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  2. Interleukin-8 mediates neutrophil-endothelial interactions in pig-to-human xenogeneic models

Interleukin-8 mediates neutrophil-endothelial interactions in pig-to-human xenogeneic models

  • Xenotransplantation. 2018 Mar;25(2):e12385. doi: 10.1111/xen.12385.
Beth M French 1 Selin Sendil 1 Krishna Mohan Sepuru 2 Jolene Ranek 1 Lars Burdorf 1 Donald Harris 1 Emily Redding 1 Xiangfei Cheng 1 Christopher T Laird 1 Yuming Zhao 1 Benjamin Cerel 1 Krishna Rajarathnam 2 Richard N Pierson 3rd 1 3 Agnes M Azimzadeh 1
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Department of Surgery, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
  • 2 Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, TX, USA.
  • 3 VAMC Baltimore, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Abstract

Background: Human neutrophils are sequestered by pig lung xenografts within minutes during ex vivo perfusion. This phenomenon is not prevented by pig genetic modifications that remove xeno-antigens or added human regulatory molecules intended to down-regulate activation of complement and coagulation pathways. This study investigated whether recipient and donor interleukin-8 (IL-8), a chemokine known to attract and activate neutrophils during inflammation, is elaborated in the context of xenogeneic injury, and whether human or pig IL-8 promote the adhesion of human neutrophils in in vitro xenograft models.

Methods: Plasma levels of pig, human or non-human primate (NHP) IL-8 from ex vivo pig lung perfusion experiments (n = 10) and in vivo pig-to-baboon lung transplantation in baboons (n = 22) were analysed by ELISA or Luminex. Human neutrophils stimulated with human or pig IL-8 were analysed for CD11b expression, CD18 activation, oxidative burst and adhesion to resting or TNF-activated endothelial cells (EC) evaluated under static and flow (Bioflux) conditions. For some experiments, human neutrophils were incubated with Reparixin (IL-8/CXCL8 receptor blocker) and then analysed as in the in vitro experiments mentioned above.

Results: Plasma levels of pig IL-8 (~6113 pg/mL) increased more than human (~1235 pg/mL) between one and four hours after initiation of ex vivo lung perfusion. However, pig IL-8 levels remained consistently low (<60 pg/mL) and NHP IL-8 plasma levels increased by ~2000 pg/mL after four hours in a pig-to-baboon lung xenotransplantation. In vitro, human neutrophils' CD11b expression, CD18 activation and oxidative burst all increased in a dose-dependent manner following exposure to either pig or human IL-8, which also were associated with increased adhesion to EC in both static and flow conditions. Reparixin inhibited human neutrophil activation by both pig and human IL-8 in a dose-dependent fashion. At 0.1 mg/mL, Reparixin inhibited the adhesion of IL-8-activated human neutrophils to pAECs by 84 ± 2.5%.

Conclusions: Pig IL-8 increased in an ex vivo model of pig-to-human lung xenotransplantation but is not detected in vivo, whereas human or NHP IL-8 is elevated to a similar degree in both models. Both pig and human IL-8 activate human neutrophils and increase their adhesion to pig aortic ECs, a process significantly inhibited by the addition of Reparixin to human neutrophils. This work implicates IL-8, whether of pig or human origin, as a possible factor mediating in lung xenograft inflammation and injury and supports the evaluation of therapeutic targeting of this pathway in the context of xenotransplantation.

Keywords

cell adhesion; chemokines; endothelial cells; interleukin-8; lung; neutrophils; xenotransplantation.

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