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Current Barriers to Clinical Liver Xenotransplantation

期刊

FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY
卷 13, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2022.827535

关键词

liver xenotransplantation; thrombocytopenia; xenograft; immune rejection; porcine

资金

  1. Department of Surgery [VFR-457-Ekser]
  2. Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute [UL1TR001108]
  3. National Institutes of Health (NIH)
  4. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, Clinical and Translational Sciences Award
  5. NIH NIAID [R21AI164002]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Recent studies on pig-to-nonhuman primate liver xenotransplantation have shown progress in achieving longer survival times. However, there are still challenges of thrombocytopenia and coagulation dysregulation. The current research aims to understand the biological mechanisms behind these issues and explore genetic modifications as potential solutions.
Preclinical trials of pig-to-nonhuman primate liver xenotransplantation have recently achieved longer survival times. However, life-threatening thrombocytopenia and coagulation dysregulation continue to limit preclinical liver xenograft survival times to less than one month despite various genetic modifications in pigs and intensive pharmacological support. Transfusion of human coagulation factors and complex immunosuppressive regimens have resulted in substantial improvements in recipient survival. The fundamental biological mechanisms of thrombocytopenia and coagulation dysregulation remain incompletely understood. Current studies demonstrate that porcine von Willebrand Factor binds more tightly to human platelet GPIb receptors due to increased O-linked glycosylation, resulting in increased human platelet activation. Porcine liver sinusoidal endothelial cells and Kupffer cells phagocytose human platelets in an asialoglycoprotein receptor 1-dependent and CD40/CD154-dependent manner, respectively. Porcine Kupffer cells phagocytose human platelets via a species-incompatible SIRP alpha/CD47 axis. Key drivers of coagulation dysregulation include constitutive activation of the extrinsic clotting cascade due to failure of porcine tissue factor pathway inhibitor to repress recipient tissue factor. Additionally, porcine thrombomodulin fails to activate human protein C when bound by human thrombin, leading to a hypercoagulable state. Combined genetic modification of these key genes may mitigate liver xenotransplantation-induced thrombocytopenia and coagulation dysregulation, leading to greater recipient survival in pig-to-nonhuman primate liver xenotransplantation and, potentially, the first pig-to-human clinical trial.

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