Literature DB >> 12471101

Murine CD4 T cells selected in a highly disparate xenogeneic porcine thymus graft do not show rapid decay in the absence of selecting MHC in the periphery.

Jose-Ignacio Rodriguez-Barbosa1, Yong Zhao, Guiling Zhao, Angel Ezquerra, Megan Sykes.   

Abstract

CD4 repopulation can be achieved in T cell-depleted, thymectomized mice grafted with xenogeneic porcine thymus tissue. These CD4 T cells are specifically tolerant of the xenogeneic porcine thymus donor and the recipient, but are positively selected only by porcine MHC. Recent studies suggest that optimal peripheral survival of naive CD4 T cells requires the presence of the same class II MHC in the periphery as that of the thymus in which they were selected. These observations would suggest that T cells selected on porcine thymic MHC would die rapidly in the periphery, where porcine MHC is absent. Persistent CD4 reconstitution achieved in mice grafted with fetal porcine thymus might be due to increased thymic output to compensate for rapid death of T cells in the periphery. Comparison of CD4 T cell decay after removal of porcine or murine thymic grafts ruled out this possibility. No measurable role for peripheral murine class II MHC in maintaining the naive CD4 pool originating in thymic grafts was demonstrable. However, mouse class II MHC supported the conversion to, survival, and/or proliferation of memory-type CD4 cells selected in fetal porcine thymus. Thus, the same MHC as that mediating positive selection in the thymus is not critical for maintenance of the memory CD4 cell pool in the periphery. Our results support the interpretation that xenogeneic thymic transplantation is a feasible strategy to reconstitute CD4 T cells and render recipients tolerant of a xenogeneic donor.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12471101     DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.169.12.6697

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Immunol        ISSN: 0022-1767            Impact factor:   5.422


  4 in total

1.  Functional CD8+ but not CD4+ T cell responses develop independent of thymic epithelial MHC.

Authors:  Marianne M Martinic; Maries F van den Broek; Thomas Rülicke; Christoph Huber; Bernhard Odermatt; Walter Reith; Edit Horvath; Raphael Zellweger; Katja Fink; Mike Recher; Bruno Eschli; Hans Hengartner; Rolf M Zinkernagel
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2006-09-18       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  Reduced positive selection of a human TCR in a swine thymus using a humanized mouse model for xenotolerance induction.

Authors:  Grace Nauman; Chiara Borsotti; Nichole Danzl; Mohsen Khosravi-Maharlooei; Hao-Wei Li; Estefania Chavez; Samantha Stone; Megan Sykes
Journal:  Xenotransplantation       Date:  2019-09-29       Impact factor: 3.907

3.  Abnormal regulatory and effector T cell function predispose to autoimmunity following xenogeneic thymic transplantation.

Authors:  Yasuhiro Fudaba; Takashi Onoe; Meredith Chittenden; Akira Shimizu; Juanita M Shaffer; Roderick Bronson; Megan Sykes
Journal:  J Immunol       Date:  2008-12-01       Impact factor: 5.422

4.  Xenograft tolerance and immune function of human T cells developing in pig thymus xenografts.

Authors:  Hannes Kalscheuer; Takashi Onoe; Alexander Dahmani; Hao-Wei Li; Markus Hölzl; Kazuhiko Yamada; Megan Sykes
Journal:  J Immunol       Date:  2014-03-03       Impact factor: 5.422

  4 in total

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