Abstract

Previous studies using knockout mice document a key role for the integrin CD103 in promoting organ allograft rejection and graft-versus-host disease. However, a determination of whether blockade of the CD103 pathway represents a viable therapeutic strategy for intervention in these processes has proven problematic due to the lack of reagents that efficiently deplete CD103+ cells from wild type hosts. To circumvent this problem, we conjugated the nondepleting anti-CD103 monoclonal antibody, M290, to the toxin, saporin, to produce an immunotoxin (M290-SAP) that efficiently depletes CD103+ cells in vivo. Herein, we show that M290-SAP dramatically reduces the frequency and absolute numbers of CD103-expressing leukocytes in the blood, spleen, mesenteric lymph nodes and intestinal epithelium of treated mice. We further demonstrate that M290-SAP promotes indefinite islet allograft survival in a fully MHC mismatched mouse model. The prolonged islet allograft survival resulting from M290-SAP treatment was associated with multiple effects in the host immune system including not only depletion of CD103-expressing leukocytes, but also an increase in CD4+CD25+FoxP3+ T regulatory cells and a predominance of effector-memory CD8 T cells. Regardless of the underlying mechanisms, these data document that depletion of CD103-expressing cells represents a viable strategy for therapeutic intervention in allograft rejection.

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