Title: P1254413712GdARx
1 Transplantation Immunology
2- Lecture objectives
- Students are expected to understand
- Types of rejection (hyperacute, accelerated
acute, acute and chronic) - Immunological mechanisms of transplantation
rejection - ABO and other Blood types
- GVHD
- Immunosuppressive drugs
322. Transplantation immunology
CORE
- a. Definitions of autografts, syngrafts,
allografts, and xenografts - b. The role of MHC antigens (alloantigens),
minor histocompatibility antigens and ABO blood
type in graft acceptance and rejection - c. Mechanisms of graft rejection
- (1) Hyperacute rejection recipient has
pre-existing antibodies to ABO antigens or HLA
antigens occurs within minutes to hours
mechanism by Types II and III reactions. - (2) Accelerated Acute occurs within a few
days mediated by sensitized T cells (CMI) - (3) Acute occurs within the second week T
cells (CMI) become sensitized to alloantigens
(HLA antigens) - (4) Chronic occurs months to years after the
transplant multiple immunologic mechanisms
chronic inflammation, pro-inflammatory cytokines,
and increased adhesion molecules on endothelium
important
4Transplantation immunology
CORE
- d. Graft-versus-host reaction (acute and
chronic) - (1) Immunologic mechanisms and types of
transplants involved - e. Tissue typing, preventing rejection, and
inducing recipient unresponsiveness - (1) ABO compatibility
- (2) Crossmatching
- (3) HLA typing
- (4) Immunosuppressive drugs
- (a) Azathioprine
- (b) Cyclosporin
- (c) Corticosteroids
- (d) Anti-lymphocyte antibodies (polyclonal
anti-T, monoclonal anti-CD3, 4, 8)
5f. Clinical transplantation
CORE
- (1) Kidney
- (2) Liver
- (3) Pancreas
- (4) Heart
- (5) Lung
- (6) Bone marrow
6Tests before transplantation
Tests for compatibility HLA (HLA-A, HLA-B and
HLA-DR ) and ABO
Tests for pathogens Human Immunodeficiency Virus
(HIV-1/2), Hepatitis B (HbsAg) Hepatitis C
(HCV). Also CMV, HTLV-1, syphilis, Epstein-Barr
virus, and HTLV-2
7Terminologies
- Autograft transplantation of self tissues to a
different site of the body (e.g. skin graft in
burn patients) - Syngeneic transplant between genetically
identical individuals - (Between identical twins)
- Allogeneic transplant between genetically
different individuals - (This is most common)
- Xenograft transplantation between different
species - (e.g. Pig to Human)
8Transplantation Immunology
Allogenic immune responses after transplantation
are caused by genetic differences (e.g. MHC and
ABO) between donors and recipients.
Immune system A
Immune system B
MHC-b
MHC-a
TCR-a
TCR-b
APC
T
APC
T
Organ
A-RBC
Ab to A-RBC
Recipient (B type blood)
Donor (A type blood)
9Hyperacute (immediate) reaction
Response to ABO antigens (and/or MHC class I/II
molecules) expressed by Endothelial cells 1.
Preexisting antibodies to A/B antigen in
recipients bind A/B antigens on endothelial cells
of transplanted organs, and induce acute
rejection. 2. This can be caused by pre-existing
antibodies to MHC I/II molecules too, which can
arise from pregnancy, blood transfusion or
previous transplantation. In this case, fetal
cells induce antibody formation in the mother
Graft failure
1021. Human Blood Group Antigens
CORE
- a. ABO blood groups (structure, inheritance, and
naturally occurring antibodies) - b. Rh blood groups (e.g. erythroblastosis
fetalis)
11In blood transfusion and organ transplantation,
donors and recipients should be matched for the
A/B/O blood antigens
RBCs dont express MHC molecules but express
different types of carbohydrate antigens (A,B,
and O). These antigens are similar to bacterial
cell surface antigens. Therefore, most people
possess antibodies that react against the
antigens except the antigen they express
themselves. O persons have antibodies to A and B.
Anti-A or B antibodies cause complement fixation
and rapid clearance of RBC (hemolytic reaction
renal failure) or hyperacute rejection. Similar
to TYPE II hypersensitivity reaction.
There is no antibody to O antigen in A, B or AB
person because all express the core O
antigen. Remember that self reactive B cells are
deleted in the body.
12ABO Blood Group System
Blood Type Genotypes ABO EnzymesPresent RBC AntigensPresent Serum Antibodies
A AA, AO "H", "A" A, O anti-B
B BB, BO "H", "B" B, O anti-A
AB AB "H", "A", "B" A, B, O none
O OO "H" O anti-A, anti-B
13How Blood Types Are Inherited
X
14ABO match for blood transfusion
A RhD-
15Other blood group antigens (minor antigens)
Rhesus C, D and E RhD is most important
clinically among minor antigens due to its high
immunogenicity RhD 85 RhD-15 Other
minor blood group antigens such as Kell, Duffy,
and MN are less immunogenic.
16Coombs test for blood typing
For blood typing, serums and red blood cells are
mixed and incubated. What is the blood type of
the recipient?
Serum from individuals of type Red blood cells of the potential recipient
O Agglutination
A Agglutination
B No agglutination
AB No agglutination
RhD No agglutination
Red blood cells from individuals of type Serum from the potential recipient
O No agglutination
A Agglutination
B No agglutination
AB Agglutination
RhD Agglutination
O A B AB
RhD ?
-
17- Jesicas story
- (http//www.usnews.com/usnews/health/articles/0307
28/28jesica.timeline.htm) - This is the sequence of events, as reconstructed
by U.S. News, that led to the death of Jesica
Santillán at Duke University Medical Center after
she received a transplanted heart and lungs with
the wrong blood type. - Feb. 6, 2003, eveningThe New England Organ Bank
can't find a local candidate for a heart and
lungs from a donor at Children's Hospital Boston
with type A blood. The "match-run list" of
candidates shows two possibilities, a child and
an adult, at Duke University Medical Center in
Durham, N.C. NEOB notifies Carolina Donor
Services, Duke's link with the national
transplant system. CDS phones Duke. Pediatric
heart transplant surgeon James Jaggers turns the
organs down for the child listed, but requests
them for 17-year-old Jesica Santillán. He does
not recall mentioning or discussing blood type.
CDS verifies with NEOB that Jesica is not on the
match-run list. - Feb. 7, early morningCDS calls the United
Network for Organ Sharing in Richmond, Va., which
has data on everyone awaiting an organ, to ask if
Jesica is wait-listed for a heart and lungs. The
CDS coordinator mentions that she has type A
blood. She is type O. The donor is type A. A UNOS
specialist says she is listed. He does not
address the misstated blood type. CDS notifies
NEOB that Jesica is listed, and NEOB releases the
organs to Jaggers. CDS reports this back to
Jaggers. - About 9 a.m.Duke surgeon Shu Lin and a CDS
representative fly to Boston. Lin calls Jaggers
with a thumbs-up on the condition and size of the
donor heart and lungs. Blood type is not
mentioned. - 11 a.m. The organs are removed and packed in
ice. A tag identifies the blood as type A. The
organs are flown to Durham. - 450 p.m.The heart and lungs are transplanted
into Jesica. - 10 p.m.As Jesica is being closed, Duke's
transplant lab reports the mismatch.
Antirejection drugs are administered, but the
heart and lungs begin to fail. Jesica is put on a
heart-lung machine. - Feb. 19, 1130 p.m.CDS tells Jaggers a type O
heart and lungs are available. - Feb. 20, 1230 a.m.The Santilláns are told that
replacement organs are on the way. - 515 a.m.Jaggers begins the second transplant at
6 a.m. - Feb. 21, 2 a.m.Jesica's brain function rapidly
declines. - 3 a.m.A CT scan indicates significant brain
swelling and bleeding. - 9 a.m.Neurological tests show no brain activity.
- Feb. 22, 125 p.m.Jesica is pronounced brain
dead. - 507 p.m.Jesica's heart stops.
18Acute rejection
Acute rejection (within weeks) is caused by
effector CD4 Th1 cells or CD8 T cells responding
to HLA differences between donors and recipients
(similar to TYPE IV hypersensitivity
reaction) Can be prevented by immunosuppressive
drugs or anti-T cell antibodies Accelerated
Acute rejection (within days) is mediated by
sensitized (memory) T cells by previous grafts or
exposure.
19Cross-reactive recognition for alloreactivityDiff
erences in MHC molecule expression between a
donor and a recipient are said to be allogenic,
provoking alloreactions that cause graft
rejection..
Immune response to foreign antigens
Acute response to the graft expressing allogeneic
MHC
20(No Transcript)
21After transplantation, donor-derived dendritic
cells migrate to the recipient spleen and
activate recipient T cells, which mediate graft
rejection
22MLR (mixed lymphocyte reaction test)Co-culture
of blood cells from donor and recipientMore
proliferation More mismatch
23Chronic rejection Occurs months or years after
transplantation. Thickening of blood vessel walls
leading to ischemia The mechanism is not
entirely clear but it may be due to chronic DTH
response
localized tissue anemia due to obstruction of the
inflow of arterial blood
24HLA matching improves the survival of
transplanted kidneys
Matching in HLA A, B, and DR is particularly
important
252 types of alloreactions
Also, there is GVL (Leukemia) effect against
recipients leukemic or tumor cells
26Diseases for which bone marrow transplantation is
a therapy (BMT)
- The graft must contain immunocompetent cells (T
cells) - MHC mismatch
- The recipient must be incapable of rejecting the
graft
For GVHD to occur
27(No Transcript)
28Pros and Cons of bone marrow transplantation
(BMT) Pros Can cure a number of malignant and
genetic diseases Large numbers of potential
donors Simple procedure takes 30 min to take out
marrow from a donor from iliac crests of the
pelvis under local anesthesia Cons 1. In GVHD,
donor-derived lymphocytes attack host tissues 2.
Non-functional T cells due to MHC
mismatch Alternative sources of stem cells to
minimize GVHD 1. Autologous BMT using self
marrow obtained before radiation therapy 2.
Umbilical cord blood cells, which are enriched
with hematopoietic stem cells (CD34 cells).
These fetal cells cause less GVHD. 3. Isolated
stem cells free of T cells
29Stages of GVHD
30(No Transcript)
31- Xenotransplantation
- Pigs donors of choice
- Of similar size, farmed and consumed
- Problems
- Hyperacute rejection
- Humans have antibodies to pig endothelial
carbohydrates - Pigs cells are attacked by human complements
- Potential solutions
- Transgenic pigs expressing human DAF, which
prevents complement reaction - Transgenic pigs that dont express the reactive
antigens. - Advantage
- MHC molecules of different species are so
different from those of humans that human T cells
can not recognize them. So T-cell mediated
rejection is mild.
32- Immunosuppressive drugs made allogeneic
transplantation possible. - They also treat autoimmune diseases.
- Corticosteroids
- Cytotoxic drugs that kill proliferating
lymphocytes - Microbial immunosuppressive products
- Immunosuppressive antibodies
- These drugs limit the normal immune response to
pathogens. Patients are susceptible to infection. - As the immune system accommodates the graft, the
dose of immunosuppressive drugs is gradually
reduced so that patients can have certain defense
ability against pathogens - These drugs are used in combination to reduce
toxic or side-effects. - A long-term side effect is a higher incidence of
cancer. - Suppress acute rejection mediated by T cells.
331. Corticosteroids Prednisolone
Induces expression of many genes, one of which is
IkB-alpha that inhibits NF-Kb activation. Side
effects fluid retention, weight gain, diabetes,
loss of bone mineral, thinning of the skin.
34Effects of corticosteroids
35Cyclosporine A, FK506 (Tacrolimus) and
Rapamycin Cyclosporine a cyclic decapeptide
from a soil fungus. Targets calcineurin and
blocks NFAT activation FK506 A macrolide
isolated from a soil actinomycete Targets
calcineurin and blocks NFAT activation Rapamycin
A macrolide isolated from a soil
bacterium. Blocks signal transduction from IL-2
receptor
36(No Transcript)
37Cyclosporine A and FK506 inactivate calcineurin
(a calcium binding protein), which is required
for T, B and granulocyte activation
38Cytotoxic drugs kill dividing cells
Azathioprine inhibits DNA replication. Kills not
only lymphocytes but also all dividing cells in
the body bone marrow cells, intestinal
epithelial cells and hair follicle
cells Cyclophosphamide cross-link DNA. Side
effect includes damage to bladder. Methotrexate
prevents DNA replication by inhibiting thymidine
synthesis
Specificity issue?
39Antibodies specific to human T cells (e.g.
anti-CD3) are used to deplete T cells or to
suppress their functions These antibodies can
be made in sheep or goats that have been
immunized with human lymphocytes or from mouse
hybridoma cells. Limitation These non-human
antibodies can induce formation of antibodies to
the anti-T cell antibodies, which reduces the
effectiveness of anti-T cell antibodies.
40- Summary
- Transplantation rejections
- Hyperacute
- Factors preexisting antibodies to ABO and other
antigens. - Accelerated Acute preexisting memory T cells
- Acute
- Factors MHC compatibility, T cells
- GVHD vs. graft rejection.
- Chronic
- Blood vessel wall thickening.
- Immunosuppressive drugs suppress the acute (and
also slow down chronic) rejection processes.