Knockdown of swine leukocyte antigen expression in porcine lung transplants enables graft survival without immunosuppression

Author:

Figueiredo Constanca1ORCID,Chen-Wacker Chen1ORCID,Salman Jawad2,Carvalho-Oliveira Marco1ORCID,Monthé Thierry Siemeni3,Höffler Klaus2,Rother Tamina1,Hacker Karolin2,Valdivia Emilio1,Pogozhykh Olena1ORCID,Hammer Sabine4ORCID,Sommer Wiebke5,Yuzefovych Yuliia1,Wenzel Nadine1,Haverich Axel2,Warnecke Gregor5ORCID,Blasczyk Rainer1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Transfusion Medicine and Transplant Engineering, Hannover Medical School, 30625 Hannover, Germany.

2. Department of Cardiothoracic, Transplant and Vascular Surgery, Hannover Medical School, 30625 Hannover, Germany.

3. Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Jena University Hospital, 07747 Jena, Germany.

4. Institute of Immunology, Department of Pathobiology, University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna, 1210 Vienna, Austria.

5. Department of Cardiac Surgery, University of Kiel, 24105 Kiel, Germany.

Abstract

Immune rejection remains the major obstacle to long-term survival of allogeneic lung transplants. The expression of major histocompatibility complex molecules and minor histocompatibility antigens triggers allogeneic immune responses that can lead to allograft rejection. Transplant outcomes therefore depend on long-term immunosuppression, which is associated with severe side effects. To address this problem, we investigated the effect of genetically engineered transplants with permanently down-regulated swine leukocyte antigen (SLA) expression to prevent rejection in a porcine allogeneic lung transplantation (LTx) model. Minipig donor lungs with unmodified SLA expression (control group, n = 7) or with modified SLA expression (treatment group, n = 7) were used to evaluate the effects of SLA knockdown on allograft survival and on the nature and strength of immune responses after terminating an initial 4-week period of immunosuppression after LTx. Genetic engineering to down-regulate SLA expression was achieved during ex vivo lung perfusion by lentiviral transduction of short hairpin RNAs targeting mRNAs encoding β2-microglobulin and class II transactivator. Whereas all grafts in the control group were rejected within 3 months, five of seven animals in the treatment group maintained graft survival without immunosuppression during the 2-year monitoring period. Compared with controls, SLA-silenced lung recipients had lower donor-specific antibodies and proinflammatory cytokine concentrations in the serum. Together, these data demonstrate a survival benefit of SLA–down-regulated lung transplants in the absence of immunosuppression.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

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