Abstract

We analysed the effect of selective α/ß-T cell elimination on allograft survival in a strongly histoincompatible DA → LEWIS rat model by treatment of recipients with the mouse monoclonal antibody R73 two times before and seven times after transplantation. R73 induced virtually indefinite cardiac allograft survival in 44% of six-week-old LEWIS recipients, whereas donor-type skin allografts were rejected within 11 days. The remaining 56% of animals presented a mean cardiac survival time of 41 ± 13 days. Graft prolongation was age dependent since in ten-week-old animals the survival time was only of 19 ± 5 days (untreated controls: 7 ± 1 days. R73 induced a rapid decrease of R73-positive T cells in the peripheral blood from 70% before treatment to 2%. From the fifth day of treatment a gradual T cell recovery was registered. The T cell marker CD5 decreased from 72% to 17% but recovered already from the second day of treatment. Determination of α/ß-TCR, CD3 and CD5 density on T cells during R73 therapy showed that the initial T cell decrease was due to T cell elimination, whereas modulation of α/ß-TCR was predominant during the following days. Anti-R73 antibodies appeared regularly during the first week of treatment and blocked R73 activity, indicating their anti-idiotypic nature. The present findings show that short-term R73 therapy is able to induce long-lasting allograft survival. This experimental model can be used to study the basis of peripheral organ specific T cell tolerance.

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