HISTOCOMPATIBILITY STUDIES IN A CLOSELY BRED COLONY OF DOGS
Open Access
- 1 November 1971
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 134 (5) , 1222-1237
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.134.5.1222
Abstract
The segregation of the canine DL-A leukocyte group antigen(s) b, c, d, e, f, g, h, k, l, and m has been traced in 141 consecutive matings in the Cooperstown Colony of beagles. All of the leukocyte antigen(s) were regularly transmitted en bloc from parent to offspring, with no instance of independent segregation. A total of 23 haplotypes, including six different DL-A antigen patterns (gl, bkhfm, bkcd, e, be, fgl) was observed. 31 different DL-A phenotypes were observed in a population of 100 mongrel dogs. A number of statistically significant positive and negative associations between individual DL-A antigenic components occurred in this population. The results support the concept of the DL-A system as a complex immunogenetic system governed by a single region (or locus) of an autosomal pair of chromosomes. Studies of skin, kidney, heart, and liver allografts in the Cooperstown Colony indicated that the longest allograft survivals occur under genetically and serologically defined conditions of donor-recipient DL-A compatibility. Skin and renal allografts generally behaved in parallel fashion, while cardiac allografts survived for longer periods of time (MST = 47.1 days) than kidneys (MST = 28.1 days) or skin (MST = 25.1 days) under conditions of DL-A identity. Heart transplants were rejected at a more rapid rate than kidney, however, in DL-A-incompatible donor-recipient combinations. Liver transplants were accorded the longest survival time (MST = 76.2 days) under conditions of DL-A identity, but were rejected at a rapid rate (MST = 5 days) in DL-A-incompatible nonlittermate donor-recipient pairs. The results provide further evidence that the DL-A system is the principal system of histocompatibility in the canine species. The differences in survival of different organs under similar conditions of donor-recipient DL-A compatibility suggest, however, the existence of a number of unknown variables which may also be capable of significantly affecting allograft behavior.Keywords
This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pathology of the Conduction System in Cardiac RejectionCirculation, 1969
- Allografts in Genetically Defined Rats: Difference in Survival between Kidney and SkinScience, 1968
- ISOHEMAGGLUTININS AND HISTOCOMPATIBILITY IN THE DOGTransplantation, 1968
- LYMPHOCYTE TYPING IN ALLOGRAFTED BEAGLESTransplantation, 1968
- Cross-reactive Human HL-A IsoantibodiesNature, 1968
- MARROW GRAFTS BY COMBINED MARROW AND LEUKOCYTE INFUSIONS IN UNRELATED DOGS SELECTED BY HISTOCOMPATIBILITY TYPINGTransplantation, 1968
- CYTOTOXIC TYPING ANTISERA FOR MARROW GRAFTING IN LITTERMATE DOGSTransplantation, 1968
- Prolonged survival of liver transplants in the pig.BMJ, 1967
- Observations of orthotopic liver transplantation in the pig.BMJ, 1967
- IMMUNOLOGIC RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN SKIN AND KIDNEY HOMOGRAFTS IN DOGS ON IMMUNOSUPPRESSIVE THERAPYTransplantation, 1966