CYCLOSPORINE-INDUCED TOLERANCE TO INTRATESTICULAR ISLET XENOGRAFTS
- 1 October 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Transplantation
- Vol. 50 (4) , 654-656
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00007890-199010000-00025
Abstract
Survival of highly immunogenic hamster islet xenografts can be achieved in rats if the graft is transplanted into the abdominal testis. Permanent survival requires the administration of cyclosporine during the first thirty days after grafting. The majority of grafts will survive indefinitely beyond this point if the grafted animals receive a once-weekly maintenance dose of CsA until day 100, when CsA is no longer necessary. Hamster islet xenografts transplanted under the kidney capsule or into the portal vein are rejected, regardless of CsA treatment. Animals maintaining long-term primary intratesticular xenografts accept secondary contralateral testicular xenografts. CsA is not required. Primary grafts are also resistant to the adoptive transfer of lymphocytes from rat donors primed to hamster xenoantigens. Secondary hepatic and renal islet xenograft survival is also extended some hepatic grafts long-term. Therefore, the combination of CsA and the privileged status of the abdominal testis leads not only to the acceptance of primary intratesticular islet xenografts but also to partial immunological unresponsiveness of subsequent grafts in other sites.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cyclosporine-induced tolerance requires antigens capable of initiating an immune response.The Journal of Immunology, 1987
- EFFECT OF LOW-TEMPERATURE CULTURE AND SITE OF TRANSPLANTATION ON HAMSTER ISLET XENOGRAFT SURVIVAL (HAMSTER TO MOUSE)Transplantation, 1987
- Specific unresponsiveness in rats with prolonged cardiac allograft survival after treatment with cyclosporine. Mediation of specific suppression by T helper/inducer cells.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1985
- RESTORATION OF T CELL RESPONSIVENESS TO INTERLEUKIN-2 IN RECIPIENTS OF PANCREATIC ISLET XENOGRAFTS TREATED WITH CYCLOSPORINETransplantation, 1985