A promising approach for preventing allograft rejection involves shifting the balance between cytopathic and regulatory T cells to dominance of the latter cell type. Nonspecific lymphodepletion was conducted by administration of depleting anti-CD4 and anti-CD8 antibodies to reduce effector T cells and adoptive transfer of ex vivo-expanded host Treg cells by stimulation with donor dendritic cells to augment the Treg cell compartment. Evaluation of an MHC-mismatched skin allograft model revealed that combined therapy with these two protocols consistently induced modest prolongation of allograft survival, although all skin grafts were eventually rejected.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe induction of immune tolerance is one of the final therapeutic goals in clinical transplantation. Regulatory T lymphocytes are important for the induction and maintenance of immune tolerance to grafts. If immunosuppressive drugs used clinically to prevent immune rejection also inhibit regulatory T lymphocytes, tolerance would not be achieved.
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