First Author | Colvin BL | Year | 2005 |
Journal | Am J Transplant | Volume | 5 |
Issue | 9 | Pages | 2104-13 |
PubMed ID | 16095489 | Mgi Jnum | J:133225 |
Mgi Id | MGI:3778118 | Doi | 10.1111/j.1600-6143.2005.00996.x |
Citation | Colvin BL, et al. (2005) CXCL9 antagonism further extends prolonged cardiac allograft survival in CCL19/CCL21-deficient mice. Am J Transplant 5(9):2104-13 |
abstractText | CCL19/MIP-3beta and CCL21/SLC are essential for chemotactic recruitment of mature dendritic cells (DC) to T-cell areas of secondary lymphoid tissue. Paucity of lymph node T-cells (plt/plt) mice lack CCL21-serine (ser) and CCL19 expression. We tested plt/plt and wild type (wt) BALB/c (H2d) mice as recipients of heart or skin allografts from C57BL/10J (H2b) donors. Donor DC trafficking to secondary lymphoid tissue was markedly reduced in plt heart but not skin allograft recipients. Heart, but not skin grafts survived significantly longer in plt recipients. Accordingly, T cells from plt heart transplant recipients demonstrated poor anti-donor responses in ex vivo MLR, compared to wt heart or wt and plt skin recipients. Moreover, donor-reactive T cells from plt heart recipients exhibited Th2-skewing in comparison to T cells from wt heart or skin graft recipients. Anti-CXCL9/Mig was administered for 2 weeks post-transplant to determine whether impairment of activated T-cell migration could further prolong cardiac allograft survival in plt recipients. CXCL9-antagonism extended graft survival significantly only in plt mice, likely due, in part, to retention of alloactivated T cells in secondary lymphoid tissue/reduction of graft-infiltrating T cells. Thus, targeting DC and activated T-cell migration concomitantly has additive effects in prolonging heart graft survival with potential for therapeutic application. |