Interleukin-7 receptor blockade by an anti-CD127 monoclonal antibody in nonhuman primate kidney transplantation.
Hoa Le MaiThi Van Ha NguyenJulien BranchereauNicolas PoirierKarine RenaudinCaroline MaryLyssia BelarifDavid MinaultJeremy HervouetStéphanie Le Bas-BerdardetJean-Paul SoulillouBernard VanhoveGilles BlanchoSophie BrouardPublished in: American journal of transplantation : official journal of the American Society of Transplantation and the American Society of Transplant Surgeons (2019)
IL-7 is an important cytokine for T cell lymphopoiesis. Blockade of the IL-7 signaling pathway has been shown to induce long-term graft survival or graft tolerance in murine transplant models through inhibiting T cell homeostasis and favoring immunoregulation. In this study, we assessed for the first time the effects of a blocking anti-human cluster of differentiation 127 (CD127) mAb administered in combination with low-dose tacrolimus or thymoglobulin in a life-sustaining kidney allograft model in baboons. Contrary to our expectation, the addition of an anti-CD127 mAb to the treatment protocols did not prolong graft survival compared to low-dose tacrolimus alone or thymoglobulin alone. Anti-CD127 mAb administration led to full CD127 receptor occupancy during the follow-up period. However, all treated animals lost their kidney graft between 1 week and 2 weeks after transplantation. Unlike in rodents, in nonhuman primates, anti-CD127 mAb treatment does not decrease the absolute numbers of lymphocyte and lymphocyte subsets and does not effectively inhibit postdepletional T cell proliferation and homeostasis, suggesting that IL-7 is not a limiting factor for T cell homeostasis in primates.
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