| Literature DB >> 29913044 |
Mayara Garcia de Mattos Barbosa1, Marilia Cascalho1,2, Jeffrey L Platt1,2.
Abstract
Accommodation refers to a condition in which a transplant (or any tissue) appears to resist immune-mediated injury and loss of function. Accommodation was discovered and has been explored most thoroughly in ABO-incompatible kidney transplantation. In this setting, kidney transplants bearing blood group A or B antigens often are found to function normally in recipients who lack and hence produce antibodies directed against the corresponding antigens. Whether accommodation is owed to changes in anti-blood group antibodies, changes in antigen or a change in the response of the transplant to antibody binding are critically reviewed and a new working model that allows for the kinetics of development of accommodation is put forth. Regardless of how accommodation develops, observations on the fate of ABO-incompatible transplants offer lessons applicable more broadly in transplantation and in other fields.Entities:
Keywords: ABO-incompatible transplant; accommodation; blood group; blood type; kidney transplant; rejection
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29913044 PMCID: PMC6047762 DOI: 10.1111/xen.12418
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Xenotransplantation ISSN: 0908-665X Impact factor: 3.907