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  • Title: Interleukin-1 receptor antagonist therapy and induction of anterior chamber-associated immune deviation-type tolerance after corneal transplantation.
    Author: Yamada J, Zhu SN, Streilein JW, Dana MR.
    Journal: Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci; 2000 Dec; 41(13):4203-8. PubMed ID: 11095616.
    Abstract:
    PURPOSE: Topical treatment with interleukin 1 receptor antagonist (IL-1ra) can promote corneal allograft survival by suppressing induction of allodestructive immunity. The purpose of these experiments was to determine whether IL-1ra could also promote induction of allo-protective tolerogenic pathways, including anterior chamber-associated immune deviation (ACAID), which has been shown to participate in long-term survival of corneal transplants. METHODS: Corneal buttons from BALB/c (syngeneic) or C57BL/6 (fully mismatched allogeneic) mice were orthotopically grafted onto BALB/c recipients. Topical IL-1ra or vehicle alone was applied to grafts three times daily. Donor-specific ACAID was measured in allogeneic grafted mice at 4 and 8 weeks after transplantation by ear-challenging grafted hosts with donor-derived splenocytes 1 week after SC immunization. In separate experiments, grafted mice were treated for 4 weeks before injecting ovalbumin (OVA) into their anterior chambers to determine their capacity to induce antigen-specific ACAID. RESULTS: Treatment with IL-1ra did not promote, or inhibit, induction of donor-specific ACAID compared with vehicle-treated controls at either the early or late time points studied. However, IL-1ra treatment after transplantation led to significantly earlier restoration of the grafted eyes' capacity for inducing ACAID to soluble antigen (OVA). CONCLUSIONS: Promotion of OVA-specific ACAID by IL-1ra suggests that suppression of IL-1-mediated mechanisms contributes to recovery of the anterior segment's immunosuppressive microenvironment at least 1 month earlier than would otherwise be seen after corneal transplantation. However, IL-1ra treatment does not alter induction of donor-specific ACAID after transplantation, suggesting that its anti-inflammatory activities do not lead to an ACAID-inducing signal per se. This suggests that IL-1ra promotes graft survival almost exclusively by virtue of suppressing inflammation and not by directly promoting tolerance or antigen-specific regulatory pathways.
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