Abstract

Peripheral blood lymphocytes from skin graft-sensitized pigs will adhere in vitro to fresh donor-type large vessel endothelium, but do not spread out or migrate. Similar cells will however spread out on and migrate through monolayers of cultured donor-type aortic endothelium to a significantly greater extent than nonallergized lymphocytes. Cells sensitized in mixed lymphocyte culture at first exhibit a nonspecific increase in adherence and migration correlated with increased thymidine uptake, but after more prolonged incubation adherence becomes specific for stimulator-type endothelium. It is suggested that lymphocyte infiltration of an allograft in the presence of circulating sensitized cells involves a combination of nonspecific lymphocyte adhesion to endothelium, antigenic stimulation of “primed” cells to increased motility, endothelial penetration and lymphokine production, and soluble-factor-mediated stimulation of migration by nonsensitized cells.

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