Literature DB >> 16501935

Transplant tolerance: models, concepts and facts.

Nicola J Monk1, Roseanna E G Hargreaves, Elizabeth Simpson, Julian P Dyson, Stipo Jurcevic.   

Abstract

Despite extensive research, our understanding of immunological tolerance to self-antigens is incomplete, and the goal of achieving tolerance to allogeneic transplanted tissue remains elusive. Currently, it is generally believed that the blockade of T cell co-stimulation offers considerable potential for achieving tolerance in the clinical setting. However, the recent finding that CD154-specific antibody may act through the depletion of activated T cells rather than co-stimulation blockade alone highlights the need for a re-evaluation of published data and the role of co-stimulation blockade in transplant tolerance. Activated T cells are programmed to die unless they receive sufficient survival signals in the form of inflammatory and lymphotropic cytokines produced by activated antigen-presenting cells or the T cells themselves. In conditions where the threshold for surviving activation is not reached, for example when a small number of responder T cells are activated in the absence of substantial injury or inflammation, the ensuing death of all activated T cells can result in deletional tolerance. Therefore, we propose that tolerance represents a failure of T cells to survive activation and develop into memory cells. This concept is likely to apply in the transplant setting, where the strength of the alloresponse depends on both the number/phenotype of the recipients' alloreactive T cells and immunogenicity of the transplanted tissue. Hence, in some rodent donor-recipient strain combinations that instigate a weak alloresponse, many treatments that only modestly decrease the alloresponse can achieve tolerance. In contrast, clinical transplantation is characterised by a strong alloresponse and highly immunogenic allografts, and thus, most treatments fail to control allograft rejection, and tolerance is difficult to achieve.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16501935     DOI: 10.1007/s00109-005-0006-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Mol Med (Berl)        ISSN: 0946-2716            Impact factor:   4.599


  77 in total

Review 1.  Thymic generation and selection of CD25+CD4+ regulatory T cells: implications of their broad repertoire and high self-reactivity for the maintenance of immunological self-tolerance.

Authors:  Shimon Sakaguchi; Shohei Hori; Yoshinori Fukui; Takehiko Sasazuki; Noriko Sakaguchi; Takeshi Takahashi
Journal:  Novartis Found Symp       Date:  2003

2.  Characterization of dendritic cells that induce tolerance and T regulatory 1 cell differentiation in vivo.

Authors:  Abdelilah Wakkach; Nathalie Fournier; Valérie Brun; Jean-Philippe Breittmayer; Françoise Cottrez; Hervé Groux
Journal:  Immunity       Date:  2003-05       Impact factor: 31.745

3.  Impact of both donor and recipient strains on cardiac allograft survival after blockade of the CD40-CD154 costimulatory pathway.

Authors:  Andre van Maurik; Kathryn J Wood; Nick D Jones
Journal:  Transplantation       Date:  2002-09-15       Impact factor: 4.939

Review 4.  Natural regulatory T cells and self-tolerance.

Authors:  Ronald H Schwartz
Journal:  Nat Immunol       Date:  2005-04       Impact factor: 25.606

5.  The Fas/Fas ligand pathway and Bcl-2 regulate T cell responses to model self and foreign antigens.

Authors:  L Van Parijs; D A Peterson; A K Abbas
Journal:  Immunity       Date:  1998-02       Impact factor: 31.745

6.  Mechanisms of early peripheral CD4 T-cell tolerance induction by anti-CD154 monoclonal antibody and allogeneic bone marrow transplantation: evidence for anergy and deletion but not regulatory cells.

Authors:  Josef Kurtz; Juanita Shaffer; Ariadne Lie; Natalie Anosova; Gilles Benichou; Megan Sykes
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2004-02-12       Impact factor: 22.113

7.  The graft helps to define the character of the alloimmune response.

Authors:  Alice A Bickerstaff; Jiao-Jing Wang; Ronald P Pelletier; Charles G Orosz
Journal:  Transpl Immunol       Date:  2002-05       Impact factor: 1.708

8.  In vivo studies of the maintenance of peripheral transplant tolerance after cyclosporine. Radiosensitive antigen-specific suppressor cells mediate lasting graft protection against primed effector cells.

Authors:  S J Nisco; R J Hissink; P W Vriens; E G Hoyt; B A Reitz; C Clayberger
Journal:  Transplantation       Date:  1995-05-27       Impact factor: 4.939

9.  CD4+ T cell tolerance to parenchymal self-antigens requires presentation by bone marrow-derived antigen-presenting cells.

Authors:  A J Adler; D W Marsh; G S Yochum; J L Guzzo; A Nigam; W G Nelson; D M Pardoll
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  1998-05-18       Impact factor: 14.307

10.  On the role of dendritic cells in peripheral T cell tolerance and modulation of autoimmunity.

Authors:  Kevin L Legge; Randal K Gregg; Roberto Maldonado-Lopez; Lequn Li; Jacque C Caprio; Muriel Moser; Habib Zaghouani
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  2002-07-15       Impact factor: 14.307

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  5 in total

1.  Loss of DRAK2 signaling enhances allogeneic transplant survival by limiting effector and memory T cell responses.

Authors:  B M Weist; J B Hernandez; C M Walsh
Journal:  Am J Transplant       Date:  2012-04-11       Impact factor: 8.086

2.  NOD-scid IL2rgamma(null) mouse model of human skin transplantation and allograft rejection.

Authors:  Waldemar J Racki; Laurence Covassin; Michael Brehm; Stephen Pino; Ronald Ignotz; Raymond Dunn; Joseph Laning; Susannah K Graves; Aldo A Rossini; Leonard D Shultz; Dale L Greiner
Journal:  Transplantation       Date:  2010-03-15       Impact factor: 4.939

3.  Nanofiber-expanded human umbilical cord blood-derived CD34+ cell therapy accelerates murine cutaneous wound closure by attenuating pro-inflammatory factors and secreting IL-10.

Authors:  Suman Kanji; Manjusri Das; Reeva Aggarwal; Jingwei Lu; Matthew Joseph; Sujit Basu; Vincent J Pompili; Hiranmoy Das
Journal:  Stem Cell Res       Date:  2013-11-15       Impact factor: 2.020

4.  Endoplasmic reticulum stress-mediated apoptosis involved in indirect recognition pathway blockade induces long-term heart allograft survival.

Authors:  Jianbin Xiang; Xiaodong Gu; Shiguang Qian; Zongyou Chen
Journal:  J Biomed Biotechnol       Date:  2010-05-16

5.  Small-Molecule Inhibitors of the CD40-CD40L Costimulatory Protein-Protein Interaction.

Authors:  Jinshui Chen; Yun Song; Damir Bojadzic; Alejandro Tamayo-Garcia; Ana Marie Landin; Bonnie B Blomberg; Peter Buchwald
Journal:  J Med Chem       Date:  2017-10-25       Impact factor: 7.446

  5 in total

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