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Submitted on March 3, 2004
From the Multi Organ Transplant Program, University Health Network (M.M., M.L., A.G., W.H., C.K., I.S., M.J., J.T., W.C., L.F., S.S., P.M., T.K.W., M.J.P., R.G., G.A.L., D.G.); Canadian Institutes of Health Research Group on Cellular and Molecular Mechanisms of Organ Injury (M.M., M.L., A.G., C.K., I.S., W.C., P.M., M.J.P., R.G., G.A.L.); Departments of Immunology (M.M., C.K., I.S., M.J., R.G., G.A.L.) and Surgery (A.G., T.K.W., R.G., D.G.), Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto; Department of Pathology, Hospital For Sick Children (M.J.P.); and St Michael’s Hospital and Department of Medicine, University of Toronto (P.M.), Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Dr Mendicino is a Canadian Institutes of Health Research Trainee in Regenerative Medicine. * To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: glfgl2{at}att.global.net.
Background--Xenografts ultimately fail as a result of acute vascular rejection (AVR), a process characterized by intravascular thrombosis, fibrin deposition, and endothelial cell activation. Methods and Results--We studied whether targeted deletion of Fgl-2, an inducible endothelial cell procoagulant, (Fgl-2-/-) in the donor prevents AVR in a mouse-to-rat cardiac xenotransplantation model. By 3 days after transplant, Fgl-2+/+ grafts developed typical features of AVR associated with increased levels of donor Fgl-2 mRNA. Grafts from Fgl-2-/- mice had reduced fibrin deposition but developed cellular rejection. Treatment with a short course of cobra venom factor and maintenance cyclosporine resulted in long-term acceptance of both Fgl-2+/+ and Fgl-2-/- grafts. On withdrawal of cyclosporine, Fgl-2+/+ grafts developed features of AVR; in contrast, Fgl-2-/- grafts again developed acute cellular rejection. Rejecting Fgl-2+/+ hearts stained positively for IgG, IgM, C3, and C5b-9, whereas rejecting Fgl-2-/- hearts had minimal Ig and complement deposition despite xenoantibodies in the serum. Furthermore, serum containing xenoantibodies failed to stain Fgl-2-/- long-term treated hearts but did stain wild-type heart tissues. Treatment of Fgl-2-/- xenografts with mycophenolate mofetil and tacrolimus, a clinically relevant immune suppression protocol, led to long-term graft acceptance. Conclusions--Deletion of Fgl-2 ameliorates AVR by downregulation of xenoantigens and may facilitate successful clinical heart xenotransplantation.
Revised on January 5, 2005
Accepted on March 8, 2005
Targeted Deletion of Fgl-2/Fibroleukin in the Donor Modulates Immunologic Response and Acute Vascular Rejection in Cardiac Xenografts
Michael Mendicino ,
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