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Molecular incompatibility between pig CD200 and human CD200 receptor in in vitro xenogeneic immune responses

Authors
 Bomin Kim  ;  Ji-Jing Yan  ;  Tae Kyeom Kang  ;  Wook-Bin Lee  ;  Jong Cheol Jeong  ;  Jaeseok Yang 
Citation
 XENOTRANSPLANTATION, Vol.31(3) : e12863, 2024-05 
Journal Title
XENOTRANSPLANTATION
ISSN
 0908-665X 
Issue Date
2024-05
MeSH
Animals ; Antigens, CD* / genetics ; Antigens, CD* / immunology ; Antigens, CD* / metabolism ; Coculture Techniques ; Endothelial Cells* / immunology ; Humans ; Macrophages* / immunology ; Macrophages* / metabolism ; Orexin Receptors / genetics ; Orexin Receptors / immunology ; Orexin Receptors / metabolism ; Phagocytosis ; Swine ; Transplantation, Heterologous* / methods
Keywords
human CD200 ; human CD200 receptor ; molecular incompatibility ; porcine CD200 ; xenotransplantation
Abstract
Overexpression of human CD200 (hCD200) in porcine endothelial cells (PECs) has been reported to suppress xenogeneic immune responses of human macrophages against porcine endothelial cells. The current study aimed to address whether the above‐mentioned beneficial effect of hCD200 is mediated by overcoming the molecular incompatibility between porcine CD200 (pCD200) and hCD200 receptor or simply by increasing the expression levels of CD200 without any molecular incompatibility across the two species. We overexpressed hCD200 or pCD200 using lentiviral vectors with V5 marker in porcine endothelial cells and compared their suppressive activity against U937‐derived human macrophage‐like cells (hMCs) and primary macrophages. In xenogeneic coculture of porcine endothelial cells and human macrophage‐like cells or macrophages, hCD200‐porcine endothelial cells suppressed phagocytosis and cytotoxicity of human macrophages to a greater extent than pCD200‐porcine endothelial cells. Secretion of tumor necrosis factor‐α, interleukin‐1β, and monocyte chemoattractant protein‐1 from human macrophages and expression of M1 phenotypes (inducible nitric oxide synthase, dectin‐1, and CD86) were also suppressed by hCD200 to a greater extent than pCD200. Furthermore, in signal transduction downstream of CD200 receptor, hCD200 induced Dok2 phosphorylation and suppressed IκB phosphorylation to a greater extent than pCD200. The above data supported the possibility of a significant molecular incompatibility between pCD200 and human CD200 receptor, suggesting that the beneficial effects of hCD200 overexpression in porcine endothelial cells could be mediated by overcoming the molecular incompatibility across the species barrier rather than by simple overexpression effects of CD200.
Full Text
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/xen.12863
DOI
10.1111/xen.12863
Appears in Collections:
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Dept. of Internal Medicine (내과학교실) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Yang, Jaeseok(양재석)
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/199989
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