Publications by authors named "J R Urmson"

The biological processes responsible for somatic cell senescence contribute to organ aging and progression of chronic diseases, and this may contribute to kidney transplant outcomes. We examined the effect of pre-existing donor aging on the performance of kidney transplants, comparing mouse kidney isografts and allografts from old versus young donors. Before transplantation, old kidneys were histologically normal, but displayed an increased expression of senescence marker p16(INK4a).

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IFN-gamma is produced by cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) but can also decrease CTL generation. We used IFN-gamma-R1-deficient (GRKO) and IFN-gamma-deficient (GKO) mice to study the effects of IFN-gamma in MLC on the generation of CTL activity and CTL number, IL-2 production and cell proliferation. CTL activity was increased in MLC when GRKO responders or GKO stimulators and responders were used, compared to wild-type (WT) MLC.

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Organ allograft rejection is strongly associated with the presence of alloreactive cytotoxic T cells but the role of cytotoxicity in the pathologic lesions is unclear. Previous studies showed that the principal lesions of kidney rejection - interstitial infiltration, tubulitis, and endothelial arteritis - are T-cell-dependent and antibody-independent. We studied the role of cytotoxic granule components perforin and granzymes A and B in the evolution of the T-cell-mediated lesions of mouse kidney transplant rejection.

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The natural history and pathogenesis of the pathologic lesions that define rejection of kidney transplants have not been well characterized. We studied the evolution of the pathology of rejection in mouse kidney allografts, using four strain combinations across full major histocompatibility complex (MHC) plus nonMHC disparities, to permit more general conclusions. Interstitial infiltrate, MHC induction, and venulitis appeared by day 5, peaked at day 7-10, then stabilized or regressed by day 21.

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Experimental liver allografts undergo spontaneous acceptance despite undergoing rejection during the first few weeks post transplant. We explored the role of interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) in the spontaneous acceptance of mouse liver allografts. Strain of mouse (CBA) liver allografts transplanted into normal BALB/c mice developed histologic changes typical of rejection that spontaneously regressed, permitting long-term survival of these allografts similar to that of syngeneic grafts.

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