Abstract

The factors responsible for B cell regulation in stable renal transplant patients are unknown. To examine these control mechanisms, the B cell responses to 4 mitogens (pokeweed, wheat germ agglutinin, lipopolysaccharide, and SAC-1), which are known to stimulate B cells by different mechanisms, were measured in two groups of stable long-term (greater than 1 year post-transplant) renal transplant recipients. The first group were patients who had been transplanted under conditions of a negative crossmatch on all available pretransplant sera (negative crossmatch group) and the second group were patients who might have a unique regulation of B cell function in that they had been successfully transplanted under the conditions of a negative crossmatch using sera at the time of transplant but with pretransplant sera that gave a positive donor-specific T cell crossmatch (positive crossmatch group). Stable transplant patients were found to have significantly impaired responses to all four mitogens tested. Furthermore there were no differences in the responses of the negative crossmatch patients as compared with the positive crossmatch patients. The lack of response to mitogens was not due to a lack of proliferation of cells or to a loss of viability in culture. The number of cells in culture was the same in negative crossmatch patients and controls but was significantly less than controls in positive crossmatch patients (P less than 0.001). These findings suggest an intrinsic B cell defect in all stable transplant patients, and that the degree of the impaired B cell responses is the same in positive and negative crossmatch patients. In addition in positive crossmatch patients, there is a decrease in the percentage B cells that resulted after separation on a Ficoll-Paque gradient.

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