Specific tolerance induction and transplantation: A single-day protocol

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Abstract

Bone marrow transfusion is a well-established method for induction of mixed hematopoietic chimerism and donor-specific tolerance in animal models. This procedure, however, is inapplicable in clinical transplantation using cadaveric donors due to the interval (1 week to 7 months) between tolerance induction and organ transplantation. For clinical use, it is essential that allografts be placed at the time of bone marrow transfusion. In the present study, we performed skin transplantation within I hour after a nonlethal conditioning regimen. Recipient mice were treated with anti-CD3, anti-CD4, low-dose total body irradiation (3 to 6 Gy TBI) and fully mismatched or haploidentical donor bone marrow cells. Stable multilineage chimerism and specific T-cell nonresponsiveness developed. Donor skin grafts were permanently accepted. These results suggest that this single day protocol has clear potential for application in both cadaveric and living-related organ transplantation.

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De Vries-Van Der Zwan, A., Besseling, A. C., De Waal, L. P., & Boog, C. J. P. (1997). Specific tolerance induction and transplantation: A single-day protocol. Blood, 89(7), 2596–2601. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.v89.7.2596

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