| Literature DB >> 24502272 |
C A Su1, S Iida, T Abe, R L Fairchild.
Abstract
Differences in levels of environmentally induced memory T cells that cross-react with donor MHC molecules are postulated to account for the efficacy of allograft tolerance-inducing strategies in rodents versus their failure in nonhuman primates and human transplant patients. Strategies to study the impact of donor-reactive memory T cells on allografts in rodents have relied on the pretransplant induction of memory T cells cross-reactive with donor allogeneic MHC molecules through recipient viral infection, priming directly with donor antigen or adoptive transfer of donor antigen primed memory T cells. Each approach accelerates allograft rejection and confers resistance to tolerance induction, but also biases the T cell repertoire to strong donor reactivity. The ability of endogenous memory T cells within unprimed mice to directly reject an allograft is unknown. Here, we show a direct association between increased duration of cold ischemic allograft storage and numbers and enhanced functions of early graft infiltrating endogenous CD8 memory T cells. These T cells directly mediate rejection of allografts subjected to prolonged ischemia and this rejection is resistant to costimulatory blockade. These findings recapitulate the clinically significant impact of endogenous memory T cells with donor reactivity in a mouse transplant model in the absence of prior recipient priming. © Copyright 2014 The American Society of Transplantation and the American Society of Transplant Surgeons.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiac allograft rejection; endogenous memory CD8 T cells; heterologous immunity; ischemia-reperfusion injury
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24502272 PMCID: PMC3947453 DOI: 10.1111/ajt.12605
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Transplant ISSN: 1600-6135 Impact factor: 8.086