Abstract

Quantitative immunologic techniques for analysis of human alloreactivity are currently lacking in transplantation immunology. We report a rapid, sensitive, and quantitative limiting dilution analysis technique that provides a minimal estimate of the number of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) capable of secreting interleukin-2 (operationally defined as helpter T lymphocytes) when cultured in vitro with allogeneic PBMC bearing serologically identified MHC disparities. Using this LDA technique, we have estimated that approximately 1/500 to 1/2000 (0.2% to 0.05%) of the PBMC from various individuals can secrete IL-2 after in vitro contact with completely major-histocompatibility-complex-disparate PBMC. Under normal conditions the HTL frequency in human peripheral blood appears quite stable, based on serial analysis of HTL frequency in a healthy human donor. This LDA technique is more rapid and informative than the MLR, and may be useful for pretransplant evaluation and posttransplant monitoring of donor reactivity in transplant recipients.

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