1. The Knife’s Edge of Tolerance: Inducing Stable Multilineage Mixed Chimerism but With a Significant Risk of CMV Reactivation and Disease in Rhesus Macaques
- Author
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Shan Yu, Dollnovan Tran, Kelly Hamby, Christian P. Larsen, Sanjeev Gumber, Benjamin Watkins, Allan D. Kirk, Charlotte E. Hotchkiss, Karnail Singh, Amitinder Kaur, Jennifer Lane, Andrew B. Adams, Linda C. Cendales, Bruce R. Blazar, Scott N. Furlan, Victor Tkachev, Leslie S. Kean, Katie Zeleski, and Hengqi Zheng
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Transplantation Conditioning ,Myeloid ,T-Lymphocytes ,medicine.medical_treatment ,T cell ,Cytomegalovirus ,Graft vs Host Disease ,Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation ,030230 surgery ,Communicable Diseases ,Belatacept ,Article ,Immune tolerance ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Transplantation, Homologous ,Immunology and Allergy ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Transplantation Chimera ,Transplantation ,business.industry ,Graft Survival ,Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation ,Skin Transplantation ,Total body irradiation ,Macaca mulatta ,Regimen ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cytomegalovirus Infections ,Immunology ,Transplantation Tolerance ,Virus Activation ,business ,Busulfan ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Although stable mixed-hematopoietic chimerism induces robust immune tolerance to solid organ allografts in mice, the translation of this strategy to large animal models and to patients has been challenging. We have previously shown that in MHC-matched nonhuman primates (NHPs), a busulfan plus combined belatacept and anti-CD154-based regimen could induce long-lived myeloid chimerism, but without T cell chimerism. In that setting, donor chimerism was eventually rejected, and tolerance to skin allografts was not achieved. Here, we describe an adaptation of this strategy, with the addition of low-dose total body irradiation to our conditioning regimen. This strategy has successfully induced multilineage hematopoietic chimerism in MHC-matched transplants that was stable for as long as 24 months posttransplant, the entire length of analysis. High-level T cell chimerism was achieved and associated with significant donor-specific prolongation of skin graft acceptance. However, we also observed significant infectious toxicities, prominently including cytomegalovirus (CMV) reactivation and end-organ disease in the setting of functional defects in anti-CMV T cell immunity. These results underscore the significant benefits that multilineage chimerism-induction approaches may represent to transplant patients as well as the inherent risks, and they emphasize the precision with which a clinically successful regimen will need to be formulated and then validated in NHP models.
- Published
- 2017
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