Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Immunology and
2. Diabetes Research Institute, Miller School of Medicine, University of Miami, FL
Abstract
Abstract
T regulatory cells (Tregs) represent agents to mediate tolerance to allografts so that the use of immunosuppressive drugs is avoided. In this regard, we previously demonstrated that the adoptive transfer of allogeneic Tregs into IL-2Rβ−/− mice prevented autoimmunity and led to allograft tolerance. Here, we investigated the requirements and mechanisms that favor this long-lasting tolerance. The most potent tolerance required exact matching of all alloantigens between the adoptively transferred allogeneic Tregs and allogeneic skin grafts, but tolerance to such allografts that lacked expression of major histocompatibility complex class I or II molecules also occurred. Thus, Tregs are not required to directly recognize major histocompatibility complex class II alloantigens to suppress skin transplant rejection. Depletion of allogeneic Tregs substantially, but not completely, abrogated this form of tolerance. However, thymocytes from allogeneic Treg adoptively transferred IL-2Rβ−/− mice did not reject the corresponding allogeneic skin graft in secondary Scid recipients. Consistent with a requirement for a deletional mechanism in this IL-2Rβ−/− model, a small number of wild-type T cells readily abrogated the immune tolerant state. Collectively, these findings indicate that full tolerance induction is largely dependent on substantial Treg-mediated suppression and thymic deletion of alloreactive T cells and may represent general conditions for Treg-mediated transplantation tolerance.
Publisher
American Society of Hematology
Subject
Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry
Cited by
17 articles.
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