PRECLINICAL STUDIES OF ALLOGRAFT TOLERANCE IN RHESUS MONKEYS
- 1 July 1997
- journal article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Transplantation
- Vol. 64 (1), 124-135
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00007890-199707150-00022
Abstract
A major challenge in clinical transplantation today is to design a practical and effective protocol for tolerance induction compatible with cadaver organ transplantation. A preclinical rhesus monkey kidney allograft model using immediate peritransplant anti-CD3 immunotoxin (anti-CD3-IT) and donor bone marrow (DBM) is shown here to induce operational tolerance with prolonged graft survival in the absence of chronic immunosuppressive drugs. Bone marrow harvested from the kidney donor was depleted of mature alloantigen-presenting cells and T cells by removing DR(bright) cells and CD3(bright) cells, respectively. In outbred, major histocompatibility complex-incompatible donor-recipient pairs with high pretransplant mixed lymphocyte response and cytotoxic T lymphocyte precursor activity, four of six allografts survived for periods of 120 days to >1.5 years. Graft acceptance after peritransplant treatment followed robust elimination of both peripheral blood T cells and lymph node T cells. In most recipients given anti-CD3-IT and DBM infusion, anti-donor immunoglobulin G responses were completely inhibited. Microchimerism was observed in all recipients studied, including those not given DBM, but levels of microchimerism did not correlate with graft survival. Anti-CD3-IT induction in combination with modified DBM protocols such as the depletion of mature T cells and DR(bright) antigen-presenting cells may offer new opportunities to improve clinical tolerance protocols beyond those attempted in the clinic to date. Overall, these results with anti-CD3-IT show promise for development of cadaver transplant tolerance induction.Keywords
This publication has 45 references indexed in Scilit:
- The lost chord: microchimerism and allograft survivalImmunology Today, 1996
- Multiple Bone Marrow Infusions to Enhance Acceptance of Allografts from the Same DonorAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1995
- DONOR-RECIPIENT MICROCHIMERISM IS NOT REQUIRED FOR TOLERANCE INDUCTION FOLLOWING RECIPIENT PRETREATMENT WITH DONOR-SPECIFIC TRANSFUSION AND ANTI-CD4 ANTIBODYTransplantation, 1995
- Donor-specific bone marrow infusion after orthotopic liver transplantationThe Lancet, 1994
- T cell co-stimulation and in vivo toleranceCurrent Opinion in Immunology, 1993
- Immunotoxins: magic bullets or misguided missiles?Immunology Today, 1993
- Immunotoxins: the power and the gloryImmunology Today, 1992
- Evolutionary stability of transspecies major histocompatibility complex class II DRB lineages in humans and rhesus monkeysHuman Immunology, 1992
- A fail-safe mechanism for maintaining self-tolerance.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1992
- Mixed allogeneic chimerism as an approach to transplantation toleranceImmunology Today, 1988