SUPPRESSOR T CELLS IN RATS WITH PROLONGED CARDIAC ALLOGRAFT SURVIVAL AFTER TREATMENT WITH CYCLOSPORINE1
- 1 June 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Transplantation
- Vol. 37 (6) , 595-599
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00007890-198406000-00014
Abstract
DA rats treated with cyclosporine for 2 wk after being grafted with an RT1-incompatible PVG heart graft did not reject the graft and developed a state of specific unresponsiveness to graft antigens. The cellular mechanisms maintaining this state of unresponsiveness were studied by testing the capacity of lymphocytes from these animals to effect or inhibit graft rejection in irradiated grafted hosts. Whole lymph node and spleen cell populations, and the T cell subpopulation separated from the latter, failed to restore the rejection of PVG hearts in irradiated DA recipients but restored 3rd-party Wistar-Furth (W/F) rejection. Both whole spleen cells and the splenic T cell subpopulation had the capacity to suppress the ability of normal DA lymphocytes to cause graft rejection. Suppression was not dependent upon a state of chimerism in grafted cyclosporine-treated animals and was not associated with any measurable alterations in the proportion of cytotoxic/suppressor T cells in lymphoid tissues. The state of specific unresponsiveness that follows the treatment of heart grafted rats with cyclosporine is dependent, in part, upon active suppression that is induced or mediated by T lymphocytes. Many features of the immune reactivity of cyclosporine-treated grafted rats support the hypothesis that the mechanism of specific suppression in these animals is akin to that of enhancement, rather than to that of transplantation tolerance induced in neonatal rats.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- SUPPRESSOR CELLS IN TRANSPLANTATION TOLERANCETransplantation, 1982
- KINETICS OF UNRESPONSIVENESS INDUCED BY A SHORT COURSE OF CYCLOSPORIN ATransplantation, 1982