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Dive into the research topics where A. J. Ouwehand is active.

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Featured researches published by A. J. Ouwehand.


Transplantation | 1993

The detection of cytotoxic T cells with high-affinity receptors for donor antigens in the transplanted heart as a prognostic factor for graft rejection

A. J. Ouwehand; Carla C. Baan; Dave L. Roelen; L. M. B. Vaessen; Balk Ah; N. H. P. M. Jutte; Egbert Bos; Frans H.J. Claas; W. Weimar

Alloreactive T lymphocytes are the initiators and effectors of acute rejection of organ transplants, and T cells with high-affinity receptors for antigen might be especially implicated in this process. It has been shown that the cytotoxic capacity of CTL with low affinity for alloantigens can be inhibited with CD8 mAb, while high-affinity CTL are not affected. To investigate whether the presence of such high-affinity cells in human heart transplants may be predictive for acute rejection, we analyzed their frequency in cultures derived from endomyocardial biopsies in 19 patients, 9 of whom had never experienced acute rejection and 10 who had had one or more rejection episodes. IN the rejectors, already before histological signs of rejection (myocyte damage) had developed, significantly higher donor-reactive CTL frequencies were found compared with the nonrejectors (medians of 10,586 vs 1,169 reactive cells per 10(6) tested cells, P = 0.002). After CD8 inhibition, the difference between rejectors and nonrejectors was even more pronounced (P < 0.001). In patients with rejection, the number of CD8-resistant, high-affinity CTL was higher than 1000 per million cells in all cases, while in patients who had never experienced rejection this number was less than 1000. As these CTL characteristics are already present before the first histological signs of rejection have developed, this might be used as a prognostic factors.


Human Immunology | 1991

Alloreactive lymphoid infiltrates in human heart transplants: Loss of class II-directed cytotoxicity more than 3 months after transplantation

A. J. Ouwehand; L. M. B. Vaessen; Carla C. Baan; N. H. P. M. Jutte; A. H. M. M. Balk; Catherina E. Essed; Egbert Bos; Frans Claas; Willem Weimar

From 535 endomyocardial biopsies (87 heart transplant recipients) 283 cell cultures could be generated. All cultures tested contained T lymphocytes and in most cases CD4 was the predominant phenotype at any time posttransplant. A significantly higher proportion of CD8-dominated cultures was found among cultures from biopsies without myocytolysis. In the first 3 months post transplant 57% of cultures showed cytotoxicity against both class I and class II mismatched donor major histocompatibility complex (MHC) antigens, changing to an incidence of 33% at greater than 90 days. This proved to be due to a significant decrease in the number of cultures with human leukocyte antigen class II-directed cytotoxicity. This study shows that early after transplantation a heart transplant is infiltrated with activated donor-specific cytotoxic T cells which recognize a broad spectrum of mismatched donor MHC antigens, and that in time this spectrum becomes more restricted.


Transplantation | 1994

Differential avidity and cyclosporine sensitivity of committed donor-specific graft-infiltrating cytotoxic T cells and their precursors : relevance for clinical cardiac graft rejection

Lenard M. B. Vaessen; Carla C. Baan; A. J. Ouwehand; A. H. M. M. Balk; N. H. P. M. Jutte; B. Mochtar; Frans H.J. Claas; Willem Weimar

We have used limiting dilution analysis to study the qualitative and quantitative differences between graft-infiltrating cytotoxic T cell populations propagated from endomyocardial biopsies of heart transplant patients who experienced one or more acute rejection episodes and patients who never showed signs of rejection. Limiting dilution cultures were stimulated with autologous or donor cells both in the absence or in presence of cyclosporine and of CD8 in the cytotoxic phase. Almost all antigen-primed, committed cytotoxic T cells (cCTL) present in the graft of patients with rejections were CsA resistant. In contrast, in most patients of the nonrejector group, a substantial part of the cCTL could be inhibited by CsA. The CTL precursors (pCTL) in both groups were predominantly CsA sensitive. Addition of CD8 mAb during the cytotoxicity phase of the limiting dilution analysis was used to differentiate between CTL populations with high avidity for donor antigens and populations with low avidity. The predominant subpopulation in the graft of rejectors was a CsA-resistant cCTL with high avidity, while in the graft of most nonrejectors, cCTL with low avidity dominated. In most rejectors, CD8 mAb had only a minor influence on the pCTL frequency estimates, and thus on T cells with high avidity. CsA-sensitive pCTL with high avidity might represent an intermediate stage between the naive pCTL and mature, functional, CsA-insensitive cCTL with high avidity for donor antigens.


Clinical and Experimental Immunology | 2008

Acute rejection in heart transplant patients is associated with the presence of committed donor-specific cytotoxic lymphocytes in the graft but not in the blood.

L. M. B. Vaessen; Carla C. Baan; A. J. Ouwehand; N. H. P. M. Jutte; A. H. M. M. Balk; B. Mochtar; Frans H.J. Claas; W. Weimar

In vivo‐activated, commuted donor‐specific cytotoxic lymphocytes (cCTL) can be propagated and expanded from endomyocardial biopsies (EMB) in IL‐2‐enriched medium especially during an acute rejection episode. We report here our efforts to detect these cCTL by the same technique in peripheral blood at the moment of rejection and when no rejection was diagnosed. During or just before rejection, significantly less frequent (P < 0·01) donor reactive cCTL were found in PBL samples (two out of 20) than in the simultaneously taken EMB samples (13 out of 19). Donor B‐LCL and/or third‐party B‐LCL were lysed by 15 PBL samples. Inhibition studies revealed that this lysis was due to LAK‐like cytotoxicity. The results show that peripheral blood does not reflect intra‐graft events, which is probably the reason for the irrcproduciblc results of diagnosis of rejection by monitoring immunological parameters in the peripheral blood.


Human Immunology | 1990

γδ T-cell receptor-positive T-cell clones derived from human heart transplants do not show donor-specific cytotoxicity

N. H. P. M. Jutte; B.A.E. Vandekerckhove; L. M. B. Vaessen; A. J. Ouwehand; Carla C. Baan; Egbert Bos; Frans H.J. Claas; Willem Weimar

gamma delta T-cell receptor-positive T-cell clones were obtained from three endomyocardial biopsies taken from two patients. Clones obtained from two biopsies from patient A, one taken during rejection and one after resolution of this rejection, were WT31-, 11F2+, Ti gamma A-, delta TcS1+. Clones from patient B grown from a biopsy without histologic signs of rejection were either WT31-, 11F2+, Ti gamma A+, delta TcS1-, or WT31+. All gamma delta T-cell receptor-positive clones had cytolytic potential but did not demonstrate donor-specific lysis.


Human Immunology | 1994

Characteristics of graft-infiltrating lymphocytes after human heart transplantation: HLA mismatches and the cellular immune response within the transplanted heart

A. J. Ouwehand; Carla C. Baan; L. M. B. Vaessen; N. H. P. M. Jutte; A. H. M. M. Balk; Egbert Bos; Frans Claas; Willem Weimar

The influence of HLA mismatches between donor and recipient on the phenotypes, function, and specificity of T-lymphocyte cultures derived from endomyocardial biopsies was studied in 118 heart transplant recipients. In case of HLA-DR mismatches, the majority of the EMB-derived cultures were dominated by CD4+ T cells while, in patients with HLA-A and -B mismatches but without DR mismatches, CD8+ T cells comprised the predominant T-cell subset. Cytotoxicity against donor antigens was observed in 75% of the cultures. A significantly (p < 0.005) lower proportion of the cultures showed cytotoxicity against HLA-A antigens (36%) when compared with HLA-B (53%) or HLA-DR (49%). An HLA-A2 mismatch elicited a cytotoxic response that was comparable to that found against HLA-B and -DR antigens: 62% of the cultures from HLA-A2 mismatched donor-recipient combinations was reactive against A2. A higher number of A, B, or DR mismatches resulted in a higher number of cytotoxic cultures directed against these antigens. A higher number of HLA-B and -DR mismatches was associated with a lower freedom from rejection. Our data indicate that, despite the use of adequate immunosuppressive therapy, the degree of HLA matching plays a crucial role in the immune response against a transplanted heart, resulting in a significant effect on freedom from rejection.


Transplantation | 1993

Altered specificity of alloreactive cardiac graft-infiltrating cells by prophylactic treatment with OKT3 or horse antilymphocyte globulin

A. J. Ouwehand; Carla C. Baan; Kees Groeneveld; A. H. M. M. Balk; NlCOLET H. P. M. Jutte; Egbert Bos; Frans H.J. Claas; WlLLEM Weimar

Graft-infiltrating lymphocytes from patients who were prophylactically treated with OKT3 or horse an-tilymphocyte globulin (H-ALG) were found to have different specificity patterns from those in the control group that received cyclosporine from the day of transplantation. This prophylactic treatment led to a significant decrease of the HLA-DR-directed cytotoxicity, while the cytolytic response against HLA-class I mismatches was hardly affected. In H-ALG patients without rejection, the percentages of class I-reactive cultures were found to be lower than in the other treatment groups, which was mainly due to a lower percentage of HLA-B-reactive cultures. In CsA and OKT3 patients, cytotoxic T cells were rather directed to HLA-B mismatches than to HLA-A antigens, while in H-ALG patients no difference in HLA-A and B-directed cytotoxicity was found. Our data suggest that OKT3 and H-ALG influence the specificity of the T cell allorepertoire, resulting in a decreased frequency of class II-specific cytotoxic T cells after transplantation. H-ALG also has a downregulating influence on the CTL response against HLA class I (HLA-B) antigens. In some patients a fast regeneration of these cells occurs, which results in a higher rejection incidence during the first posttrans-plant year.


Transplant International | 1992

Monitoring of cardiac graft recipients: comparison of in vivo activated, committed T lymphocytes in peripheral blood and in the graft

Carla C. Baan; L. M. B. Vaessen; A. J. Ouwehand; P. Heyse; C. R. Daane; N. H. P. M. Jutte; Frans H.J. Claas; W. Weimar

The proliferative and cytotoxic capacity of peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) and the cytotoxic activity of lymphocytes propagated from endomyocardial biopsies (EMB) towards donor cells was used to identify in vivo activated, committed T cells. A series of 39 PBL samples and 38 EMB simultaneously taken from 20 patients after heart transplantation was cultured in interleukin 2 (IL-2) conditioned medium. The cytotoxic capacity of these cultures against donor cells was tested in a 4-h chromium-51 release assay. From a comparable patient group, 224 samples were evaluated for donor reactivity by a primed lymphocyte test (PLT). Analysis showed that PBL cultures hardly ever contained committed cytotoxic T lymphocytes (cCTL, 2/39) or committed proliferative T lymphocytes (cPTL, 1/224). In contrast, significantly more EMB cultures (17/38, P < 0.001, chi2 test) demonstrated donor-directed cytotoxicity. This was especially found during rejection (11/17 vs 6/21 without rejection, P = 0.05). These results show that after heart transplantation, committed cells are mainly found in the graft.


Transplant International | 1992

The influence of HLA-mismatches on phenotypic and functional characteristics of graft infiltrating lymphocytes after heart transplantation.

A. J. Ouwehand; Carla C. Baan; L. M. B. Vaessen; N. H. P. M. Jutte; A. H. M. M. Balk; Egbert Bos; Frans H.J. Claas; Willem Weimar

We studied the influence of HLA mismatches on T lymphocyte cultures that were derived from endomyocardial biopsies (EMB) from 118 heart transplant recipients. From patients with DR mismatches, the majority of the EMB-derived cultures were dominated by CD4, while in patients without DR mismatches, CD8 was the predominant T cell subset. The majority (75%) of the cultures were cytotoxic against donor antigens. A significantly (P < 0.005) lower proportion of the cultures showed cytotoxicity (36%) against HLA-A antigens when compared to HLA-B (53%) or HLA-DR (49%). A dose effect phenomenon was detected for all HLA antigens, including HLA-A: a higher number of A, B or DR mismatches resulted in a higher number of cytotoxic cultures directed against these antigens. B and DR matching had the greatest influence on 6 month freedom from rejection. Both our experimental and clinical data indicated that HLA matching played a role in the immune response against a transplanted heart.


Transplant International | 1992

Donor directed cytotoxicity of cardiac graft infiltrating cells during cytomegalovirus infection

A. J. Ouwehand; A. H. M. M. Balk; Carla C. Baan; C. R. Daane; Herold J. Metselaar; K. Groeneveld; N. H. P. M. Jutte; Egbert Bos; W. Weimar

We investigated whether cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection had an effect on donor directed cytotoxicity of cardiac graft infiltrating cells. The group we studied comprised 89 heart transplant recipients. Thirty eight showed signs of CMV infection, and in 27 of them cytolytic activity of biopsy-derived cultures could be tested during the infection. Fifty-one patients had never had CMV infection, and they were used as the control group. Eight patients had a primary, and 19 a secondary infection. We found that during CMV infection, both primary and secondary, a significantly higher proportion of the biopsy-derived cultures showed cytotoxicity against donor antigens (P < 0.01 when compared to the control group). In secondary infections, this was only due to an increase in donor class I directed cytotoxicity, while in primary infections a significant increase of class II directed cytotoxicity was also found (P < 0.005 when compared to secondary infection).

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Carla C. Baan

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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N. H. P. M. Jutte

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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L. M. B. Vaessen

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Frans H.J. Claas

Leiden University Medical Center

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A. H. M. M. Balk

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Egbert Bos

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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W. Weimar

Erasmus University Medical Center

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Willem Weimar

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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B. Mochtar

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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