Treatment of C57BL/6 mice with one transfusion of BALB/c spleen cells and a brief course of anti-CD154 (anti-CD40 ligand) antibody permits BALB/c islet grafts to survive indefinitely and BALB/c skin grafts to survive for ∼50 days without further intervention. We now report adaptation of this protocol to the transplantation of islet and skin xenografts. We observed prolonged survival of rat islet xenografts in mice treated with donor-specific spleen cell transfusion and anti-CD154 monoclonal antibody (mAb). Challenge islet xenografts placed on these animals indicated that graft acceptance was species-specific but not strain specific. Spleen cells from recipients bearing intact grafts led to rejection of rat islet xenografts in scid mice, suggesting that graft acceptance was not due to complete clonal deletion of xenoreactive cells. We also observed prolonged survival of rat skin xenografts in mice treated with donor-specific transfusion and anti-CD154 mAb. Prolonged survival of skin xenografts was also species specific. We conclude that treatment with appropriately timed donor-specific transfusion and anti-CD154 mAb induces durable survival of both islet and skin xenografts in mice. Because this procedure is targeted directly at CD154, a co-activation molecule expressed predominantly by activated CD4+ T-cells, the results suggest that CD4+ cells have a major role in the cellular immune response to xenografts.
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Immunology and Transplantation|
August 01 1998
Prolonged Survival of Rat Islet and Skin Xenografts in Mice Treated with Donor Splenocytes and Anti-CD154 Monoclonal Antibody
Ethel J Gordon;
Ethel J Gordon
Department of Medicine, University of Massachusetts Medical School
Worcester, Massachusetts
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Thomas G Markees;
Thomas G Markees
Department of Medicine, University of Massachusetts Medical School
Worcester, Massachusetts
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Nancy E Phillips;
Nancy E Phillips
Department of Medicine, University of Massachusetts Medical School
Worcester, Massachusetts
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Randolph J Noelle;
Randolph J Noelle
Department of Microbiology, Dartmouth Medical School
Lebanon, New Hampshire
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Leonard D Shultz;
Leonard D Shultz
Jackson Laboratory
Bar Harbor, Maine
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John P Mordes;
John P Mordes
Department of Medicine, University of Massachusetts Medical School
Worcester, Massachusetts
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Aldo A Rossini;
Aldo A Rossini
Department of Medicine, University of Massachusetts Medical School
Worcester, Massachusetts
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Dale L Greiner
Dale L Greiner
Department of Medicine, University of Massachusetts Medical School
Worcester, Massachusetts
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Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Aldo Rossini, 373 Plantation St., Biotech 2, Suite 218, Worcester, MA 01605. E-mail: aldo.rossini@ummed.edu
Diabetes 1998;47(8):1199–1206
Article history
Received:
February 23 1998
Revision Received:
April 21 1998
Accepted:
April 21 1998
PubMed:
9703317
Citation
Ethel J Gordon, Thomas G Markees, Nancy E Phillips, Randolph J Noelle, Leonard D Shultz, John P Mordes, Aldo A Rossini, Dale L Greiner; Prolonged Survival of Rat Islet and Skin Xenografts in Mice Treated with Donor Splenocytes and Anti-CD154 Monoclonal Antibody. Diabetes 1 August 1998; 47 (8): 1199–1206. https://doi.org/10.2337/diab.47.8.1199
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