for CD3, CD25, tumor necrosis factor-α, IL-1-β, and IL-2 genes were comparable in long-surviving and rejecting allografts. The staining for IL-2R, IL-2, and IFN-γ was diminished, whereas the staining for IL-4 was either unaffected or enhanced in well-functioning grafts in RIB-5/2 mAb-treated hosts. The untreated recipients elicited strong circulating IgM allo-Ab response, which peaked around the time of cardiac rejection and then switched to IgG allo-Ab 4-7 days after heart transplantation. Treatment with RIB-5/2 mAb decreased IgM and prevented the switch into the IgG allo-Ab response. In conclusion, the ability of RIB-5/2 mAb treatment to combat accelerated rejection and to produce long-term graft acceptance is unprecedented in our experience in this model. These data provide new insights into the complexities of the cellular and humoral responsiveness, contributing to the the induction of donor-specific unresponsiveness in sensitized hosts. This study, along with our previous reports, indicate that an immune deviation in which intragraft Th1-type cytokines (primarily IFN-γ) are diminished and Th2-type cytokines (IL-4 and IL-10) are maintained represents the common effector mechanism of CD4 mAb regimens in recipients of vascularized organ allografts.

This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit: