The study described in this thesis represents an attempt to identify
possible factors determining the induction of operational tolerance
after LTX. Current beliefs propose that the establishment of tolerance
is a multifactorial phenomenon in which the combined action of several
factors conveys tolerance towards the grafted organ. Among these
factors, the transfer of passenger donor leukocytes into the recipient
after transplantation and the secretion of specific donor-derived
soluble MHC molecules seem to play a relevant role. In this thesis we
considered two components as possible inducers of LTX tolerance: donor
NK cells (as part of the pool of passenger donor leukocytes) and HLA-G
(as soluble HLA molecule). We analyzed different aspects of donor
hepatic NK cells as to investigate their contribution to tolerance
induction in LTX. Additionally, we laid the foundations for a critical
assessment of the role of HLA-G as a tolerogenic molecule in LTX.
Our results suggest that hepatic NK cells in adults derive from
hematopoietic CD34+ stem cells that are continuously recruited from
peripheral blood (Chapter 5). Hematopoietic CD34+ stem cells are known
to be periodically released from the bone marrow into peripheral blood.
This continuous release of cells into peripheral blood seems to
constitute a mechanism to maintain full occupancy of hematopoietic stem
cells niches not only in bone marrow cavities but also in peripheral
tissues, including the adult liver. Once relocated in the liver, these
early progenitors may develop, under the influence of the local
microenvironment, into liver-specific NK cells (Chapter 5).
Liver-specific NK cells contain a unique subset of CD56bright NK cells
that are physiologically activated and highly cytotoxic (Chapter 2).
These characteristics of hepatic CD56bright NK cells differ from the
functional properties attributed to the same subset of NK cells found in
blood or in other peripheral tissues, such as lymph nodes or uterus.
After LTX, part of donor hepatic NK cells detach from the grafted organ
and are detectable in the recipient circulation for approximately two
weeks (Chapter 2). Besides this portion of migrating cells, donor
hepatic NK cells remain in the grafted liver for at least two years
after LTX (Chapter 5). This long-term chimerism can be explained by two
scenarios. First, donor hepatic NK cells and their precursors may
relocate, after LTX, to specific sites in the recipient (such as bone
marrow, gut-associated lymphoid tissues or spleen, see Chapter 2) and
from there contribute to long-term donor NK-cell chimerism.
Alternatively, the donor NK cells found long after LTX within the liver
graft may constitute a pool of long-living NK cells similar to the ones
recently described in mice liver by the groups of von Andrian, Lanier
and Cooper. Overall these observations in mice indicate that NK cells
activated specifically by a chemical hapten or a virus, or
non-specifically by a state of lymphopenia or by inflammatory cytokines
acquire classical characteristics of immune memory that include an
extended lifespan, the ability to self-renew, and the capacity to mount
robust and protective recall responses. However, as specific markers for
human memory NK cells are not known yet, we could not test whether
donor hepatic NK cells long after LTX actually represent a pool of NK
cells that acquired immune memory.
With regard to the role of these donor-derived NK cells in the induction
of allograft tolerance after LTX, we could not find firm evidence that
NK cells play a prominent role in tolerance induction (Chapter 3;
Chapter 4). In fact neither donor nor recipient NK-cell alloreactivity,
as predicted by considering donor and recipient HLA/KIR genotypes, was
found to correlate with LTX survival or the induction of allograft
tolerance (Chapter 3). Additionally, specific depletion of hepatic donor
NK cells prior to LTX in a spontaneously tolerant rat model, did not
affect the establishment of tolerance (Chapter 4). Altogether, based on
these results we reject the hypothesis that cytotoxic NK cells from the
donor liver play a main role in inhibiting the immune response towards
the allogeneic graft by killing alloreactive T cells and APCs from the
recipient. Therefore, these results exclude the possibility of
exploiting the cytotoxic properties of donor hepatic NK cells for
tolerance induction in clinical LTX.
In addition to the study of NK cells, we here presented our initial
attempts to assess the role of soluble HLA-G in LTX tolerance. In
contrast to what was suggested by few original studies on this topic,
our first results seem to associate HLA-G with states of inflammation
rather than tolerance induction (Chapter 6). These results will be
further expanded and additional experiments are needed to draw more
definite conclusions on this subject.
http://repub.eur.nl/res/pub/30640/cover%20book%20final.pdf
http://repub.eur.nl/res/pub/30640/cover%20book%20final.pdf
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Apoptosis
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