12 May 2014 : Original article
Immunosuppressive protocol with delayed use of low-dose tacrolimus after aortic transplantation suppresses donor-specific anti-MHC class I and class II antibody production in rats
Ivan MatiaABCDEFG, Peter FellmerADEFG, Katrin SplithABCDEF, Martin VargaBDEF, Milos AdamecADEG, Ines KämmererBCD, Linda FeldbrüggeBD, Felix KrenzienBD, Hans-Michael HauBD, Georgi AtanasovBD, Moritz SchmelzleADEG, Sven JonasADEGDOI: 10.12659/AOT.889870
Ann Transplant 2014; 19:225-232
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Arterial allografts are used as vascular conduits in the treatment of prosthetic graft infection. Immunosuppression decreases their rupture risk rate. However, immunosuppression can be unprofitable in florid infection. Previously, we confirmed inhibition of cell-mediated destruction of rat aortic grafts by delayed use of tacrolimus. In this work, we studied the influence of this protocol on the antibody-mediated rejection.
MATERIAL AND METHODS: Flow cytometry was used for the retrospective analysis of day 0, 14, and 30 sera obtained from Lewis rat recipients of isogeneic fresh infrarenal aortic grafts (group A) or Brown-Norway rat aortic grafts (group B,C,D) for the presence of donor-specific anti-MHC class I and II antibodies. Tacrolimus in daily dose of 0.2 mg/kg was administered from day 1 to day 30 (group C) or from day 7 to day 30 (group D).
RESULTS: Inhibition of fluorescence-labeled anti-BN MHC class I and MHC class II antibodies binding to BN-splenocytes was observed only by day 14 and day 30 sera of allogeneic non-immunosuppressed Lewis rats (group B). The day 30 sera significantly decreased anti-MHC I (42±3%) and anti-MHC II antibody binding (56±3%) compared to day 0 (76±9%, p=0.005 and 79±5%, p=0.003, respectively). Deposition of immunoglobulins G into the tunica media was observed only in non-immunosuppressed aortic allografts on day 30.
CONCLUSIONS: Fresh aortic allografts induce donor-specific anti-MHC class I and anti-MHC class II antibody production. Delayed administration of tacrolimus completely suppressed antibody production and antibody-mediated destruction of aortic allografts.
Keywords: anti-MHC class II antibody, anti-MHC class I antibody, Tacrolimus, antibody-mediated rejection, arterial allografts, arterial rejection
In Press
15 Mar 2024 : Review article
Approaches and Challenges in the Current Management of Cytomegalovirus in Transplant Recipients: Highlighti...Ann Transplant In Press; DOI: 10.12659/AOT.941185
18 Mar 2024 : Original article
Does Antibiotic Use Increase the Risk of Post-Transplantation Diabetes Mellitus? A Retrospective Study of R...Ann Transplant In Press; DOI: 10.12659/AOT.943282
20 Mar 2024 : Original article
Transplant Nephrectomy: A Comparative Study of Timing and Techniques in a Single InstitutionAnn Transplant In Press; DOI: 10.12659/AOT.942252
28 Mar 2024 : Original article
Association Between FEV₁ Decline Rate and Mortality in Long-Term Follow-Up of a 21-Patient Pilot Clinical T...Ann Transplant In Press; DOI: 10.12659/AOT.942823
Most Viewed Current Articles
05 Apr 2022 : Original article
Impact of Statins on Hepatocellular Carcinoma Recurrence After Living-Donor Liver TransplantationDOI :10.12659/AOT.935604
Ann Transplant 2022; 27:e935604
12 Jan 2022 : Original article
Risk Factors for Developing BK Virus-Associated Nephropathy: A Single-Center Retrospective Cohort Study of ...DOI :10.12659/AOT.934738
Ann Transplant 2022; 27:e934738
22 Nov 2022 : Original article
Long-Term Effects of Everolimus-Facilitated Tacrolimus Reduction in Living-Donor Liver Transplant Recipient...DOI :10.12659/AOT.937988
Ann Transplant 2022; 27:e937988
15 Mar 2022 : Case report
Combined Liver, Pancreas-Duodenum, and Kidney Transplantation for Patients with Hepatitis B Cirrhosis, Urem...DOI :10.12659/AOT.935860
Ann Transplant 2022; 27:e935860