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CD4 Depletion or CD40L Blockade Results in Antigen-Specific Tolerance in a Red Blood Cell Alloimmunization Model

Approximately 3–10% of human red blood cell (RBC) transfusion recipients form alloantibodies to non-self, non-ABO blood group antigens expressed on donor RBCs, with these alloantibodies having the potential to be clinically significant in transfusion and pregnancy settings. However, the majority of...

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Autores principales: Natarajan, Prabitha, Liu, Dong, Patel, Seema R., Santhanakrishnan, Manjula, Beitler, Daniel, Liu, Jingchun, Gibb, David R., Liepkalns, Justine S., Madrid, David J., Eisenbarth, Stephanie C., Stowell, Sean R., Hendrickson, Jeanne E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5545689/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28824633
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2017.00907
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author Natarajan, Prabitha
Liu, Dong
Patel, Seema R.
Santhanakrishnan, Manjula
Beitler, Daniel
Liu, Jingchun
Gibb, David R.
Liepkalns, Justine S.
Madrid, David J.
Eisenbarth, Stephanie C.
Stowell, Sean R.
Hendrickson, Jeanne E.
author_facet Natarajan, Prabitha
Liu, Dong
Patel, Seema R.
Santhanakrishnan, Manjula
Beitler, Daniel
Liu, Jingchun
Gibb, David R.
Liepkalns, Justine S.
Madrid, David J.
Eisenbarth, Stephanie C.
Stowell, Sean R.
Hendrickson, Jeanne E.
author_sort Natarajan, Prabitha
collection PubMed
description Approximately 3–10% of human red blood cell (RBC) transfusion recipients form alloantibodies to non-self, non-ABO blood group antigens expressed on donor RBCs, with these alloantibodies having the potential to be clinically significant in transfusion and pregnancy settings. However, the majority of transfused individuals never form detectable alloantibodies. Expanding upon observations that children initially transfused with RBCs at a young age are less likely to form alloantibodies throughout their lives, we hypothesized that “non-responders” may not only be ignorant of antigens on RBCs but instead tolerized. We investigated this question in a reductionist murine model, in which transgenic donors express the human glycophorin A (hGPA) antigen in an RBC-specific manner. Although wild-type mice treated with poly IC and transfused with hGPA RBCs generated robust anti-hGPA IgG alloantibodies that led to rapid clearance of incompatible RBCs, those transfused in the absence of an adjuvant failed to become alloimmunized. Animals depleted of CD4(+) cells or treated with CD40L blockade prior to initial hGPA RBC exposure, in the presence of poly IC, failed to generate detectable anti-hGPA IgG alloantibodies. These non-responders to a primary transfusion remained unable to generate anti-hGPA IgG alloantibodies upon secondary hGPA exposure and did not prematurely clear transfused hGPA RBCs even after their CD4 cells had returned or their CD40L blockade had resolved. This observed tolerance was antigen (hGPA) specific, as robust IgG responses to transfused RBCs expressing a third-party antigen occurred in all studied groups. Experiments completed in an RBC alloimmunization model that allowed evaluation of antigen-specific CD4(+) T-cells (HOD (hen egg lysozyme, ovalbumin, and human duffy(b))) demonstrated that CD40L blockade prevented the expansion of ovalbumin 323-339 specific T-cells after HOD RBC transfusion and also prevented germinal center formation. Taken together, our data suggest that recipients may indeed become tolerized to antigens expressed on RBCs, with the recipient’s immune status upon initial RBC exposure dictating future responses. Although questions surrounding mechanism(s) and sustainability of tolerance remain, these data lay the groundwork for future work investigating RBC immunity versus tolerance in reductionist models and in humans.
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spelling pubmed-55456892017-08-18 CD4 Depletion or CD40L Blockade Results in Antigen-Specific Tolerance in a Red Blood Cell Alloimmunization Model Natarajan, Prabitha Liu, Dong Patel, Seema R. Santhanakrishnan, Manjula Beitler, Daniel Liu, Jingchun Gibb, David R. Liepkalns, Justine S. Madrid, David J. Eisenbarth, Stephanie C. Stowell, Sean R. Hendrickson, Jeanne E. Front Immunol Immunology Approximately 3–10% of human red blood cell (RBC) transfusion recipients form alloantibodies to non-self, non-ABO blood group antigens expressed on donor RBCs, with these alloantibodies having the potential to be clinically significant in transfusion and pregnancy settings. However, the majority of transfused individuals never form detectable alloantibodies. Expanding upon observations that children initially transfused with RBCs at a young age are less likely to form alloantibodies throughout their lives, we hypothesized that “non-responders” may not only be ignorant of antigens on RBCs but instead tolerized. We investigated this question in a reductionist murine model, in which transgenic donors express the human glycophorin A (hGPA) antigen in an RBC-specific manner. Although wild-type mice treated with poly IC and transfused with hGPA RBCs generated robust anti-hGPA IgG alloantibodies that led to rapid clearance of incompatible RBCs, those transfused in the absence of an adjuvant failed to become alloimmunized. Animals depleted of CD4(+) cells or treated with CD40L blockade prior to initial hGPA RBC exposure, in the presence of poly IC, failed to generate detectable anti-hGPA IgG alloantibodies. These non-responders to a primary transfusion remained unable to generate anti-hGPA IgG alloantibodies upon secondary hGPA exposure and did not prematurely clear transfused hGPA RBCs even after their CD4 cells had returned or their CD40L blockade had resolved. This observed tolerance was antigen (hGPA) specific, as robust IgG responses to transfused RBCs expressing a third-party antigen occurred in all studied groups. Experiments completed in an RBC alloimmunization model that allowed evaluation of antigen-specific CD4(+) T-cells (HOD (hen egg lysozyme, ovalbumin, and human duffy(b))) demonstrated that CD40L blockade prevented the expansion of ovalbumin 323-339 specific T-cells after HOD RBC transfusion and also prevented germinal center formation. Taken together, our data suggest that recipients may indeed become tolerized to antigens expressed on RBCs, with the recipient’s immune status upon initial RBC exposure dictating future responses. Although questions surrounding mechanism(s) and sustainability of tolerance remain, these data lay the groundwork for future work investigating RBC immunity versus tolerance in reductionist models and in humans. Frontiers Media S.A. 2017-08-07 /pmc/articles/PMC5545689/ /pubmed/28824633 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2017.00907 Text en Copyright © 2017 Natarajan, Liu, Patel, Santhanakrishnan, Beitler, Liu, Gibb, Liepkalns, Madrid, Eisenbarth, Stowell and Hendrickson. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Immunology
Natarajan, Prabitha
Liu, Dong
Patel, Seema R.
Santhanakrishnan, Manjula
Beitler, Daniel
Liu, Jingchun
Gibb, David R.
Liepkalns, Justine S.
Madrid, David J.
Eisenbarth, Stephanie C.
Stowell, Sean R.
Hendrickson, Jeanne E.
CD4 Depletion or CD40L Blockade Results in Antigen-Specific Tolerance in a Red Blood Cell Alloimmunization Model
title CD4 Depletion or CD40L Blockade Results in Antigen-Specific Tolerance in a Red Blood Cell Alloimmunization Model
title_full CD4 Depletion or CD40L Blockade Results in Antigen-Specific Tolerance in a Red Blood Cell Alloimmunization Model
title_fullStr CD4 Depletion or CD40L Blockade Results in Antigen-Specific Tolerance in a Red Blood Cell Alloimmunization Model
title_full_unstemmed CD4 Depletion or CD40L Blockade Results in Antigen-Specific Tolerance in a Red Blood Cell Alloimmunization Model
title_short CD4 Depletion or CD40L Blockade Results in Antigen-Specific Tolerance in a Red Blood Cell Alloimmunization Model
title_sort cd4 depletion or cd40l blockade results in antigen-specific tolerance in a red blood cell alloimmunization model
topic Immunology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5545689/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28824633
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2017.00907
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