Induction of long-term cardiac allograft survival by heme oxygenase-1 gene transfer

C Braudeau, D Bouchet, L Tesson, S Iyer, S Remy… - Gene therapy, 2004 - nature.com
C Braudeau, D Bouchet, L Tesson, S Iyer, S Remy, R Buelow, I Anegon, C Chauveau
Gene therapy, 2004nature.com
Elevated expression of heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1), an intracellular enzyme that degrades
heme into carbon monoxide (CO), biliverdine and free iron, has anti-inflammatory and
antiapoptotic effects in diverse models. Here, we analyzed the effects of specific
overexpression of HO-1 following adenovirus-mediated (AdHO-1) gene transfer in an acute
cardiac allograft rejection model. The intragraft (ig) injection of AdHO-1 into cardiac
allografts, as well as intramuscular (im) or intravenous (iv) administration, prolonged …
Abstract
Elevated expression of heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1), an intracellular enzyme that degrades heme into carbon monoxide (CO), biliverdine and free iron, has anti-inflammatory and antiapoptotic effects in diverse models. Here, we analyzed the effects of specific overexpression of HO-1 following adenovirus-mediated (AdHO-1) gene transfer in an acute cardiac allograft rejection model. The intragraft (ig) injection of AdHO-1 into cardiac allografts, as well as intramuscular (im) or intravenous (iv) administration, prolonged allograft survival with, respectively, 13.3, 62.5 and 80% of the grafts surviving long term (> 100 days), whereas control grafts were rejected with acute kinetics. HO-1 overexpression was associated with inhibited allogeneic responses in MLRs using graft-infiltrating leukocytes and splenocytes, but not with lymph node cells. The inhibition of splenocyte proliferation was mediated by soluble factors and was dependent on the presence of APCs, since purified T cells proliferated normally. iv but not ig AdHO-1 administration decreased the number of graft-infiltrating leukocytes, cytokine mRNA accumulation and apoptosis in transplanted hearts, whereas iv and ig AdHO-1 did not modify normal immune responses against cognate antigens, indicating that there was no general immunosuppression. These results indicate that HO-1 overexpression prolongs the survival of vascularized allografts by promoting tolerogenic mechanisms acting on allogeneic cellular immune responses.
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