Solid tissue transplant is a growing medical need that is further complicated by a limited donor organ supply. Acute and chronic rejection occurs in nearly all transplants and reduces long-term graft survival, thus increasing the need for repeat transplantation. Viruses have evolved highly adapted responses designed to evade the host's immune defenses. Immunomodulatory proteins derived from viruses represent a novel class of potential therapeutics that are under investigation as biologics to attenuate immune-mediated rejection and damage. These immune-modulating proteins have the potential to reduce the need for traditional posttransplant immune suppressants and improve graft survival. The myxoma virus-derived protein M-T7 is a promising biologic that targets chemokine and glycosaminoglycan pathways central to kidney transplant rejection. Orthotopic transplantations in mice are prohibitively difficult and costly and require a highly trained microsurgeon to successfully perform the procedure. Here we describe a kidney-to-kidney subcapsular transplant model as a practical and simple method for studying transplant rejection, a model that requires fewer mice. One kidney can be used as a donor for transplants into six or more recipient mice. Using this model there is lower morbidity, pain, and mortality for the mice. Subcapsular kidney transplantation provides a first step approach to testing virus-derived proteins as new potential immune-modulating therapeutics to reduce transplant rejection and inflammation.
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第一作者:
第一作者单位:[1]Arizona State Univ, Biodesign Inst, Ctr Personalized Diagnost, Tempe, AZ 85281 USA[2]Arizona State Univ, Biodesign Inst, Ctr Immunotherapy Vaccines & Virotherapy, Tempe, AZ 85281 USA
通讯作者:
通讯机构:[1]Arizona State Univ, Biodesign Inst, Ctr Personalized Diagnost, Tempe, AZ 85281 USA[2]Arizona State Univ, Biodesign Inst, Ctr Immunotherapy Vaccines & Virotherapy, Tempe, AZ 85281 USA
推荐引用方式(GB/T 7714):
Burgin Michelle,Yaron Jordan R.,Zhang Liqiang,et al.Kidney Subcapsular Allograft Transplants as a Model to Test Virus-Derived Chemokine-Modulating Proteins as Therapeutics[J].VIRUSES AS THERAPEUTICS: Methods and Protocols.2021,2225:257-273.doi:10.1007/978-1-0716-1012-1_15.
APA:
Burgin, Michelle,Yaron, Jordan R.,Zhang, Liqiang,Guo, Qiuyun,Daggett, Juliane...&Lucas, Alexandra R..(2021).Kidney Subcapsular Allograft Transplants as a Model to Test Virus-Derived Chemokine-Modulating Proteins as Therapeutics.VIRUSES AS THERAPEUTICS: Methods and Protocols,2225,
MLA:
Burgin, Michelle,et al."Kidney Subcapsular Allograft Transplants as a Model to Test Virus-Derived Chemokine-Modulating Proteins as Therapeutics".VIRUSES AS THERAPEUTICS: Methods and Protocols 2225.(2021):257-273