Blood Advances (Nov 2017)

Successful desensitization with proteasome inhibition and costimulation blockade in sensitized nonhuman primates

  • Jean Kwun,
  • Christopher Burghuber,
  • Miriam Manook,
  • Brian Ezekian,
  • Jaeberm Park,
  • Janghoon Yoon,
  • John S. Yi,
  • Neal Iwakoshi,
  • Adriana Gibby,
  • Jung Joo Hong,
  • Alton B. Farris,
  • Allan D. Kirk,
  • Stuart J. Knechtle

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1182/bloodadvances.2017010991
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 24
pp. 2115 – 2119

Abstract

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Abstract: The detrimental effects of donor-directed antibodies in sensitized transplant patients remain a difficult immunologic barrier to successful organ transplantation. Antibody removal is often followed by rebound. Proteasome inhibitors (PIs) deplete antibody-producing plasma cells (PCs) but have shown marginal benefit for desensitization. In an allosensitized nonhuman primate (NHP) model, we observed increased germinal center (GC) formation after PI monotherapy, suggesting a compensatory PC repopulation mediated via GC activation. Here we show that costimulation blockade (CoB) targets GC follicular helper T (Tfh) cells in allosensitized NHPs. Combined PI and CoB significantly reduces bone marrow PCs (CD19+CD20−CD38+), Tfh cells (CD4+ICOS+PD-1hi), and GC B cells (BCL-6+CD20+); controls the homeostatic GC response to PC depletion; and sustains alloantibody decline. Importantly, dual PC and CoB therapy prolongs rejection-free graft survival in major histocompatibility complex incompatible kidney transplantation without alloantibody rebound. Our study illustrates a translatable desensitization method and provides mechanistic insight into maintenance of alloantibody sensitization.