Abstract

Abstract Donor-specific blood transcfusion (DSBT) promotes graft acceptance in certain experimental and clinical situations. However, the exact nature of the operating mechanisms, and in particular the role of Th1/Th2 cytokines, remains controversial. We recently described a fully mismatched rat combination [RA rat (RT1p) to PVG rat (RT1c)] in which a single pre-transplant (Tx) DSBT induces donor-specific tolerance following heart transplantation (Htx). In order to delineate better the role of Th1 and Th2 cytokines in the development of tolerance versus rejection, we studied the intragraft mRNA for Th1 and Th2 cytokines at different time points post-Tx in rejecting and DSBT-tolerized heart grafts. We performed reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) to examine intragraft Th1/Th2 cytokines profile. In contrast to findings from previous data, we detected an early (post-Tx day 2) Th1 cytokine upregulation. Th1 downregulation/Th2 immune deviation was observed only at a later period (post-Tx day 30). Consistent with this Th1 early upregulation, a dense mononuclear cellular infiltrate was seen in tolerized grafts, which was equivalent to that seen in rejecting grafts. Despite in vivo unresponsiveness, peripheral lymphocyte derived from tolerant animals proliferated against donor-matched antigens to the same degree as against those of a third party until post-Tx day 30. Altogether, these observations (dense graft cellular infiltrate, early post-Tx Th1 cytokine production, early preserved cellular proliferative responses), suggest that the development of tolerance is preceded by an active Th1 cytokine-mediated immune response. The mechanisms by which an early Th1 response promotes tolerance need to be further studied.

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