CD28 costimulatory blockade induces tolerance in most murine transplant models but fails to do so in stringent transplant models, such as skin transplantation. The precise immunological mechanisms of CD28-independent rejection remain to be fully defined. Using two novel mouse strains in which both CD28 and either CD4 or CD8 are knocked out (CD4-/-CD28 -/- or CD8-/- CD28-/- mice), we examined mechanisms of CD28-independent CD4+ or CD8+ T-cell-mediated allograft rejection. CD4-/-CD28-/- and CD8-/-CD28-/ deficient mice rejected fully allogeneic skin allografts at a tempo comparable with that in wild-type mice. Rejection proceeded despite significant reduction in alloreactive T-cell clone sizes suggesting the presence of a subset of T cells harnessing alternate CD28-independent costimulatory pathways. Blockade of CD40-CD154 and CD134-CD134L, but not ICOS-B7h pathways in combination significantly prolonged allograft survival in CD8-/-CD28-/- recipients and to a lesser extent in CD4-/-CD28-/- recipients. Prolongation in allograft survival was associated with reduced effector-memory T-cell generation, decreased allospecific Th1 cytokine generation and diminished alloreactive T-cell proliferation in vivo. In aggregate, the data identify these two pathways as critical mediators of CD28-independent rejection by CD4 + and to a lesser extent CD8+ T cells, and provide novel mechanistic insights into functions of novel T-cell co-stimulatory pathways in vivo. © 2007 The Authors.
CITATION STYLE
Habicht, A., Najafian, N., Yagita, H., Sayegh, M. H., & Clarkson, M. R. (2007). New insights in CD28-independent allograft rejection. American Journal of Transplantation, 7(8), 1917–1926. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-6143.2007.01886.x
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