Immune Checkpoints in Solid Organ Transplantation

Archive ouverte

del Bello, Arnaud | Treiner, Emmanuel

Edité par CCSD ; MDPI -

International audience. Allogenic graft acceptance is only achieved by life-long immunosuppression, which comes at the cost of significant toxicity. Clinicians face the challenge of adapting the patients’ treatments over long periods to lower the risks associated with these toxicities, permanently leveraging the risk of excessive versus insufficient immunosuppression. A major goal and challenge in the field of solid organ transplantation (SOT) is to attain a state of stable immune tolerance specifically towards the grafted organ. The immune system is equipped with a set of inhibitory co-receptors known as immune checkpoints (ICs), which physiologically regulate numerous effector functions. Insufficient regulation through these ICs can lead to autoimmunity and/or immune-mediated toxicity, while excessive expression of ICs induces stable hypo-responsiveness, especially in T cells, a state sometimes referred to as exhaustion. IC blockade has emerged in the last decade as a powerful therapeutic tool against cancer. The opposite action, i.e., subverting IC for the benefit of establishing a state of specific hypo-responsiveness against auto- or allo-antigens, is still in its infancy. In this review, we will summarize the available literature on the role of ICs in SOT and the relevance of ICs with graft acceptance. We will also discuss the possible influence of current immunosuppressive medications on IC functions.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Global and donor-specific T cell exhaustion after kidney transplantation : Phenotypic and functional analyses. Caractériser l'épuisement lymphocytaire T global ou donneur-spécifique, après transplantation rénale : analyse phénotypique et fonctionnelle

Archive ouverte | del Bello, Arnaud | CCSD

Kidney transplantation requires the long-term use of immunosuppressive therapy (IT) even if a modification of rejections phenotype with time was previously noted. However, patient and graft survival remain entailed by over-IT (e.g...

The CD226/TIGIT axis is involved in T cell hypo-responsiveness appearance in long-term kidney transplant recipients

Archive ouverte | del Bello, Arnaud | CCSD

International audience. T cell exhaustion refers to a dysfunctional state in which effector T cells present a decreased ability to proliferate and to produce cytokines, while the co-expression of inhibitory receptor...

Possible patient to patient transmission of progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy among kidney-transplant patients

Archive ouverte | Lajaunie, Rebecca | CCSD

International audience

Chargement des enrichissements...