Abstract
A human skin allograft injury model in immunodeficient mice, engrafted with human peripheral blood mononuclear cells from a different donor, has been used to test whether reagents that block human Τ cell CD2 interactions with its principal ligand, LFA-3 (CD58), can inhibit immune reactions in vivo. In this model, human skin grafts show a reproducible pattern of progressive human T-cell infiltration and human graft microvascular injury that resembles human first-set skin graft rejection. Murine Mab to human LFA-3 or human LFA-3-lgG1 fusion protein, but not isotype-matched control antibodies, each markedly protected skin grafts from leukocyte infiltration and injury. These data provide the first evidence that LFA-3 functions in vivo and establish the ability of this new model to test human-specific immune modulators. © 1997 Nature Publishing Group.
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Sultan, P., Schechner, J. S., McNiff, J. M., Hochman, P. S., Hughes, C. C. W., Lorber, M. I., … Pober, J. S. (1997). Blockade of CD2-LFA-3 interactions protects human skin allografts in immunodeficient mouse/human chimeras. Nature Biotechnology, 15(8), 759–762. https://doi.org/10.1038/nbt0897-759
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