Literature DB >> 2200173

The role of tumor necrosis factor in allograft rejection. II. Evidence that antibody therapy against tumor necrosis factor-alpha and lymphotoxin enhances cardiac allograft survival in rats.

D K Imagawa1, J M Millis, K M Olthoff, P Seu, R A Dempsey, J Hart, P I Terasaki, E M Wasef, R W Busuttil.   

Abstract

In the previous study we demonstrated that circulating levels of TNF-alpha are elevated during liver allograft rejection and may precede clinical manifestations. The current study was designed to investigate the efficacy of antibody therapy against tumor necrosis factor-alpha and lymphotoxin (LT) in a rat heterotropic cardiac transplant model utilizing Buffalo donors and Lewis recipients. Control animals received no immunotherapy and experienced rejection on postoperative day 11 +/- 0.4 (mean +/- SEM). Experimental animals received immunotherapy either intraperitoneal or intravenous from days 1 to 10. The i.p. administered anti-TNF-alpha prolonged graft survival to 16 +/- 2.7 days (P less than 0.05 vs. controls); the i.v. administration prolonged survival to 15 +/- 1.4 days (P less than 0.004). Animals treated with i.p. anti-LT survived 17 +/- 1.7 days (P less than 0.002 vs. controls). Combination immunotherapy of anti-TNF-alpha and anti-LT increased function to 21 +/- 2.2 days (P less than 0.001 vs controls). Conversely, administration of purified TNF-alpha or LT to graft recipients accelerated the time to rejection. Mean survival for both treatments was 7 days (P less than 0.001 vs. controls). Histologic examination of the transplanted cardiac tissue showed a typical pattern for acute rejection; there was no evidence of hemorrhagic or coagulative necrosis. In contrast, administration of purified TNF-alpha or LT to recipients of a syngeneic heart did not stimulate rejection. These data suggest that TNF-alpha and LT may play a role in the pathogenesis of acute allograft rejection. In addition, the mechanism appears to be distinct from that seen in TNF-alpha or LT-mediated cytotoxicity of tumor cells.

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Year:  1990        PMID: 2200173     DOI: 10.1097/00007890-199008000-00003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Transplantation        ISSN: 0041-1337            Impact factor:   4.939


  11 in total

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4.  Role of TNFalpha in early chemokine production and leukocyte infiltration into heart allografts.

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5.  Attenuation of acute rejection in a rat liver transplantation model by a liver-targeted dextran prodrug of methylprednisolone.

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8.  Prolongation of skin allografts by recombinant tumor necrosis factor and interleukin-1.

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10.  Tumor necrosis factor production during human renal allograft rejection is associated with depression of plasma protein C and free protein S levels and decreased intragraft thrombomodulin expression.

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