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Published ahead of print on July 10, 2008, doi:10.1164/rccm.200701-013OC

Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med., Volume 178, Number 7, October 2008, 765-773

A more recent version of this article appeared on October 1, 2008
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Submitted on January 2, 2007
Accepted on July 10, 2008

CD28 Downregulation on CD4 T-Cells is a Marker for Graft Dysfunction in Lung Transplant Recipients

Sean M Studer1, M. Patricia George1, Xuehai Zhu1, Yifang Song1, Vincent G Valentine2, Michael W Stoner1, Jigme Sethi1, Chad Steele3, and Steven R Duncan1*

1 Pulmonary, Allergy and Critcal Care Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA, 2 Department of Medicine, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, TX, USA, 3 Department of Pediatrics, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: duncsr{at}upmc.edu.

Rationale: Repeated antigen-driven proliferations cause CD28 on T-cells to downregulate. We hypothesized alloantigen-induced proliferations could cause CD28 downregulation in lung transplant recipients. Objectives: To ascertain if CD28 downregulation on CD4 T-cells associated with manifestations of allograft dysfunction in lung transplant recipients. Methods: Peripheral blood CD4 T-cells from 65 recipients were analyzed by flow cytometry, cytokine multiplex and proliferative assays, and correlated with clinical events. Measurements and Main Results: Findings that CD28 was present on <90% of total CD4 T-cells were predominantly seen among the recipients with bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome (specificity=88%). Perforin and granzyme B were produced by >50% of the CD4+CD28null cells, but <6% of autologous CD4+CD28+ cells (p≤0.006). CD4+CD28null cells also had increased productions of proinflammatory cytokines, but less frequently expressed regulatory T-cell marker FoxP3 (2.1±1.3%), compared to autologous CD4+CD28+ (9.5±1.4, p=0.01). Cyclosporine A (100 ng/ml) inhibited proliferation of CD4+CD28null cells by 33±11% vs. 68±12% inhibition of CD4+CD28null (p=0.025). FEV1 fell six months later (0.35±0.04L) in recipients with CD4+CD28+/CD4total<90% (CD28% Low) compared to 0.08±0.08L among CD4+CD28+/CD4total>90% (CD28% High) recipients (p=0.013). Two-year freedom from death or retransplantation in CD28% Low recipients was 32±10%, vs. 78±6% among the CD28% High subjects (p<0.0001). Conclusions: CD28 downregulation on CD4 cells is associated with bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome and poor outcomes in lung transplantation recipients. CD4+CD28null cells could be important in the progression of allograft dysfunction. These findings may illuminate a novel paradigm of transplantation immunopathogenesis, and suggest CD28 measurements could identify recipients at risk for clinical deteriorations.


Key words: bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome, obliterative bronchiolitis, chronic allograft rejection, regulatory T-cells, cyclosporine







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