Abstract

We designed to determine whether pretreatment of allografts with methoxypolyethylene glycol-succinimidyl-propionic acid ester (mPEG-SPA) and an anti-OX40L monoclonal antibody (McAb) can relieve acute graft-versus-host disease in allogeneic bone marrow transplantation recipients. Responder splenocytes from C57BL/6 donor mice were incubated with stimulator splenocytes from BALB/c recipient mice for 7days in the presence or absence of anti-OX40L McAb followed by mPEG-SPA modification. Donor BM cells plus mixed culture T cells were then transplanted into myeloablatively irradiated BALB/c mice. The signs of GVHD were less evident in mice of groups B (mPEG-SPA modification group), C (anti-OX40L McAb pretreated group) and D (dual-treated group), with average survival durations all longer than those in group A (non-treated BMT group) (P<0.05). The survival rates on day 60 post-BMT in groups B, C and D were 50, 41.7 and 66.7%, respectively. After BMT, serum IL-4 and IL-10 levels elevated in groups B, C (P<0.05) and even more significantly increased in group D (P<0.01), while serum IFN-gamma levels decreased in these three groups (P<0.01). In conclusion, the combination of mPEG-SPA and anti-OX40L McAb can block T cell-activated antigens, co-stimulatory pathways and induce the immune shift of Th cells toward Th2 cells; their effects in ameliorating GVHD are synergistic.

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