Abstract

The effect of splenectomy on renal allograft survival is not clear. In the rat, spleens isolated from recipients with functioning grafts have been shown to be a major source of cells that are capable of suppressing the rejection response (suppressor T lymphocytes). Thus the removal of the spleen in these allograft recipients could be detrimental to renal allograft survival. This study investigates this hypothesis, and looks for the presence of suppressor cells in other lymphoid organs apart from the spleen. In the rat renal allograft model, donor Lewis spleen cells given to DA recipients intravenously 1 week before transplantation of a Lewis kidney leads to indefinite allograft survival (median survival time (MST) greater than 100 days). Splenectomy before or after pretreatment with donor spleen cells failed to abrogate this effect (MST greater than 100 days). Experiments were performed in which cells or serum were prepared from long-term surviving splenectomized animals which had already been pretreated and transplanted, and then were injected into untreated recipients (adoptive transfer experiments). This was done to determine if cells capable of suppressing graft rejection were present in lymphoid organs outside the spleen in these splenectomized recipients. Thus the IV transfer of 10(8) lymph node cells harvested from splenectomized DA recipients with a long-term surviving LEW graft (LTS), into untreated but lightly irradiated (200 rad) DA recipients resulted in indefinite survival of a fresh Lewis kidney (MST greater than 100 days). In contrast, adoptive transfer of normal DA lymph node cells was ineffective (MST 13 days). Thus splenectomy is not necessarily detrimental to graft survival, as cells capable of preventing graft rejection are found in other lymphoid organs, such as lymph nodes, in splenectomized recipients.

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