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Effect of prolonged monoclonal antibody administration on cardiac allograft survival in the rat. Scand J Immunol 1989 Sep;30(3):333-8

Date

09/01/1989

Pubmed ID

2675304

DOI

10.1111/j.1365-3083.1989.tb01218.x

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-0024453163 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   11 Citations

Abstract

After heterotopic cardiac transplantation in the rat, monoclonal antibodies (MoAb) specific for rat T-cell subsets were administered until rejection. Across combined major histocompatibility complex (MHC) and non-MHC differences (WF to Lew) and isolated non-MHC differences (WF to Lew.1W) cardiac allografts were rapidly rejected in unmodified hosts (7.7 +/- 1.0 days and 12.2 +/- 0.8 days respectively). Across combined MHC and non-MHC differences, administration of MoAb OX-19 (pan T-cell) on days -1, 0, and 1 (where day 0 was the day of transplantation) and alternate days thereafter until rejection significantly prolonged allograft survival (28.5 +/- 10.2 days, P less than 0.01). Administration of MoAb W3/25 (helper T cell) and MoAb OX-39 (interleukin 2 (IL-2) receptor) prolonged allograft survival (11.3 +/- 2.6 days, P less than 0.05 and 13.3 +/- 2.0 days, P less than 0.01 respectively), whereas MoAb OX-8 (cytotoxic/suppressor T cell) administration had no effect on allograft survival. In contrast, across non-MHC differences (WF to Lew.1W) administration of MoAb OX-8 markedly prolonged allograft survival (85, greater than 100 x 3 days) whereas MoAb W3/25 administration had no effect. The effect of MoAb administration on lymphocyte subsets at rejection was assessed by flow cytometry. The relationship between depletion of targeted T-cell subsets and graft survival was variable. Across both combined MHC and non-MHC and isolated non-MHC differences MoAb OX-8 administration resulted in a marked reduction of OX-8+ cells at rejection with no prolongation of graft survival in the former and indefinite graft survival in the latter. In contrast, OX-19 administration resulted in prolonged graft survival but at rejection there were significant numbers of OX-19+ cells present. Administration of MoAb W3/25 failed to affect a significant reduction in W3/25+ cells, but allograft survival was nonetheless prolonged.

Author List

Roza AM, Kimura H, Markmann J, Naji A



MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Animals
Antibodies, Monoclonal
Graft Survival
Heart Transplantation
Histocompatibility Antigens
Male
Rats
Rats, Inbred Lew
T-Lymphocytes
Transplantation, Homologous