|
|
Hiroshi Harada, Alan D. Salama, Masayuki Sho, Atsushi Izawa, Sigrid E. Sandner, Toshiro Ito, Hisaya Akiba, Hideo Yagita, Arlene H. Sharpe, Gordon J. Freeman, Mohamed H. Sayegh
J Clin Invest. 2003;
112(2):234
doi:10.1172/JCI17008
Abstract |
Full text
| PDF

I
nducible costimulatory molecule (ICOS) plays a pivotal role in T cell activation and Th1/Th2 differentiation. ICOS blockade has disparate effects on immune responses depending on the timing of blockade. Its role in transplantation immunity, however, remains incompletely defined. We used a vascularized mouse cardiac allograft model to explore the role of ICOS signaling at different time points after transplantation, targeting immune initiation (early blockade) or the immune effector phase (delayed blockade). In major histocompatibility–mismatched recipients, ICOS blockade prolonged allograft survival using both protocols but did so more effectively in the delayed-treatment group. By contrast, in minor histocompatibility–mismatched recipients, early blockade accelerated rejection and delayed blockade prolonged graft survival. Alloreactive CD4+ T cell expansion and alloantibody production were suppressed in both treatment groups, whereas only delayed blockade resulted in suppression of effector CD8+ T cell generation. After delayed ICOS blockade, there was a diminished frequency of allospecific IL-10–producing cells and an increased frequency of both IFN-γ– and IL-4–producing cells. The beneficial effects of ICOS blockade in regulating allograft rejection were seen in the absence of CD28 costimulation but required CD8+ cells, cytotoxic T lymphocyte antigen-4, and an intact signal transducer and activator of transcription–6 pathway. These data define the complex functions of the ICOS-B7h pathway in regulating alloimmune responses in vivo.
Citation information
This citation data is accumulated from CrossRef, which receives citation information from participating publishers, including this journal.
Not all publishers participate in CrossRef, so this information is not comprehensive.
Additionally, data may not reflect the most current citations to this article,
and the data may differ from citation information available from other sources
(for example, Google Scholar, Web of Science, and Scopus).
Total citations by year
in CrossRef
Citations to this article
in CrossRef
(24)
| Title and authors |
Publication |
Year |
ICOS-Dependent and -Independent Functions of Memory CD4 T Cells in Allograft Rejection
Q.-W. Zhang, M. Rabant, A. Schenk, A. Valujskikh
|
Am J Transplant
|
2008 |
Costimulatory blockade of CD154-CD40 in combination with T-cell lymphodepletion results in prevention of allogeneic sensitization.
Hong Xu, Jun Yan, Yiming Huang, Paula M Chilton, Chuanlin Ding, Carrie L Schanie, Li Wang, Suzanne T Ildstad
|
Blood
|
2008 |
Role of ICOS pathway in autoimmune and alloimmune responses in NOD mice
Mohammed Javeed I. Ansari, Paolo Fiorina, Shirine Dada, Indira Guleria, Takuya Ueno, Xueli Yuan, Subbulaxmi Trikudanathan, R. Neal Smith, Gordon Freeman, Mohamed H. Sayegh
|
Clinical Immunology
|
2008 |
ICOS/B7RP-1 Interference in Mouse Kidney Transplantation
Jens Lutz, Ruiyan Lu, Matthias Strobl, Hai Huang, Meihong Deng, Minghui Wang, Nengtai Ouyang, Uwe Heemann
|
Transplantation
|
2007 |
The influence of inducible costimulator fusion protein (ICOSIg) gene transfer on corneal allograft survival
Daniel Fabian, Nianqiao Gong, Katrin Vogt, Hans-Dieter Volk, Uwe Pleyer, Thomas Ritter
|
Graefe's Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol
|
2007 |
Mice Lacking CD200R1 Show Absence of Suppression of Lipopolysaccharide-Induced Tumor Necrosis Factor-?? and Mixed Leukocyte Culture Responses by CD200
Ivo Boudakov, Jian Liu, Na Fan, Pelin Gulay, Karrie Wong, Reg M. Gorczynski
|
Transplantation
|
2007 |
New Insights in CD28-Independent Allograft Rejection
A. Habicht, N. Najafian, H. Yagita, M. H. Sayegh, M. R. Clarkson
|
Am J Transplant
|
2007 |
The Challenge of Inhibiting Alloreactive T-Cell Memory
A. Valujskikh
|
Am J Transplant
|
2006 |
Costimulation blockade and its possible future use in clinical transplantation
Renaud Snanoudj, Helene de Preneuf, Caroline Creput, Nadia Arzouk, Benjamin Deroure, Severine Beaudreuil, Antoine Durrbach, Bernard Charpentier
|
Transplant International
|
2006 |
ICOS cooperates with CD28, IL-2, and IFN-γ and modulates activation of human naïve CD4+ T cells
Riccardo Mesturini, Stefania Nicola, Annalisa Chiocchetti, Ilaria Seren Bernardone, Luca Castelli, Thea Bensi, Massimo Ferretti, Cristoforo Comi, Chen Dong, Josè Maria Rojo, Junji Yagi, Umberto Dianzani
|
Eur. J. Immunol.
|
2006 |
|