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Transgenic expression of CTLA4-Ig by fetal pig neurons for xenotransplantation
Authors:Caroline Martin  Martine Plat  Véronique Nerrière-Daguin  Flora Coulon  Svetlana Uzbekova  Eric Venturi  Françoise Condé  Jean-Michel Hermel  Philippe Hantraye  Laurent Tesson  Ignacio Anegon  Benoit Melchior  Marc Peschanski  Brigitte Le Mauff  Françoise Boeffard  Solène Sergent-Tanguy  Isabelle Neveu  Philippe Naveilhan  Jean-Paul Soulillou  Michel Terqui  Philippe Brachet  Bernard Vanhove
Affiliation:(1) Institut de Transplantation et de Recherche en Transplantation, INSERM U643, CHU Hôtel Dieu, 30, Bld J, Monnet, Nantes, France;(2) INRA Physio Repro Reproduction Femelle CR de Tours, 37380 Nouzilly, France;(3) Service Hospitalier Frédéric Joliot, URA CEA CNRS 2210, 4 place du Général Leclerc, 91401 Orsay, France;(4) Faculté de Médecine, INSERM U421 8 rue du Général Sarrail, 94010 Créteil, France
Abstract:The transplantation of fetal porcine neurons is a potential therapeutic strategy for the treatment of human neurodegenerative disorders. A major obstacle to xenotransplantation, however, is the immune-mediated rejection that is resistant to conventional immunosuppression. To determine whether genetically modified donor pig neurons could be used to deliver immunosuppressive proteins locally in the brain, transgenic pigs were developed that express the human T cell inhibitory molecule hCTLA4-Ig under the control of the neuron-specific enolase promoter. Expression was found in various areas of the brain of transgenic pigs, including the mesencephalon, hippocampus and cortex. Neurons from 28-day old embryos secreted hCTLA4-Ig in vitro and this resulted in a 50% reduction of the proliferative response of human T lymphocytes in xenogenic proliferation assays. Transgenic embryonic neurons also secreted hCTLA4-Ig and had developed normally in vivo several weeks after transplantation into the striatum of immunosuppressed rats that were used here to study the engraftment in the absence of immunity. In conclusion, these data show that neurons from our transgenic pigs express hCTLA4-Ig in situ and support the use of this material in future pre-clinical trials in neuron xenotransplantation.Caroline Martin,Martine Plat, Philippe Brachet, Bernard Vanhove - These authors have contributed equally to the development of this work.
Keywords:costimulation blockade  immunosuppression  neuron  xenotransplantation
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