Background. Mucosal or oral tolerance, an established method for inducing low-risk antigen-specific hyporesponsiveness, has not been investigated in vascularized composite allograft (VCA) research. We studied its effects on recipient immune responses and VCA rejection. Methods. Lewis rats (n=12; TREATED) received seven daily intrajejunal treatments of 5×107 splenocytes from semiallogeneic Lewis-Brown-Norway rats (LBN) or vehicle (n=11; SHAM). Recipients' immune responses were assessed by mixed lymphocyte reaction (MLR) against donor antigen and controls. Other Lewis (n=8; TREATED/VCA) received LBN hindlimb VCA and daily intrajejunal treatments of 5×107 LBN splenocytes, or LBN VCA without treatment (n=5; SHAM/VCA), until VCAs rejected. Recipients' immune responses were characterised and VCAs biopsied for histopathology. Immunosuppressants were not used. Results. LBN-specific hyporesponsiveness was induced only in treated Lewis recipients. Treatment significantly reduced MLR alloreactivity, significantly reduced VCA rejection on histopathology, and significantly delayed clinical VCA rejection (P<0.0005; TREATED/VCA mean 9.6 versus 6.0 days for SHAM/VCA). Treatment significantly increased immunosuppressive IL-10/IL-4/TGF-β production and significantly decreased proinflammatory IFN-γ/TNF-α. Conclusion. Jejunal exposure to antigen conferred donor specific hyporesponsiveness that delayed VCA rejection. This method may offer a low-risk adjunctive treatment option to help protect VCAs from rejection. © 2012 Christopher Glenn Wallace et al.
CITATION STYLE
Wallace, C. G., Yen, C. H., Yang, H. C., Lin, C. Y., Wu, R. C., Huang, W. C., … Wei, F. C. (2012). Vascularized composite allograft rejection is delayed by intrajejunal treatment with donor splenocytes without concomitant immunosuppressants. Clinical and Developmental Immunology, 2012. https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/704063
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