Y Sano1, B R Ksander, J W Streilein. 1. Schepens Eye Research Institute, Department of Ophthalmology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02114, USA.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Orthotopic corneal allografts placed in normal eyes of mice are often not rejected, whereas grafts placed in high-risk (neovascularized) eyes are routinely destroyed. Because rejection of solid tissue allografts is usually mediated by donor-specific T cells, we wished to determine the extent to which donor-specific T cells become primed in mice bearing orthotopic corneal allografts in normal and "high-risk" eyes. METHODS AND RESULTS: Our data indicate corneal allografts placed in neovascularized eyes were rejected within 2 weeks, and lymph nodes draining these grafts contained primed donor-specific T cells that proliferated in vitro and displayed cytotoxic activity. By contrast, only 50% of corneal allografts placed in normal eyes experienced rejection. Lymphoid cells from all of these mice displayed donor-specific proliferative activity, irrespective of whether the graft was accepted or rejected. At no time were donor-specific cytotoxic T cells detected. Failure to detect primed cytotoxic T cells was not the result of anergy or deletion of unprimed donor-specific precursors of CTL. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that primed donor-specific proliferative and cytotoxic T cells directed at MHC alloantigens correlate well with rejection of orthotopic corneal allografts in neovascularized high-risk eyes. However, rejection of cornea allografts in normal eyes does not correlate well with proliferative T cells, nor are donor MHC-specific cytotoxic T cells detected. The possibility is discussed that graft rejection in normal eyes is not mediated by T cells that recognize MHC alloantigens via the direct pathway, but via T cells that recognize donor alloantigens presented by recipient MHC molecules (indirect pathway).
BACKGROUND: Orthotopic corneal allografts placed in normal eyes of mice are often not rejected, whereas grafts placed in high-risk (neovascularized) eyes are routinely destroyed. Because rejection of solid tissue allografts is usually mediated by donor-specific T cells, we wished to determine the extent to which donor-specific T cells become primed in mice bearing orthotopic corneal allografts in normal and "high-risk" eyes. METHODS AND RESULTS: Our data indicate corneal allografts placed in neovascularized eyes were rejected within 2 weeks, and lymph nodes draining these grafts contained primed donor-specific T cells that proliferated in vitro and displayed cytotoxic activity. By contrast, only 50% of corneal allografts placed in normal eyes experienced rejection. Lymphoid cells from all of these mice displayed donor-specific proliferative activity, irrespective of whether the graft was accepted or rejected. At no time were donor-specific cytotoxic T cells detected. Failure to detect primed cytotoxic T cells was not the result of anergy or deletion of unprimed donor-specific precursors of CTL. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that primed donor-specific proliferative and cytotoxic T cells directed at MHC alloantigens correlate well with rejection of orthotopic corneal allografts in neovascularized high-risk eyes. However, rejection of cornea allografts in normal eyes does not correlate well with proliferative T cells, nor are donorMHC-specific cytotoxic T cells detected. The possibility is discussed that graft rejection in normal eyes is not mediated by T cells that recognize MHC alloantigens via the direct pathway, but via T cells that recognize donor alloantigens presented by recipient MHC molecules (indirect pathway).
Authors: Carlos A Medina; Alexander M Rowe; Hongmin Yun; Jared E Knickelbein; Kira L Lathrop; Robert L Hendricks Journal: Cornea Date: 2013-05 Impact factor: 2.651
Authors: Daniel R Saban; Janet Cornelius; Sharmila Masli; Johannes Schwartzkopff; Maire Doyle; Sunil K Chauhan; Ammon B Peck; Maria B Grant Journal: Mol Vis Date: 2008-12-19 Impact factor: 2.367