| Literature DB >> 9498741 |
B T Konieczny1, Z Dai, E T Elwood, S Saleem, P S Linsley, F K Baddoura, C P Larsen, T C Pearson, F G Lakkis.
Abstract
It is postulated that IFN-gamma production hinders long-term acceptance of transplanted organs. To test this hypothesis, we compared survival of skin and heart allografts in wild-type (IFN-gamma+/+) mice to that in IFN-gamma gene knockout (IFN-gamma-/-) mice. We found that perioperative blockade of the CD28 and/or CD40 ligand T cell costimulation pathways induces long-term skin and heart allograft survival in IFN-gamma+/+ recipients but fails to do so in IFN-gamma-/- mice or in wild-type mice treated with IFN-gamma-neutralizing Ab at the time of transplantation. In vitro studies showed that endogenously produced IFN-gamma down-regulates T cell proliferation and CTL generation in MLCs. These actions of IFN-gamma were not mediated by TNF-alpha production or Fas-Fas ligand interactions. In vivo studies revealed exaggerated expansion and, subsequently, impaired deletion of superantigen-reactive T lymphocytes in IFN-gamma-/- mice injected with staphylococcal enterotoxin B. Taken together, our findings indicate that IFN-gamma does not hinder but instead facilitates induction of long-term allograft survival possibly by limiting expansion of activated T cells.Entities:
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Year: 1998 PMID: 9498741
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol ISSN: 0022-1767 Impact factor: 5.422