4.3 Article

Characterization of acid and non-acid glycosphingolipids of porcine heart valve cusps as potential immune targets in biological heart valve grafts

Journal

XENOTRANSPLANTATION
Volume 21, Issue 6, Pages 510-522

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/xen.12123

Keywords

carbohydrate antigens; glycosphingolipid characterization; immune recognition of bioprosthetic heart valves; mass spectrometry; porcine heart valves

Funding

  1. Swedish Medical Research Council [12628]
  2. Swedish Cancer Foundation
  3. EU [HEALTH-F4-2013-603049]
  4. Swedish Research Council [342-2004-4434]

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Background: Although xenotransplantation of vascularized organs/cells has not yet reached the clinic, glutaraldehyde-treated bio-prosthetic heart valves (BHV), derived from porcine or bovine tissues, are today used for clinical replacement of diseased heart valves. However, the durability of these valve cusps is limited partly due to the onset of immune responses to the grafts. The xenoantigen-determinant Gal alpha 3-Gal- and corresponding anti-Gal antibodies have been postulated to in part contribute to BHV damage. However, the presence of other non-Gal carbohydrate antigen determinants as well as the immune response to these non-Gal antigens and the inflammatory response generated by their interaction with the immune system has not been studied. In this study, we have isolated and structurally characterized both non-acid and acid glycosphingolipids from naive porcine aortic and pulmonary valve cusps. Methods: Total non-acid and acid glycosphingolipids were isolated from porcine aortic and pulmonalis valve cusps of 20 animals. Glycosphingolipid components were structurally characterized by thin-layer chromatography, liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry and binding of monoclonal antibodies and lectins. Results: The non-acid glycosphingolipids were characterized as globotetrao-sylceramide, H-type 2 pentaosylceramide, fucosyl-gangliotetrao-sylceramide, and Gal alpha 3neolactotetraosylceramide. The acid glycosphingolipid fractions had both sulfatide and gangliosides (GM3, GM2, GM1, fucosyl-GM1, GD3 and GD1a), and all gangliosides contained N-acetyl-neuraminic acid. Significantly, the N-glycolyl-neuraminic acid (NeuGc) variant, a major component in many pig organs and to which humans can develop antibodies, was not detected among the gangliosides. Conclusions: Pig valve cusps contain several complex lipid-bound carbohydrate structures that may be targets for the human immune system. Notable, the NeuGc determinant was absent in the cusp gangliosides. This work forms a platform for further characterizing the antibody reactivity of patients with porcine-derived BHV.

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