TOLERANCE TO RAT LIVER ALLOGRAFTS
- 1 December 1996
- journal article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Transplantation
- Vol. 62 (12) , 1725-1730
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00007890-199612270-00005
Abstract
Liver allografts in some rat strains are often spontaneously accepted across a complete major histocompatibility barrier without the requirement for immunosuppression while other nonliver allografts are rejected. In previous studies, we have shown that spontaneous acceptance is dependent on liver passenger leukocytes. Depletion of passenger leukocytes by donor irradiation allows rejection, with DA recipients of irradiated PVG livers having a median survival time (MST) of 16 days. Here we show that, in this model, spontaneous acceptance is reconstituted by intravenous injection of donor leukocytes. Intravenous injection of 3-5×107 PVG liver leukocytes significantly prolonged DA survival time (MST=96 days,P=0.026), as did 5×107 spleen leukocytes(MST>100 days, P=0.002). Deletion of T cells from the reconstituting inoculum reduced survival time (MST=78 days,P=0.039), whereas deletion of B cells or monocytes/macrophages had no effect on survival time. In contrast, PVG hearts are regularly rejected by DA recipients, and PVG liver or spleen leukocytes, even at doses of greater than 3×108 cells/recipient, were unable to induce heart acceptance. To investigate the possibility that acceptance of the irradiated liver but not the heart might be due to the large mass of the liver, two kidneys and two hearts of PVG origin were transplanted to each DA recipient together with 1.5×108 PVG leukocytes. These organs survived for greater than 200 days, thereby showing that a large mass of donor tissue, in association with donor leukocytes, leads to acceptance of organs that are rejected if transplanted singly. It appears likely that spontaneous liver transplant tolerance is a high-dose or activation-associated immune phenomenon.Keywords
This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- Isolation of a 40 kDa immunoinhibitory protein induced by rat liver transplantationTransplant Immunology, 1995
- Detection of membrane-bound and soluble MHC class I antigen from donor migrating cells following rat liver transplantationTransplant Immunology, 1994
- Murine liver allograft transplantation: Tolerance and donor cell chimerismHepatology, 1994
- Immunological tolerance induced by liver grafting in the rat: splenic macrophages and T cells mediate distinct phases of immunosuppressive activityClinical and Experimental Immunology, 1991
- SPECIFIC SUPPRESSION OF ALLOGRAFT REJECTION BY SOLUBLE CLASS I ANTIGEN AND COMPLEXES WITH MONOCLONAL ANTIBODYTransplantation, 1990
- ORTHOTOPIC LIVER ALLOGRAFTS IN THE RATTransplantation, 1984
- Reversal of transplantation immunity by liver graftingNature, 1981
- FULLY ALLOGENEIC LIVER GRAFTING IN RATS INDUCES A STATE OF SYSTEMIC NONREACTIVITY TO DONOR TRANSPLANTATION ANTIGENSTransplantation, 1980
- Kidney transplants in mice. An analysis of the immune status of mice bearing long-term, H-2 incompatible transplantsThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1978
- Induction of Immunological Tolerance by Porcine Liver AllograftsNature, 1969