Normal human fetal and adult cardiac myocytes do not express detectable levels of either MHC Class I or Class II histocompatibility antigens. Yet, these cardiac myocytes appear to be susceptible to cytotoxic immune responses of infiltrating host mononuclear cells post primary cardiac allotransplantation. While the presence of mononuclear cell infiltrate have been documented in human cardiac biopsy specimens at various times post transplantation, relatively little is known about MHC antigen expression on cardiac myocytes. Considerable controversy exists on the phenotype of mononuclear cells that induce cardiac graft rejection. Thus, helper T cells (CD4+), cytotoxic T cells (CD8+) and natural killer cells have all been implicated. The CD4+ cells presumably mediate their response primarily through recognition of MHC-Class II molecules and the CD8+ cells by primarily recognition of MHC Class I molecules resulting in deleterious DTH type and direct cytotoxicity responses respectively. Three lines of approach have been planned in this research proposal. First, studies will concern the examination of serial cardiac biopsy specimen post transplantation for MHC Class I, II antigen expression on cardiac myocytes and correlate these with quantitative phenotypic and functional characterization of mononuclear cell infiltrates. Functional studies such as specific and non-specific donor MLR, CTL and MLR suppressor cell activity will be performed on mononuclear cells cultured and cloned from portions of the cardiac biopsies in vitro using IL-2. Secondly, primary cell cultures of human cardiac myocytes will be used to investigate the phenotype, cellular genetic and subcellular requirements for induction of MHC antigens. Thirdly, use of a unique established cloned cardiac myocyte cell line (EU-MY086- 003-05) will provide a homogenous cell population which will allow the precise determination of the cellular, genetic, subcellular and molecular requirements for induction of MHC gene products in vitro. The influence of immunosuppressive drugs on the induction and regulation of MHC antigen expression in the presence and absence of purified CD4+ and CD8+ specifically allosensitized cells will also be studied. The results will provide a systematic evaluation of the role of phenotypically distinct mononuclear allogeneic cells on MHC antigen expression by cardiac myocytes and more importantly, provide unique insight in the mechanisms of organ allograft rejection.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01HL047272-06
Application #
3366473
Study Section
Surgery, Anesthesiology and Trauma Study Section (SAT)
Project Start
1988-02-01
Project End
1995-03-31
Budget Start
1993-04-01
Budget End
1994-03-31
Support Year
6
Fiscal Year
1993
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Emory University
Department
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
042250712
City
Atlanta
State
GA
Country
United States
Zip Code
30322
Sundstrom, J Bruce; Jollow, Kimberley C; Braud, Veronique et al. (2003) Magnitude of alloresponses to MHC class I/II expressing human cardiac myocytes is limited by their intrinsic ability to process and present antigenic peptides. Clin Dev Immunol 10:213-26
Jollow, K C; Sundstrom, J B; Gravanis, M B et al. (1997) Apoptosis of mononuclear cell infiltrates in cardiac allograft biopsy specimens questions studies of biopsy-cultured cells. Transplantation 63:1482-9
Sundstrom, J B; Mayne, A; Kanter, K et al. (1995) Mechanisms of human cardiac allograft rejection: absence of co-stimulatory molecules and cell adhesion molecules on major histocompatibility complex class I/II+ human cardiac myocytes does not induce anergy. Transplant Proc 27:1310-3
Ansari, A A; Sundstrom, J B; Kanter, K et al. (1995) Cellular and molecular mechanisms of human cardiac myocyte injury after transplantation. J Heart Lung Transplant 14:102-12
Sundstrom, J B; Ansari, A A (1995) Comparative study of the role of professional versus semiprofessional or nonprofessional antigen presenting cells in the rejection of vascularized organ allografts. Transpl Immunol 3:273-89
Ansari, A A; Mayne, A; Sundstrom, J B et al. (1995) Frequency of hypoxanthine guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT-) T cells in the peripheral blood of cardiac transplant recipients. A noninvasive technique for the diagnosis of allograft rejection. Circulation 92:862-74
Ansari, A A; Mayne, A; Freed, C R et al. (1995) Lack of a detectable systemic humoral/cellular allogeneic response in human and nonhuman primate recipients of embryonic mesencephalic allografts for the therapy of Parkinson's disease. Transplant Proc 27:1401-5
Herskowitz, A; Mayne, A E; Willoughby, S B et al. (1994) Patterns of myocardial cell adhesion molecule expression in human endomyocardial biopsies after cardiac transplantation. Induced ICAM-1 and VCAM-1 related to implantation and rejection. Am J Pathol 145:1082-94
Ansari, A A; Sundstrom, J B; Runnels, H et al. (1994) The absence of constitutive and induced expression of critical cell-adhesion molecules on human cardiac myocytes. Its role in transplant rejection. Transplantation 57:942-9
Ansari, A A; Kanter, K; Wang, Y C et al. (1993) Major histocompatibility complex-expressing human cardiac myocytes are not the direct target of host cardiac-infiltrating cells: evidence for a prominent role of the indirect pathway in human cardiac allograft rejection. Transplant Proc 25:89-93

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