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Transplantation | 2000

Establishment of stable multilineage hematopoietic chimerism and donor-specific tolerance without irradiation.

Douglas A. Hale; Rita Gottschalk; Akihisa Umemura; Takashi Maki; Anthony P. Monaco

BACKGROUND Induction of tolerance to organ transplants will increase graft survival and decrease patient mortality and morbidity. Radiation-induced cytoreduction/ablation followed by donor hematopoietic cell reconstitution has been the most consistently successful approach to experimental tolerance induction. However, reluctance of clinicians to expose recipients to radiation has hampered its clinical application. METHODS In the studies described, administration of polyclonal antilymphocyte serum (ALS), donor-specific bone marrow (DSBM) (150x10(6) cells), and sirolimus (24 mg/kg) in a completely mismatched murine model (B10.A donor, C57B/10 recipient) produced 100% indefinite (>250 days) skin graft survival. The level and character of donor-specific chimerism was evaluated with flow cytometry. RESULTS Specific tolerance was confirmed by continued acceptance of primary and secondary donor-specific skin allografts and rejection of third-party grafts. The level and duration of chimerism induced was directly related to the dose of DSBM administered. Mice given 150x10(6) DSBM cells showed levels of 8-10% donor peripheral blood mononuclear cell chimerism by 30 days, and these levels persisted indefinitely (>250 days) in association with permanent tolerance of donor grafts. Eighty percent of donor chimeric cells were B lymphocytes (MHC class I and II positive, Fc receptor positive, CD45/B220 positive but negative for CD4, CD8 and Thy 1.2) and 20% were sorted in the macrophage monocyte population. CONCLUSIONS These studies demonstrate for the first time that cytoreduction/ablation with ALS combined with sirolimus and reconstitution with donor bone marrow induces tolerance and chimerism in a completely mismatched murine combination. The use of ALS and sirolimus, currently employed therapies in clinical transplantation, and the lack of requirement for radiation make this tolerance protocol attractive for clinical application.


Journal of Immunology | 2001

Dissociation of Hemopoietic Chimerism and Allograft Tolerance After Allogeneic Bone Marrow Transplantation

Akihisa Umemura; Hirofumi Morita; Xian Chang Li; Steven R. Tahan; Anthony P. Monaco; Takashi Maki

Creation of stable hemopoietic chimerism has been considered to be a prerequisite for allograft tolerance after bone marrow transplantation (BMT). In this study, we demonstrated that allogeneic BMT with bone marrow cells (BMC) prepared from either knockout mice deficient in both CD4 and CD8 T cells or CD3E-transgenic mice lacking both T cells and NK cells maintained a high degree of chimerism, but failed to induce tolerance to donor-specific wild-type skin grafts. Lymphocytes from mice reconstituted with T cell-deficient BMC proliferated when they were injected into irradiated donor strain mice, whereas lymphocytes from mice reconstituted with wild-type BMC were unresponsive to donor alloantigens. Donor-specific allograft tolerance was restored when donor-type T cells were adoptively transferred to recipient mice given T cell-deficient BMC. These results show that donor T cell engraftment is required for induction of allograft tolerance, but not for creation of continuous hemopoietic chimerism after allogeneic BMT, and that a high degree of chimerism is not necessarily associated with specific allograft tolerance.


Journal of Immunology | 2000

Donor MHC Class II Antigen Is Essential for Induction of Transplantation Tolerance by Bone Marrow Cells

Akihisa Umemura; Anthony P. Monaco; Takashi Maki

Posttransplant infusion of donor bone marrow cells (BMC) induces tolerance to allografts in adult mice, dogs, nonhuman primates, and probably humans. Here we used a mouse skin allograft model and an allogeneic radiation chimera model to examine the role of MHC Ags in tolerance induction. Infusion of MHC class II Ag-deficient (CIID) BMC failed to prolong C57BL/6 (B6) skin grafts in ALS- and rapamycin-treated B10.A mice, whereas wild-type B6 or MHC class I Ag-deficient BMC induced prolongation. Removal of class II Ag-bearing cells from donor BMC markedly reduced the tolerogenic effect compared with untreated BMC, although graft survival was significantly longer in mice given depleted BMC than that in control mice given no BMC. Infusion of CIID BMC into irradiated syngeneic B6 or allogeneic B10.A mice produced normal lymphoid cell reconstitution including CD4+ T cells except for the absence of class II Ag-positive cells. However, irradiated B10.A mice reconstituted with CIID BMC rejected all B6 and a majority of CIID skin grafts despite continued maintenance of high degree chimerism. B10.A mice reconstituted with B6 BMC maintained chimerism and accepted both B6 and CIID skin grafts. Thus, expression of MHC class II Ag on BMC is essential for allograft tolerance induction and peripheral chimerism with cells deficient in class II Ag does not guarantee allograft acceptance.


Transplantation | 2000

Donor T cells are not required for induction of allograft tolerance in mice treated with antilymphocyte serum, rapamycin, and donor bone marrow cells.

Akihisa Umemura; Anthony P. Monaco; Takashi Maki

Background. Postgraft infusion of donor bone marrow cells (BMC) effectively induces tolerance to skin allografts in antilymphocyte serum- and rapamycin-treated recipients in fully major histocompatibility complex-mismatched mouse strain combinations.We used various gene knockout mice to examine the role of donor T cells and B cells in BMC-induced allograft tolerance. Methods. All recipient mice received ALS on days −1 and 2 and rapamycin (6 mg/kg) on day 7 relative to fully major histocompatibility complex-mismatched skin grafting on day 0. Donor BMC prepared either from mice lacking CD4- and/or CD8a-, or CD3&egr;-expressing cells or B cells, or from corresponding wild-type mice, were given on day 7. The level and phenotypes of chimerism was determined by flow cytometry. Results. All T cell- and B cell-deficient BMC were as effective as wild-type BMC in inducing prolongation of skin graft survival. A low degree of chimerism without donor type T cells was detected in tolerant mice given T cell-deficient BMC or wild-type BMC 60 days after transplantation. Chimeric cells were composed of B cells and macrophages/monocytes. Low level chimerism without donor T or B cells was also present in tolerant mice given B cell-deficient BMC. Conclusion. Donor type T cells and T cell chimerism are not required for induction of allograft tolerance by the antilymphocyte serum /rapamycin/donor BMC-infusion protocol. Donor B cells also do not participate in tolerance induction. Thus, infusion of T cell-depleted BMC in conjunction with conventional immunosuppressive regimens will be a simple, safe, and effective way to induce allograft tolerance in clinical organ transplantation.


Transplantation | 2002

Immunologic mechanisms in tolerance produced in mice with nonradiation-based lymphoablation and donor-specific bone marrow.

Douglas A. Hale; Rita Gottschalk; Akihisa Umemura; Takashi Maki; Anthony P. Monaco


Transplantation Proceedings | 2001

The enigma of tolerance and chimerism: variable role of t cells and chimerism in induction of tolerance with bone marrow☆

Anthony P. Monaco; Takashi Maki; Douglas A. Hale; Akihisa Umemura; H. Morita


Transplantation Proceedings | 2001

Expression of MHC class II antigen is essential in tolerance induction by donor bone marrow cell in antilymphocyte serum–treated and rapamycin-treated mice

Akihisa Umemura; Anthony P. Monaco; Takashi Maki


Transplantation Proceedings | 2001

Essential role of MHC class II antigens in tolerance induction in allogeneic radiation chimera.

Akihisa Umemura; Anthony P. Monaco; Takashi Maki


Transplantation | 2000

SUPPRESSOR CELLS ARE PRESENT DURING INDUCTION IN MICE MADE TOLERANT WITH ANTILYMPHOCYTE SERUM, DONOR BONE MARROW AND SIROLIMUS.: Abstract# 516 Poster Board #-Session: P156-II

Douglas A. Hale; Rita Gottschalk; Akihisa Umemura; Takashi Maki; Anthony P. Monaco


Transplantation | 2000

EXPRESSION OF MHC CLASS II ANTIGEN BY DONOR BONE MARROW CELLS IS ESSENTIAL FOR TOLERANCE INDUCTION IN ALLOGENEIC RADIATION CHIMERA.: Abstract# 523 Poster Board #-Session: P163-II

Akihisa Umemura; Anthony P. Monaco; Takashi Maki

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Takashi Maki

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Douglas A. Hale

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Rita Gottschalk

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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H. Morita

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Steven R. Tahan

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Xian Chang Li

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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