A short course of procarbazine hydrochloride (PCH; 50 mg/kg) and antilymphocyte serum (ALS; 5 ml/kg), administered to Lewis (LEW;RT1(1] rats in the first week following transplantation of Brown Norway (BN;RT1n) kidneys, substantially prolonged allograft survival and induced long-term survival in 62% of the grafts. The two agents acted synergistically, in that neither of them administered alone had much effect. Graft recipients did not produce detectable cytotoxic antibodies and antigen-reactive cells injected i.v. were not diverted to the liver, thus showing that neither antibodies nor immune complexes are likely to mediate the unresponsiveness. Spleen cells from graft-bearing recipients failed to cause graft-versus-host responses (GVHR) in both (LEW X BN)F1 and (LEW X DA)F1 hybrids, but they specifically suppressed the GVHR given by normal syngeneic cells to donor strain (BN) antigens. This suppression was specific because the response against third-party antigens (DA; RT1a) was unaffected. Adoptive transfer of spleen and thymus cells from PCH-ALS-treated LEW rats bearing healthy BN kidneys caused a profound prolongation of BN graft survival in sublethally irradiated LEW recipients. This transfer was specific and mediated by W3/13+ (T) lymphocytes. It is concluded that a limited regimen of PCH and ALS given in the first postoperative week incites the generation of specific suppressor T lymphocytes and that this form of immunosuppression, even without preoperative donor antigen, is an effective way of prolonging kidney allograft survival.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00007890-198311000-00002 | DOI Listing |
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