Induction of Immunologic Tolerance for Transplantation
- 1 January 1999
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American Physiological Society in Physiological Reviews
- Vol. 79 (1) , 99-141
- https://doi.org/10.1152/physrev.1999.79.1.99
Abstract
Rossini, Aldo A., Dale L. Greiner, and John P. Mordes. Induction of Immunologic Tolerance for Transplantation. Physiol. Rev. 79: 99–141, 1999. — In the second half of the 20th century, the transplantation of replacement organs and tissues to cure disease has become a clinical reality. Success has been achieved as a direct result of progress in understanding the cellular and molecular biology of the immune system. This understanding has led to the development of immunosuppressive pharmaceuticals that are part of nearly every transplantation procedure. All such drugs are toxic to some degree, however, and their chronic use, mandatory in transplantation, predisposes the patient to the development of infection and cancer. In addition, many of them may have deleterious long-term effects on the function of grafts. New immunosuppressive agents are constantly under development, but organ transplantation remains a therapy that requires patients to choose between the risks of their primary illness and its treatment on the one hand, and the risks of life-long systemic immunosuppression on the other. Alternatives to immunosuppression include modulation of donor grafts to reduce immunogenicity, removal of passenger leukocytes, transplantation into immunologically privileged sites like the testis or thymus, encapsulation of tissue, and the induction of a state of immunologic tolerance. It is the last of these alternatives that has, perhaps, the most promise and most generic applicability as a future therapy. Recent reports documenting long-term graft survival in the absence of immunosuppression suggest that tolerance-based therapies may soon become a clinical reality. Of particular interest to our laboratory are transplantation strategies that focus on the induction of donor-specific T-cell unresponsiveness. The basic biology, protocols, experimental outcomes, and clinical implications of tolerance-based transplantation are the focus of this review.Keywords
This publication has 100 references indexed in Scilit:
- Deletion of alloantigen-reactive thymocytes as a mechanism of adult tolerance induction following intrathymic antigen administrationEuropean Journal of Immunology, 1997
- Indirect T-cell allorecognition: perspectives for peptide-based therapy in transplantation lImmunology Today, 1997
- Immune privilege, T-cell tolerance, and tissue-restricted autoimmunityHuman Immunology, 1997
- Production of pigs transgenic for human DAF to overcome complement-mediated hyperacute xenograft rejection in manResearch in Immunology, 1996
- Chimerism and transplantation tolerance: cause and effectImmunology Today, 1996
- The lost chord: microchimerism and allograft survivalImmunology Today, 1996
- Presentation and recognition of major and minor histocompatibility antigensTransplant Immunology, 1994
- Identification of an Alternatively Spliced Form of the Murine Homolog of B7Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1994
- Multiple levels of peripheral toleranceImmunology Today, 1993
- Immunology of xenograft rejectionHuman Immunology, 1990