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  • Title: Posttransplant nonfunction of canine islets in PVG rats deficient in complement component C6.
    Author: Kronson JW, Hering BJ, Sutherland DE, Tanioka Y, Leone JP, Kirchhof N, Dalmasso AP.
    Journal: Transplantation; 1998 Jun 27; 65(12):1549-54. PubMed ID: 9665069.
    Abstract:
    BACKGROUND: Discordant islet xenografts are immediately nonfunctional in nonimmunosuppressed recipients other than the mouse, a process called primary nonfunction. Although at present it is unknown whether complement is involved, complement might participate in the induction of primary nonfunction through a number of mechanisms. We investigated the potential role of the membrane attack complex of complement in primary nonfunction of transplanted xenoislets. METHODS: Canine islets were transplanted into both nonimmunosuppressed and immunosuppressed normocomplementemic and C6-deficient (C6D) PVG rats. Cyclosporine, rapamycin, deoxyspergualin, and mycophenolate mofetil were used for immunosuppression from day -3 to cessation of islet cell function. Serum glucose was measured at 6 hr after transplant and daily thereafter. Xenograft tissue sections were obtained at various times after transplant and stained for inflammatory cells and insulin. RESULTS: Canine islets grafted in nonimmunosuppressed C6D rats and normocomplementemic rats underwent primary nonfunction in all animals. The incidence of primary nonfunction in animals receiving a four-drug immunosuppressive regimen was 33% in the normocomplementemic rats but only 10% in the C6D rats. The mean functional islet survival time was 1.57+/-0.33 days in the normocomplementemic group and 2.70+/-0.67 days in the C6D group (P=0.38). The islet xenografts showed little difference in degree and composition of cell infiltration between normocomplementemic and C6D rats. CONCLUSION: The membrane attack complex does not appear to play a major role in primary nonfunction of canine islet xenografts in nonimmunosuppressed PVG rats. However, there was a lower incidence of primary nonfunction and a longer posttransplant survival time in immunosuppressed C6D rats, suggesting the membrane attack complex may play a minor role in recipients that are heavily immunosuppressed.
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