PD‐1/B7‐H1 Interaction Contribute to the Spontaneous Acceptance of Mouse Liver Allograft

https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-6143.2009.02859.xGet rights and content
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The programmed death‐1 (PD‐1)/B7‐H1 pathway acts as an important negative regulator of immune responses. We herein investigated the role of the PD‐1/B7‐H1 pathway in establishing an immunological spontaneous tolerance status in mouse liver allografting. B7‐H1 is highly expressed on the donor‐derived tissue cells and it is also associated with the apoptosis of infiltrating T cells in the allografts. Strikingly, a blockade of the PD‐1/B7‐H1 pathway via anti‐B7‐H1mAb or using B7‐H1 knockout mice as a donor led to severe cell infiltration as well as hemorrhaging and necrosis, thus resulting in mortality within 12 days. Furthermore, the expression of the FasL, perforin, granzyme B, iNOS and OPN mRNA in the liver allografts increased in the antibody‐treated group in comparison to the controls. Taken together, these data revealed that the B7‐H1 upregulation on the tissue cells of liver allografts thus plays an important role in the apoptosis of infiltrating cells, which might play a critical role of the induction of the spontaneous tolerance after hepatic transplantation in mice.

Key words

Apoptosis
B7‐H1
orthotopic liver transplantation
regulatory cell
spontaneous tolerance

Abbreviations

HSC
hepatic stellate cell
KC
Kupffer cells
LSEC
liver sinusoidal endothelial cells
PD‐1
programmed death‐1
qRT‐PCR
quantitative real‐time reverse‐transcription polymerase chain reaction
NPC
nonparenchymal cells
Treg
regulatory T

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Miwa Morita and Masayuki Fujino contributed equally to this work.