Abstract

The specific immune mechanisms of corneal graft rejection are not completely understood. Recently, the technique of growing T-cell lines from rejected allografts using recombinant IL-2 has enabled the cells involved in allograft rejection to be recognized. In the present study, this method was applied for the extraction and propagation of T lymphocytes from rejected, normal, and diseased corneas. T-cell lines could successfully be grown from rejected and normal corneas, but not from corneas with keratoconus or pseudophakic bullous keratopathy. The phenotypic repertoire of the grown cells was studied by FACS scan analysis. Rejected corneas were invaded by a mixture of activated CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell lines, with one population being predominant. In normal corneas only activated CD8+ cells with cytotoxic function were cultured. No cells were obtained from diseased corneas. The in vitro function of cell lines was assessed by primed lymphocyte testing. The present study shows that the technique of propagating invading T-cell lines from organ grafts can be applied to human corneas, offering a new approach to understanding the immunological mechanisms occurring inside this immune tissue.

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