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Inhibition of obliterative airway disease development following heterotopic murine tracheal transplantation by costimulatory molecule blockade using anti-CD40 ligand alone or in combination with donor bone marrow
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Inhibition of obliterative airway disease development following heterotopic murine tracheal transplantation by costimulatory molecule blockade using anti-CD40 ligand alone or in combination with donor bone marrow

Félix G. Fernández, Brice McKane, Shawn Marshbank, G. Alexander Patterson and Thalachallour Mohanakumar
The Journal of heart and lung transplantation, Vol.24(7), pp.S232-S238
07/01/2005
PMID: 15993779

Abstract

Introduction: Obliterative airway disease (OAD) development in heterotopic murine tracheal allografts, a model of obliterative bronchiolitis after lung transplantation, is immunologically mediated. Whether tolerance induction by the administration of anti-CD40 ligand monoclonal anti-body (MR-1) alone or in conjunction with donor-derived bone marrow cells (BMCs) can prevent the development of OAD was tested in this study. Methods: BALB/c tracheal allografts were heterotopically transplanted into C57BL/6 recipients. Group 1 received no treatment. Group 2 received multiple infusions of donor BMCs intravenously. Group 3 was administered MR-1 intraperitoneally. Group 4 received donor BMCs and MR-1. Allografts were harvested at several time points post-transplantation and examined for the development of OAD. Results: Group 1 developed cellular infiltration and epithelial damage by Day 15 post-transplant and OAD by Day 28, evidenced by complete obliteration of the tracheal lumen. Group 2 developed OAD with similar kinetics to Group 1. Group 3 had no evidence of OAD at 28 days. At Days 45 to 90, moderate cellular infiltration, epithelial metaplasia, and a minimal narrowing of the tracheal lumen were evident. OAD developed by Day 120. Group 4 mice had patent tracheal lumens even at 120 days post-transplantation, with only mild epithelial metaplasia and luminal narrowing noted. Conclusions: The administration of MR-1 alone in combination with infusions of donor bone marrow cells significantly attenuated the development of OAD. Tolerance-inducing regimens such as this deserve further investigation in the prevention of post-lung transplant obliterative bronchiolitis following human lung transplantation. Copyright © 2005 by the International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation.

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