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Long-term tolerance of islet allografts in nonhuman primates induced by apoptotic donor leukocytes.

Amar SinghSabarinathan RamachandranMelanie J GrahamSaeed DaneshmandiDavid HellerWilma Lucia Suarez-PinzonAppakalai N BalamuruganJeffrey D AnsiteJoshua J WilhelmAmy YangYing ZhangNagendra P PalaniJuan E AbrahanteChristopher BurlakStephen D MillerXunrong LuoBernhard J Hering
Published in: Nature communications (2019)
Immune tolerance to allografts has been pursued for decades as an important goal in transplantation. Administration of apoptotic donor splenocytes effectively induces antigen-specific tolerance to allografts in murine studies. Here we show that two peritransplant infusions of apoptotic donor leukocytes under short-term immunotherapy with antagonistic anti-CD40 antibody 2C10R4, rapamycin, soluble tumor necrosis factor receptor and anti-interleukin 6 receptor antibody induce long-term (≥1 year) tolerance to islet allografts in 5 of 5 nonsensitized, MHC class I-disparate, and one MHC class II DRB allele-matched rhesus macaques. Tolerance in our preclinical model is associated with a regulatory network, involving antigen-specific Tr1 cells exhibiting a distinct transcriptome and indirect specificity for matched MHC class II and mismatched class I peptides. Apoptotic donor leukocyte infusions warrant continued investigation as a cellular, nonchimeric and translatable method for inducing antigen-specific tolerance in transplantation.
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