EFFECT OF ANTICOMPLEMENTARY COBRA VENOM FACTOR ON HYPERACUTE RAT CARDIAC ALLOGRAFT-REJECTION
- 1 January 1978
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 39 (5) , 463-470
Abstract
Cobra venom factor was used as a probe to evaluate the effect of depression of recipient hemolytic C3 [complement component 3] activity on the sequential morphologic features of hyperacute cardiac allograft rejection in the rat. A series of ACI cardiac allografts transplanted to Lewis recipients presensitized with ACI skin grafts was studied at arbitrary time periods over the initial 24 h post-transplantation. The usual morphologic features of hyperacute rejection in this model, platelet aggregation, intravascular fibrin, endothelial destruction, neutrophil infiltration and myocardial necrosis, were not observed in all allografts when recipient hemolytic C3 activity was virtually undetectable at the time of transplantation. Allograft binding of rat C3 was not detected by immunofluorescence, although staining for Ig[immunoglobulin]G was commonly encountered. Despite profound depression of recipient hemolytic C3 activity, mononuclear cells were observed within the allograft microcirculation by 2 h post-transplantation, and changes consistent with early cellular rejection were present in allografts examined at 24 h. C activation by graft-bound alloantibody is a critical effector mechanism of hyperacute rejection in this inbred rat model.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- ROLE OF THE COMPLEMENT SYSTEM IN GRAFT REJECTIONS IN EXPERIMENTAL ANIMALS AND MAN*Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1966
- ISOLATION + PRELIMINARY CHARACTERIZATION OF RAT MAST CELL GRANULES1964