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Cultured thymus tissue implantation promotes donor-specific tolerance to allogeneic heart transplants
Jean Kwun, Jie Li, Clay Rouse, Jae Berm Park, Alton B. Farris, Maragatha Kuchibhatla, Joseph W. Turek, Stuart J. Knechtle, Allan D. Kirk, M. Louise Markert
Jean Kwun, Jie Li, Clay Rouse, Jae Berm Park, Alton B. Farris, Maragatha Kuchibhatla, Joseph W. Turek, Stuart J. Knechtle, Allan D. Kirk, M. Louise Markert
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Research Article Immunology Transplantation

Cultured thymus tissue implantation promotes donor-specific tolerance to allogeneic heart transplants

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Abstract

Eighty-six infants born without a thymus have been treated with allogeneic cultured thymus tissue implantation (CTTI). These infants, who lack T cells and are profoundly immunodeficient at birth, after CTTI from an unmatched donor develop T cells similar to those of recipient that are tolerant to both their own major histocompatibility antigens and those of the donor. We tested use of CTTI with the goal of inducing tolerance to unmatched heart transplants in immunocompetent rats. We thymectomized and T cell–depleted Lewis rats. The rats were then given cultured thymus tissue from F1 (Lewis × Dark Agouti ) under the kidney capsule and vascularized Dark Agouti (DA) heart transplants in the abdomen. Cyclosporine was administered for 4 months. The control group did not receive CTTI. Recipients with CTTI showed repopulation of naive and recent thymic emigrant CD4 T cells; controls had none. Recipients of CTTI did not reject DA cardiac allografts. Control animals did not reject DA grafts, due to lack of functional T cells. To confirm donor-specific unresponsiveness, MHC-mismatched Brown Norway (BN) hearts were transplanted 6 months after the initial DA heart transplant. LW rats with LWxDA CTTI rejected the third-party BN hearts (mean survival time 10 days); controls did not. CTTI recipients produced antibody against third-party BN donor but not against the DA thymus donor, demonstrating humoral donor-specific tolerance. Taken together, F1(LWxDA) CTTI given to Lewis rats resulted in specific tolerance to the allogeneic DA MHC expressed in the donor thymus, with resulting long-term survival of DA heart transplants after withdrawal of all immunosuppression.

Authors

Jean Kwun, Jie Li, Clay Rouse, Jae Berm Park, Alton B. Farris, Maragatha Kuchibhatla, Joseph W. Turek, Stuart J. Knechtle, Allan D. Kirk, M. Louise Markert

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Figure 5

Donor-specific humoral tolerance with CTTI.

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Donor-specific humoral tolerance with CTTI.
(A) Representative histogram...
(A) Representative histogram plots for posttransplant donor-specific alloantibody (anti-DA and anti-BN antibodies) measured by T cell flow crossmatch. LW recipients with or without CTTI did not generate any antibodies against DA antigen (A, second and third plots, respectively, in top row), whereas animals with CTTI were able to generate antibody against BN antigen (A, second panel, bottom row). Serum samples from LW recipients of DA heart transplantation without immunosuppression (A, first panel in top row) and from LW recipients of BN heart transplantation without immunosuppression (A, first panel in bottom row) were used as positive controls (DA control and BN control) for anti-DA or anti-BN antibody, respectively. (B) Level of anti-DA antibody after primary DA heart transplantation. Serum samples from animals with CTTI and without CTTI after DA heart transplantation (POD 180) did not develop antibody against DA cells. (C) Levels of anti-BN antibody after secondary BN heart transplantation. Animals with CTTI showed significantly elevated anti-BN Abs, whereas animals without CTTI showed no antibodies against BN cells. A total 4 to 5 animals per group were analyzed; Student’s t test. CTTI, cultured thymus tissue implantation; DA, Dark Agouti; BN, Brown Norway; LW, Lewis.

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