These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.
Pubmed for Handhelds
PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS
Search MEDLINE/PubMed
Title: Unmodified pancreatic islet allograft rejection results in the preferential expression of certain T cell activation transcripts. Author: O'Connell PJ, Pacheco-Silva A, Nickerson PW, Muggia RA, Bastos M, Kelley VR, Strom TB. Journal: J Immunol; 1993 Feb 01; 150(3):1093-104. PubMed ID: 8423334. Abstract: Polymerase chain reaction-assisted reverse transcription was used to study the temporal course of rejection in unmodified recipients of murine pancreatic islet cell allografts (DBA/2-->B6AF1) by using syngeneic tissues as controls. The histologic appearance of the grafts was analyzed in parallel. Preproinsulin and constant region of the TCR-beta chain transcripts were studied as markers of graft integrity and infiltrating T cell mass, respectively. The participation of certain cytokines and CTL were analyzed by the detection of IL-2, IFN-gamma, IL-4, and CTL-specific serine protease (granzyme B) transcripts. The time-related disappearance of intragraft preproinsulin transcripts correlated with graft destruction, whereas the intensity of intragraft TCR-beta chain transcript levels correlated with the magnitude of mononuclear leukocyte infiltration in allografts. In unmodified allografts, the magnitude of IL-2 and IFN-gamma intragraft mRNA levels correlated with the intense mononuclear leukocyte infiltrate found on histologic examination at day 8. Only after stable IL-2 gene transcription on day 8 does evidence of graft destruction become apparent, indicating that IL-2 gene activation is closely related to and probably required for expression of alloimmune cytopathic processes. In contrast, IL-4 transcripts were absent or detected in low copy number throughout this time course. Intragraft expression of granzyme B mRNA, a CTL-specific transcript, peaked from day 8 to day 12 in allografts compared with syngeneic grafts or normal tissue. In syngeneic grafts IL-2 and/or IL-4 mRNA was essentially not detected. Although IFN-gamma and granzyme B transcripts were detected in syngeneic grafts, after 4 days the levels of detected transcripts were far less than those noted in allografts. In vivo detection of intragraft IL-2 transcripts in the relative absence of detectable IL-4 transcripts strongly suggests IL-2-dependent immune effector mechanisms are associated with, and perhaps responsible, for allograft rejection. Apparently IL-4-dependent effector mechanisms are not necessary for allograft rejection.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]