Literature DB >> 21566684

Prevention of Transplant Rejection: Can Tolerance be Achieved with Immunosuppressive Treatment?

Conor P Delaney1, Noriko Murase, Thomas E Starzl, Anthony J Demetris.   

Abstract

Successful solid organ transplantation is generally attributed to the increasingly precise ability of drugs to control rejection. However, it was recently shown that a few donor haematolymphoid cells can survive for decades in recipients of successful organ allografts, a phenomenon called microchimaerism. The association for decades of haematolymphoid chimaerism with allograft tolerance in experimental transplantation suggests that immunosuppressive drugs merely create a milieu that enables an allograft and its complement of passenger leucocytes to prime the recipient for graft acceptance.Exploitation of this concept requires a fundamental shift in the classical view of passenger leucocytes only as initiators of rejection. Microchimaerism has taught us that solid organ transplantation involves the transfer of two donor organ systems to the recipient: the allograft parenchyma and the donor haematolymphoid system in the form of donor stem cells contained within the passenger leucocyte compartment. Each has the potential to integrate with the corresponding recipient system and carry out normal physiological functions, such as immunological self definition. Resistance to initial integration by mature T cells requires some form of immunosuppression, but maintenance of donor immune system function will depend on renewable supply of cells, which can be provided by engrafted progenitors. Successful clinical application will depend on the development of low morbidity methods to enhance engraftment of donor haemopoietic stem cells.

Entities:  

Year:  1996        PMID: 21566684      PMCID: PMC3091025          DOI: 10.1007/bf03259505

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Immunother        ISSN: 1172-7039


  57 in total

1.  The requirement for allogeneic chimerism for second transfer of tolerance from mixed allogeneic chimeras (A+B-->A) to secondary recipients.

Authors:  S M Wren; M L Hronakes; S T Ildstad
Journal:  Transplantation       Date:  1992-12       Impact factor: 4.939

2.  Actively acquired tolerance of foreign cells.

Authors:  R E BILLINGHAM; L BRENT; P B MEDAWAR
Journal:  Nature       Date:  1953-10-03       Impact factor: 49.962

Review 3.  Migration patterns of dendritic leukocytes. Implications for transplantation.

Authors:  J M Austyn; C P Larsen
Journal:  Transplantation       Date:  1990-01       Impact factor: 4.939

Review 4.  Xenobiotics, chimerism and the induction of tolerance following organ transplantation.

Authors:  C P Delaney; A W Thomson; A J Demetris; T E Starzl
Journal:  Ther Immunol       Date:  1994-06

5.  Towards a network theory of the immune system.

Authors:  N K Jerne
Journal:  Ann Immunol (Paris)       Date:  1974-01

6.  Promotion of rat cardiac allograft survival by intrathymic inoculation of donor splenocytes.

Authors:  J S Odorico; A M Posselt; A Naji; J F Markmann; C F Barker
Journal:  Transplantation       Date:  1993-05       Impact factor: 4.939

7.  Murine liver allograft transplantation: tolerance and donor cell chimerism.

Authors:  S Qian; A J Demetris; N Murase; A S Rao; J J Fung; T E Starzl
Journal:  Hepatology       Date:  1994-04       Impact factor: 17.425

8.  Chimerism and donor-specific nonreactivity 27 to 29 years after kidney allotransplantation.

Authors:  T E Starzl; A J Demetris; M Trucco; A Zeevi; H Ramos; P Terasaki; W A Rudert; M Kocova; C Ricordi; S Ildstad
Journal:  Transplantation       Date:  1993-06       Impact factor: 4.939

9.  Induced immune destruction of long-surviving, H-2 incompatible kidney transplants in mice.

Authors:  P S Russell; C M Chase; R B Colvin; J M Plate
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  1978-05-01       Impact factor: 14.307

10.  Migration of dendritic leukocytes from cardiac allografts into host spleens. A novel pathway for initiation of rejection.

Authors:  C P Larsen; P J Morris; J M Austyn
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  1990-01-01       Impact factor: 14.307

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