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      Combinations of anti-LFA-1, everolimus, anti-CD40 ligand, and allogeneic bone marrow induce central transplantation tolerance through hemopoietic chimerism, including protection from chronic heart allograft rejection.

      The Journal of Immunology Author Choice
      Adjuvants, Immunologic, administration & dosage, Animals, Antibodies, Blocking, Bone Marrow Transplantation, immunology, CD40 Ligand, Drug Therapy, Combination, Female, Graft Enhancement, Immunologic, methods, Graft Rejection, pathology, prevention & control, Heart Transplantation, Hematopoiesis, Isoantibodies, biosynthesis, Lymphocyte Culture Test, Mixed, Lymphocyte Depletion, Lymphocyte Function-Associated Antigen-1, Mice, Mice, Inbred BALB C, Mice, Inbred C3H, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Skin Transplantation, Species Specificity, T-Lymphocytes, drug effects, Transplantation Chimera, Transplantation Tolerance

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          Abstract

          Central transplantation tolerance through hemopoietic chimerism initially requires inhibition of allogeneic stem cell or bone marrow (BM) rejection, as previously achieved in murine models by combinations of T cell costimulation blockade. We have evaluated LFA-1 blockade as part of regimens to support mixed hemopoietic chimerism development upon fully allogeneic BALB/c BM transfer to nonirradiated busulfan-treated B6 recipient mice. Combining anti-LFA-1 with anti-CD40 ligand (CD40L) induced high incidences and levels of stable multilineage hemopoietic chimerism comparable to chimerism achieved with anti-CD40L and everolimus (40-O-(2-hydroxyethyl)-rapamycin) under conditions where neither Ab alone was effective. The combination of anti-LFA-1 with everolimus also resulted in high levels of chimerism, albeit with a lower incidence of stability. Inhibition of acute allograft rejection critically depended on chimerism stability, even if maintained at very low levels around 1%, as was the case for some recipients without busulfan conditioning. Chimerism stability correlated with a significant donor BM-dependent loss of host-derived Vbeta11(+) T cells 3 mo after BM transplantation (Tx). Combinations of anti-CD40L with anti-LFA-1 or everolimus also prevented acute rejection of skin allografts transplanted before established chimerism, albeit not independently of allospecific BMTx. All skin and heart allografts transplanted to stable chimeras 3 and 5 mo after BMTx, respectively, were protected from acute rejection. Moreover, this included prevention of heart allograft vascular intimal thickening ("chronic rejection").

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