ROLE OF ANTIBODY IN RAT RENAL ALLOGRAFT REJECTION

Abstract
BN rats were immunized with one or three doses of 1 × 108 highly purified LEW erythrocytes (LEW-E) yielding IgM antibody (IgM-BN rats) and IgG antibody (IgG-BN rats) to LEW class I antigens, respectively. LEW kidneys transplanted into IgM-BN rats elicited cytotoxic T cell responses and lymphocytotoxic antibody responses comparable to those elicited by LEW renal grafts in unmodified BN rats. However, LEW kidneys were rejected by IgM-BN hosts in a slightly delayed fashion compared with controls (mean rejection times (MRTs), 9.4 versus 7.1 days); delayed rejection was associated with the absence of anti-LEW IgG hemagglutinins from the recipients' blood and the absence of vas-culonecrotic lesions from rejected renal grafts. LEW kidneys inserted into IgG-BN rats were rejected in a slightly accelerated fashion compared with controls (MRT, 6.6 days). Lymphocytotoxins developed in IgG-BN recipients of LEW kidneys in a fashion similar to that of controls, but cytotoxic T cell responses were delayed up to the 6th day after transplantation. These observations confirm our previous finding that cytotoxic T cells do not play a decisive role in acute rejection in this model. The association observed between delayed or accelerated rejection of LEW kidneys by BN rats sensitized with LEW-E and the absence or presence of anti-donor IgG hemagglutinins in the blood of these recipients after transplantation suggests an important role for IgG anti-donor class I antibodies in the rejection of LEW renal allografts by BN rats.