Pieces of brainstem tissue from mouse embryos were transplanted into the cerebellar vermis of 49 adult rats, which had or which had not been treated with Cyclosporin A (10 mg/kg/day). With no treatment of immunosuppressants survival rates of xenografts were low. However, when Cyclosporin A was administered, the rates increased from 40% (4/10) to 67% (8/12) 2 weeks after grafting and from 25% (3/12) to 60% (9/15) 4 weeks after grafting, although immunological reactions of varying severities were noted in all of the surviving grafts. The present immunocytochemical study elucidated the composition of cell infiltrations frequently seen in the grafts. The results showed that a large number of cytotoxic/suppressor T lymphocytes appeared, while the numbers of helper/inducer T lymphocytes were relatively small. In addition, increased staining of astrocytes and microglia was observed in areas of cell infiltration. These activated cells might play a certain role in the process of graft rejection in the brain. Formation of the blood-brain barrier in the xenografts was examined by means of peroxidase cytochemistry and immunohistochemistry. In brains containing surviving grafts limited leakage of peroxidase, following its injection into the host systemic circulation 30-75 min prior to sacrifice, was detectable at the graft-host interface and at the operation scar near the pial surface. In brains containing rejected grafts extensive extravasation of peroxidase was detected. The severity of the immunological reaction was correlated with the intensity of the rupture in the blood-brain barrier. The findings suggested that the immunological reaction contributed to the transendothelial permeability changes in the vessels of brains containing rejected grafts.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0006-8993(88)90611-7DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

immunological reaction
12
blood-brain barrier
12
weeks grafting
8
surviving grafts
8
brains rejected
8
rejected grafts
8
grafts
5
immunological
4
reaction blood-brain
4
barrier mouse-to-rat
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!