SUPPRESSION OF LYMPHOCYTE REACTIVITY BY BLOOD TRANSFUSIONS IN UREMIC PATIENTS
- 1 April 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Transplantation
- Vol. 35 (4) , 332-338
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00007890-198304000-00014
Abstract
To investigate the mechanism of the beneficial effect of blood transfusions (BT) on subsequent kidney transplant survival, we have studied the influence of planned BT on lymphocyte reactivity in previously nontransfused uremic patients. A marked decrease in mixed-lymphocyte reactions (MLR) to the donor and to other unrelated cells was observed soon after the first BT in 38% of the patients. This effect waned thereafter, but additional transfusions led to more pronounced and prolonged reductions. A sustained and nonspecific reduction that appeared only after the second or third BT was observed in 24% ot the patients. Other patients had only a transient decrease, but otherwise MLR were normal or even increased. Modifications of the response to mitogens or to soluble antigens were also noted but, except for PPD, they were not related to BT. Most of the lymphocyte suspensions in which proliferation was reduced after BT could inhibit the response of antologous cells taken before BT, when they were mixed together in three-cell experiments. Since these suspensions were usually not cytotoxic to the stimulating cells in direct 51Cr release assays, inhibition could be attributed to suppressor cells. These results indicate that nonspecific suppression to allogeneic cells can be generated in vivo by BT.This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Different Stimulating Capacity of Monocytes and B Lymphocytes in Mixed Leukocyte Cultures: A Dose Response StudyTissue Antigens, 1979
- IMPROVED RENAL ALLOGRAFT SURVIVAL AFTER BLOOD TRANSFUSION: A NONSPECIFIC, ERYTHROCYTE-MEDIATED IMMUNOREGULATORY PROCESS?The Lancet, 1979
- Regulation of the mixed leukocyte culture reaction by suppressor cellsEuropean Journal of Immunology, 1978
- A suppressor T cell of the mixed lymphocyte reaction in man specific for the stimulating alloantigen. Evidence that identity at HLA-D between suppressor and responder is required for suppression.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1978
- A suppressor T cell in the human mixed lymphocyte reaction.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1977
- SIGNIFICANCE OF MIXED LEUKOCYTE CULTURE TESTING IN CADAVER KIDNEY TRANSPLANTATIONTransplantation, 1977
- REGULATORY MECHANISMS IN CELL-MEDIATED IMMUNE-RESPONSES .3. ANTIGEN-SPECIFIC AND NONSPECIFIC SUPPRESSOR ACTIVITIES GENERATED DURING MLC1977
- Secondary response on in vitro primed human lymphocytes to allogeneic cellsImmunogenetics, 1976
- POOLED STIMULATING CELLS AS A “STANDARD STIMULATOR” IN MIXED LYMPHOCYTE CULTURETransplantation, 1976
- Uremia as a State of Immune DeficiencyScandinavian Journal of Immunology, 1976