Journal
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPLANTATION
Volume 7, Issue 1, Pages 66-75Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-6143.2006.01603.x
Keywords
lung transplant; vWF; xenograft
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Funding
- NHLBI NIH HHS [F32 HL071457, R01 HL60232-03, F32 HL 71457-01] Funding Source: Medline
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Porcine von Willebrand factor (vWF) activates human and primate platelets. Having determined the importance of pulmonary intravascular macrophages (PIMs) in pulmonary xenotransplantation, we evaluated whether, in the absence of PIMs, vWF might play a role in pulmonary xenograft dysfunction. Utilizing a left single-lung transplant model, baboons depleted of anti-alpha Gal antibodies received lungs from either vWF-deficient (n = 2); MCP-expressing (n = 5); MCP PIM-depleted (n = 5); or vWF-deficient PIM-depleted swine (n = 3). Two out of three of the PIM-depleted, pvWF deficient grafts survived longer than any previously reported pulmonary xenografts, including PIM-depleted xenografts expressing human complement regulatory proteins. Depletion of PIM's from vWF-deficient lungs, like depletion of PIM's from hMCP lungs, resulted in abrogation of the coagulopathy associated with pulmonary xenotransplantation. Thus, in terms of pulmonary graft survival, control of adverse reactions involving pvWF appears to be equally or even more important than is complement regulation using hMCP expression. However, based on the rapid failure of PIM-sufficient, pvWF-deficient pulmonary xenografts, pVWF-deficient pulmonary xenografts appear to be particularly sensitive to macrophage-mediated damage. These data provide initial evidence that vWF plays a role in the 'delayed' (24 h) dysfunction observed in pulmonary xenotransplantation using PIM depleted hMCP organs.
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