Volume 23, Issue 1 pp. 71-79

ADAP deficiency combined with costimulation blockade synergistically protects intestinal allografts

Jiong Tian

Jiong Tian

Kidney Disease Center, The 1st Affiliated Hospital, College of Medicine, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China

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Jose-Ignacio Rodriguez-Barbosa

Jose-Ignacio Rodriguez-Barbosa

Institute of Biomedicine, Immunobiology. University of Leon, Spain

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Oliver Pabst

Oliver Pabst

Institute of Immunology, Hannover Medical School, Hannover, Germany

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Dorothee Roemermann

Dorothee Roemermann

Department of Visceral and Transplantation Surgery, Hannover Medical School, Hannover, Germany

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Reinhold Foerster

Reinhold Foerster

Institute of Immunology, Hannover Medical School, Hannover, Germany

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Jan Beckmann

Jan Beckmann

Department of Visceral and Transplantation Surgery, Hannover Medical School, Hannover, Germany

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Matthias W. Hoffmann

Matthias W. Hoffmann

Department of General and Visceral Surgery, Raphaelsklinik Munster, Munster, Germany

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First published: 27 November 2009
Citations: 8
Matthias W. Hoffmann MD, PhD, Department of General and Visceral Surgery, Raphaelsklinik Munster, Loerstr 23, D-48143 Munster, Germany. Tel.: 0251-5007-2321; fax: 0251-5007-2329; e-mail: [email protected]

Summary

Adhesion and degranulation promoting adapter protein (ADAP) plays an important role in T cell activation. ADAP deficiency was recently found to prolong heart graft survival in mice. We investigated the role of ADAP in intestinal transplantation and the synergistic effect of ADAP deficiency and Costimulation blockade (CB). T cell proliferation and cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) activity were determined. MHC mismatched intestinal allografts was transplanted heterotopically. Anti-CD40L antibody was applied to the recipient. Upon stimulation with allogenic dendritic cells (DC), ADAP-deficient (ADAP−/−) T cells displayed impaired proliferative responses compared with that of wild-type (WT) T cells. In contrast, the CTL activity in ADAP−/− mice was comparable with that of WT mice. Rejection of intestinal allografts was ameliorated, but not prevented in ADAP−/− mice. Although CB alone was not sufficient to mitigate the rejection, the combination of CB and ADAP deficiency profoundly inhibited rejection. This was accompanied by less infiltration and activation of host lymphocytes in the gut-associated lymphoid tissue of intestinal allografts. ADAP deficiency combined with CB protected the intestinal allografts synergistically. ADAP could be a novel target in the induction phase of the immune responses in organ transplantation.

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