Abstract
In experimental transplantation, blockade of CD40-CD40 ligand (CD40L) interactions has proved effective at permitting long-term graft survival and has recently been approved for clinical evaluation. We show that CD4+ T cell-mediated rejection is prevented by anti-CD40L mAb therapy but that CD8+ T cells remain fully functional. Furthermore, blocking CD40L interactions has no effect on CD8+ T cell activation, proliferation, differentiation, homing to the target allograft, or cytokine production. We conclude that CD40L is not an important costimulatory molecule for CD8+ T cell activation and that following transplantation donor APC can activate recipient CD8+ T cells directly without first being primed by CD4+ T cells.
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CITATION STYLE
Jones, N. D., Van Maurik, A., Hara, M., Spriewald, B. M., Witzke, O., Morris, P. J., & Wood, K. J. (2000). CD40-CD40 Ligand-Independent Activation of CD8+ T Cells Can Trigger Allograft Rejection. The Journal of Immunology, 165(2), 1111–1118. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.165.2.1111
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