Abstract

Reports of vascular changes in renal biopsies of transplant patients treated with cyclosporine prompted review of our own renal biopsies and examination of human endothelial cell cultures exposed to cyclosporine in vitro. Endothelial cells were isolated from human umbilical cords by collagenase digestion and cultured in Medium 199 with Earle's salts plus 20% pooled human serum in the absence of antibiotics. Cultures exposed to cyclosporine (0, 0.4, 1.0, 5.0, 10.0 micrograms/ml) for 0, 3, 7, 10, and 14 days were subsequently fixed in 2% glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M cacodylate buffer. Vascular thrombosis was seen in renal biopsies of cyclosporine- and azathioprine-treated patients but the incidence was the same in both groups. No change in the morphology of endothelial cell cultures was observed until 7 days when an increase in size and number of cytoplasmic inclusions became apparent in both control and cyclosporine-treated cultures. By electron microscopy, these inclusions were identified as secondary lysosomes. Their number and size increased with the length of time in culture but did not appear to correlate with the concentration of cyclosporine in the medium. No other morphologic change was identified. It is concluded that the appearance of increased numbers of secondary lysosomes in human endothelial cell cultures is a function of culture age as opposed to cyclosporine exposure. Furthermore, the data indicate that small vessel thrombosis is not specific to treatment with cyclosporine.

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