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  • Title: Thymus-dependent, anti-CD4-induced tolerance to rat cardiac allografts.
    Author: Jaques BC, Ahmiedat H, Alastair Gracie J, Marshall HE, Middleton SE, Bolton EM, Bradley JA.
    Journal: Transplantation; 1998 Nov 27; 66(10):1291-9. PubMed ID: 9846511.
    Abstract:
    BACKGROUND: Treatment with anti-CD4 monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) leads to induction of transplant tolerance in rodent models, but the cellular mechanisms responsible are poorly defined. In this study, we used a rat model of cardiac transplantation to examine the contribution of the thymus gland to anti-CD4 mAb-induced tolerance. METHODS: Pretransplant administration of OX38 mAb partially depletes peripheral CD4 T cells and induces tolerance to fully allogeneic Lewis (RT1l) heterotopic cardiac allografts in DA (RT1a) recipients. Using this experimental model, the contribution of the adult thymus gland and of recent thymic emigrants to tolerance induction was assessed, and the cellular and humoral alloimmune responses accompanying tolerance defined. RESULTS: OX38 mAb selectively depleted mature CD4 T cells but spared CD4 T cells that had recently emerged from the thymus. Pretransplant thymectomy abrogated tolerance induction, but the data suggested a role for recent thymic emigrants rather than for the thymus gland per se. Both nonrejecting cardiac allografts in OX38-treated recipients and rejecting grafts in control animals were infiltrated to a similar extent by mononuclear cells, including activated T cells. Intragraft mRNA transcripts for interleukin (IL)-2, interferon-gamma, IL-4, IL-10, and IL-13 were similar in non-rejecting and rejecting allografts although, with the exception of IL-2, there was a trend towards reduced cytokine transcripts in tolerant grafts. CD4 T cells from long-term tolerant recipients proliferated normally to donor alloantigen in vitro, and produced IL-2, interferon-gamma, and IL-4 in amounts comparable to normal CD4 T cells. Tolerant recipients also developed a strong alloantibody response comprising both IgG1 (Th2-dependent) and IgG2b (Th1-dependent) subclasses. CONCLUSIONS: The results of this study suggest that the thymus, through the production of recent thymic emigrants, plays an important role in facilitating the induction of transplant tolerance after anti-CD4 mAb. Tolerant animals displayed strong cell-mediated and humoral alloimmune responses with no evidence of selective deviation from a Th1 to a Th2-like cytokine pattern.
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