TOLERANCE IN A RAT CARDIAC ALLOGRAFT MODEL AFTER SHORT-TERM TREATMENT WITH LF 08-0299
- 1 December 1996
- journal article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Transplantation
- Vol. 62 (11) , 1543-1549
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00007890-199612150-00003
Abstract
LF 08-0299 is a new immunosuppressive compound. In a fully mismatched rat cardiac allograft model (Dark Agouti [DA]-->Lewis [LEW]), long-term unresponsiveness was observed after LF 08-0299 short-term treatment (20 days). Survival of additional cardiac and skin DA allografts, and rejection of third-party (Brown Norway [BN]) skin allografts demonstrated induction of a donor-specific tolerance state. The aim of this study was to investigate mechanisms of cardiac acceptance in this model. LEW rats with long-term surviving heart grafts (LTS LEW) were examined for their immune proliferative and cytotoxic responses toward donors (DA) and third-party (BN) antigens. Normal proliferative responses were observed and limiting dilution analysis did not reveal a reduction of T cytotoxic cell precursors. In our model, tolerance exists despite the presence of cells reactive with donor alloantigens. In vivo adoptive transfer of serum from LTS LEW failed to transfer unresponsiveness, indicating that serum factors do not seem to be involved in tolerance maintenance. Transfer of spleen cells, obtained from LTS LEW, showed specific prolongation of DA cardiac allografts in syngeneic hosts. Moreover, these cells were able to induce the rejection of third-party BN grafts. These results suggest that although LTS LEW possessed suppressor cells, they remained immunocompetent in recognizing and responding to third-party alloantigens. Purified CD4+ cells transferred unresponsiveness to secondary hosts, but CD8+ cells did not. Taken together, these results suggest that tolerance to donor alloantigens after treatment with LF 08-0299 in the rat cardiac allograft model is most likely due to induction of specific CD4+ suppressor cell activity, rather than induction of suppressive serum factor and selective elimination of antidonor helper or cytotoxic cell precursors (clonal deletion).Keywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- IN VIVO STUDIES OF THE MAINTENANCE OF PERIPHERAL TRANSPLANT TOLERANCE AFTER CYCLOSPORINETransplantation, 1995
- Immunosuppressive drugs and the induction of transplantation toleranceTransplant Immunology, 1994
- DEVELOPMENT OF TOLERANCE TO CLASS II-MISMATCHED RENAL TRANSPLANTS AFTER A SHORT COURSE OF CYCLOSPORINE THERAPY IN MINIATURE SWINETransplantation, 1994
- FURTHER STUDIES OF VETO ACTIVITY IN RHESUS MONKEY BONE MARROW IN RELATION TO ALLOGRAFT TOLERANCE AND CHIMERISMTransplantation, 1994
- SIMILAR LEVELS OF GRANZYME A AND PERFORIN mRNA EXPRESSION IN REJECTED AND TOLERATED HEART ALLOGRAFTS IN DONOR-SPECIFIC TOLERANCE IN RATSTransplantation, 1993
- Cytokines and Peripheral Tolerance to AlloantigenImmunological Reviews, 1993
- Revisiting and revising suppressor T cellsImmunology Today, 1992
- PERIPHERAL TOLERANCE OF AN ALLOGRAFT IN ADULT RATS—CHARACTERIZATION BY LOW INTERLEUKIN-2 AND INTERFERON-γ mRNA LEVELS AND BY STRONG ACCUMULATION OF MAJOR HISTOCOMPATIBILITY COMPLEX TRANSCRIPTS IN THE GRAFTTransplantation, 1992
- Specific Acceptance of Cardiac Allograft After Treatment with Antibodies to ICAM-1 and LFA-1Science, 1992
- LONG-TERM RENAL ALLOGRAFT SURVIVAL IN RATS PREIMMUNIZED WITH DONOR STRAIN RT1.B ANTIGENSTransplantation, 1983