Objective: Whether anticytokine therapies have a place in the treatment of severe sepsis and septic shock remains a question. Although a number of preclinical studies have shown efficacy in primate models of bacteremic shock when administered prophylactically, these same therapies have a significantly diminished effectiveness when administered therapeutically. This study investigated whether delayed administration of a novel anti-human interferon-gamma monoclonal antibody could improve outcome and reduce organ injury in a lethal model of Escherichia coli bacteremia, when administered after the onset of shock.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe molecular mechanisms of immune cell apoptosis during sepsis remain unclear. Two young adult baboons (Papio sp.) received a lethal dose of live Escherichia coli and were sacrificed at either 16 (for animal welfare concerns) or 24 h post-septic shock.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Co-stimulation blockade has already been shown to induce transplantation tolerance in rodents, but until now has failed in large animal models. We therefore sought to investigate whether the addition of rapamycin to a co-stimulation blockade regimen could induce tolerance in baboon recipients of a renal allograft and to characterize the immunological characteristics of rejection.
Methods: Two baboons were used for a pharmacological and toxicological analysis and received anti-B7.
Nihon Hansenbyo Gakkai Zasshi
February 2001
The cell activation depends on T cell antigen receptor binding to antigen plus MHC and costimulation. The binding of CD28, expressed on the T cell surface to B7 (B7-1 or CD80/B7-2 or CD86) present on the antigen--presenting cells (APCs), determines, in several T cell function models, if activation or anergy follows antigenic stimulation. In leprosy, the role of CD80 and CD86 as costimulatory signal in M.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF