Abstract
Chronic and acute graft-versus-host disease (cGVHD and aGVHD) result from donor cells responding to host disparate MHC alleles. In cGVHD (H-2(d) → H- 2(bd)), heightened polyclonal immunoglobulin production is due to the interaction of donor allospecific helper T cells (T(h)) and the host B cells. In vivo administration of antibody to the ligand for CD40, gp39, blocked cGVHD-induced serum anti-DNA autoantibodies, IgE production, spontaneous immunoglobulin production in vitro, and associated splenomegaly. Antibody production remained inhibited for extended periods of time after termination of anti-gp39 administration. Antiallogeneic CTL responses induced in aGVHD were also prevented by the in vivo administration of anti-gp39 as was the associated splenomegaly. These data suggest that CD40-gp39 interactions are critical in GVHD and that CD40-gp39 may be a valuable ligand-receptor pair for targeting immunotherapeutic agents to control GVHD.
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Durie, F. H., Aruffo, A., Ledbetter, J., Crassi, K. M., Green, W. R., Fast, L. D., & Noelle, R. J. (1994). Antibody to the ligand of CD40, gp39, blocks the occurrence of the acute and chronic forms of graft-vs-host disease. Journal of Clinical Investigation, 94(3), 1333–1338. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI117453
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