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Query: UMLS:C0023473 (
chronic myeloid leukemia
)
18,916
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A single intravenous injection of 1 ml freshly heparinized donor blood seven days before transplantation significantly prolonged the survival of subsequent donor-specific hepatic allografts in the fully allogeneic
ACI
(RT1a-to-LEW(RT1l)) rat combination. The time course of cell-mediated lympholysis was studied in this animal model. The activity of
CML
in lymphocytes infiltrating into the hepatic allograft (CML-G) and in the spleen (CML-S) was determined by measuring % lysis of donor Con A blast cervical lymph node cells. Preoperative DST resulted in an increased activity of
CML
-S with a peak (31.6%, E/T = 150) on day 7. This increased
CML
-S activity after DST rapidly declined during the first days following hepatic transplantation. The activities of both
CML
-S and
CML
-G then increased after transplantation and reached peaks on days 15 (48%, E/T = 150) and 20 (2.57%, E/T = 75), respectively. These were much higher than the peak values of
CML
-S (11.2%, E/T = 150) on day 7 and
CML
-G (19.5%, E/T = 75) on day 6 in untreated controls and were followed by a subsequent gradual decrease in those activities to preoperative levels by day 113 posttransplant. Phenotypic analysis of lymphocytes infiltrating grafts in DST-treated hosts demonstrated that the CD4/CD8 ratio remained relatively constant (less than 1.0). While the ratio in control grafts increased and reached a peak (2.17) on day 9. Histological examination revealed that mononuclear cell infiltration of grafts reached a peak on day 9 in both DST-treated hosts and controls. This mononuclear cell accumulation gradually subsided in DST-enhanced grafts. The mitotic index of graft hepatocytes reached a peak on day 15 in DST-treated hosts and on day 7 in control. The evidence of prolonged survival of hepatic grafts in recipients pretreated with DST, despite the presence of cytotoxic T cells with increased
CML
activity in vitro, suggests that effector cytotoxic cell activity may not be necessary for rat liver allograft rejection and that there may be limitations in measuring host cytotoxic activity simply by
CML
assays.
...
PMID:The time course of cell-mediated lympholysis in rat hepatic allograft recipients pretreated with a single donor-specific blood transfusion. 141 34
Donor-specific blood transfusion prolongs survival of fully allogeneic
ACI
(RT1a) renal grafts in PVG (RT1a) recipients from 6-8 days to greater than 100 days. To determine how DSBT alters effector cytotoxic cell responses, we tested freshly isolated peripheral blood lymphocytes, spleen cells, and graft infiltrating cells (GIC) from pairs of PVG recipients of
ACI
kidneys pretreated with DSBT or autologous blood transfusion (ABT) for cell-mediated lympholysis, antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC), and natural killer activity at the day of transplantation (day 0) and days 3 and 6 posttransplantation. PBL and GIC from the same pairs of animals were examined for their phenotypic profile (CD4, CD8, 3.2.3 NK cell marker, IL-2 receptor).
CML
, ADCC, and NK activity were higher in PBL than splenocytes of GIC of both ABT and DSBT groups at all time points examined.
CML
activity of PBL at day 3 was significantly higher in DSBT vs. ABT recipients (P less than 0.01), while at day 6 both groups were equally elevated. Splenocytes demonstrated significantly lower
CML
activity in DSBT vs. ABT recipients at day 6 (P less than 0.05).
CML
activity of GIC eluted from ABT and DSBT kidneys was not detected at day 3, but was significantly elevated and equivalent in both groups at day 6. ADCC and NK activities of PBL did not differ between ABT and DSBT groups, and were negligible in splenocytes. GIC demonstrated higher NK activity in DSBT vs. ABT recipients at day 3 (P less than 0.05), while ADCC activity was not detectable at any time in either group. Phenotypic analysis of PBL and GIC at day 3 showed no significant differences between ABT and DSBT groups in the percentage of CD4 or CD8 cells. However, in both ABT and DSBT groups the ratio of CD4:CD8 cells was markedly lower in GIC than PBL. By day 6, PBL from both ABT and DSBT groups showed equivalent and significant decreases in CD4+ cells and increases in CD8+ and 3.2.3+ (NK) cells. The percentage of IL-2R+ cells remained low (less than 5%) in both groups at day 3. In contrast, at day 6 there was a significant increase in IL-2R+ (and to a lesser extent CD4+) GIC in ABT- but not DSBT-treated recipients, while CD8+ cells were significantly increased in both groups.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:The effects of donor-specific blood transfusion enhancement of rat renal allografts on cytotoxic activity and phenotypes of peripheral blood lymphocytes, splenocytes, and graft-infiltrating cells. 199 42
The relative contributions made by the major class I (RT1.A) and class II (RT1.B) antigens of the rat major histocompatibility complex (MHC) to the immunogenicity of corneal and skin allografts were investigated using congenic animals. PVG (RT1c) recipients were given skin or heterotopic cornea grafts from congenic PVG.1A (RT1a) or PVG.R1 (RT1r1) donors, which respectively share the entire RT1 complex or only the RT1.A (major class I MHC antigen) region with fully allogeneic
ACI
(RT1a) rats. Recipient splenocytes were tested at ten days posttransplant for their ability to lyse
ACI
, PVG.1A, PVG.R1, and PVG target cells in a secondary
CML
following 6 days in vitro stimulation with irradiated
ACI
spleen cells. Effector cells from PVG recipients of both RT1.A and B disparate (PVG.1A donor) and RT1.A disparate (PVG.R1) skin or cornea grafts lysed
ACI
, PVG.1A, and PVG.R1 (but not PVG) targets at levels significantly above controls given syngeneic grafts. However, the level of cytotoxicity against PVG.R1 as well as
ACI
and PVG.1A allogeneic targets was always significantly higher following PVG.1A grafts than following PVG.R1 grafts, indicating that the addition of a class II MHC antigen difference markedly augmented the immunogenicity of class I MHC antigen disparate cornea and skin grafts. Taken together with other recent evidence confirming the presence of Langerhans cells in the normal rat (and human) cornea, these results suggest that class II MHC-bearing cells make an important contribution to the immunogenicity of corneal allografts.
...
PMID:Relative contribution of major histocompatibility complex antigens to the immunogenicity of corneal allografts. 351 52
This study examined the role of intrathymic injection of allogeneic spleen cells in induction of donor-specific unresponsiveness to heart allografts in the Lewis-to-
ACI
rat combination. Intrathymic injection of naive Lewis SC led to rejection in naive or sublethally irradiated (200 rads TBI)
ACI
recipients at times equivalent to those obtained in control animals. Intrathymic injection of UV-B-irradiated Lewis SC, on the other hand, led to indefinite cardiac allograft survival (> 300 days) in sublethally irradiated
ACI
recipients; similar treatment failed to prevent rejection of third-party (Wistar Furth) cardiac allografts, which demonstrates the specificity of the immunologic unresponsiveness thus induced. The finding that intrathymic injection of untreated allogeneic SC does not prevent rejection of subsequently transplanted allograft suggests that modulation of major histocompatibility complex class II molecule by methods such as UVB may be critical to induction of unresponsiveness. Inoculation of UV-B donor SC in extrathymic sites (subcutaneous, intraperitoneal and intratesticular) did not significantly prolong graft survival in similarly prepared animals, thus confirming the privileged position of the thymus in the induction of tolerance. When the unresponsive recipients of cardiac allografts were made diabetic at 100 days and rechallenged with a second-set donor-type neovascularized pancreatic islet grafts, three of four animals accepted permanently (> 100 days) the islet grafts, thus indicating tolerance to donor alloantigens. To define the underlying mechanisms of specific tolerance in this model, in vitro MLR and in vivo adoptive transfer studies failed to demonstrate suppressor activity in the long-term cardiac allograft recipients. In contrast
CML
assays using 51Cr-release showed that T cells obtained from the unresponsive animals had no detectable cytotoxic activity to Con A-stimulated donor blast targets. The latter finding suggests clonal anergy or deletion of cytotoxic T cells to donor alloantigens. Our results confirm the role of the thymus as a privileged site for the induction and maintenance of specific immunologic unresponsiveness to organ allografts and suggest that this approach may be potentially useful in clinical transplantation of immediately vascularized allografts and neovascularized grafts.
...
PMID:Induction of donor-specific unresponsiveness to rat cardiac allografts by intrathymic injection of UV-B-irradiated donor spleen cells. 851 24