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  • Pilat, Nina; Sabler, Philipp; Klaus, Christoph; Mahr, Benedikt; Unger, Lukas; Hock, Karin; Wiletel, Mario; Schwarz, Christoph; Kristo, Ivan; Regele, Heinz; Wekerle, Thomas

    The Journal of heart and lung transplantation, 09/2018, Letnik: 37, Številka: 9
    Journal Article

    The mixed chimerism approach for intentional induction of donor-specific tolerance was shown to be successful in various models from mice to humans. For transplant patients, the approach would obviate the need for long-term immunosuppression and associated side effects; moreover, it would preclude the risk of late graft loss due to chronic rejection. Widespread clinical application is hindered by toxicities related to recipient pre-conditioning. Herein we aimed to investigate a clinically relevant protocol for tolerance induction to cardiac allografts, sparing CD40 blockade or T-cell depletion. B6 mice were conditioned with non-myeloablative total body irradiation, fully mismatched BALB/c bone marrow cells, and short-term therapy, based on either anti- lymphocyte function-associated antigen-1 (anti-LFA-1) or anti-CD40L. Multilineage chimerism was followed by flow-cytometric analysis, tolerance was assessed with skin and heart allografts from fully or major histocompatibility complex-mismatched donors. Mechanisms of tolerance were investigated by analysis of donor-specific antibodies (DSAs), mixed lymphocyte reaction (MLR) assays, and deletion of donor-reactive T cells. We found that the combination of cytotoxic T-lymphocyte antigen 4 immunoglobulin (CTLA4Ig) and rapamycin with LFA-1 blockade enhanced bone marrow engraftment and led to more efficient T-cell engraftment and subsequent tolerization. Although fully mismatched skin grafts were chronically rejected, primarily vascularized heart allografts survived indefinitely and without signs of chronic rejection, independent of minor antigen mismatches. We have demonstarted a robust protocol for the induction of tolerance for cardiac allografts in the absence of CD40 blockade. Our findings demonstrate the potential of a clinically relevant minimal conditioning protocol designed to induce lifelong immunologic tolerance toward cardiac allografts.