Prolonged Allogeneic and Xenogeneic Microchimerism in Unmatched Primates without Immunosuppression by Intrathymic Implantation of CD34+Donor Marrow Cells
Engraftment of stem cell-enriched donor marrow implanted in the thymus of a foreign host might facilitate acceptance of donor-specific organ or tissue grafts. To test this hypothesis, allogeneic and xenogeneic CD34+marrow cells from unrelated adult male baboons and humans were injected intrathymical...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Cellular immunology 1997-11, Vol.181 (2), p.127-138 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Engraftment of stem cell-enriched donor marrow implanted in the thymus of a foreign host might facilitate acceptance of donor-specific organ or tissue grafts. To test this hypothesis, allogeneic and xenogeneic CD34+marrow cells from unrelated adult male baboons and humans were injected intrathymically in eight infant female baboons, both with and without standard cyclosporine-based immunosuppression. In allogeneic experiments, male (donor) cells, of both T- and B-cell lineages, were detected by PCR in the peripheral blood of all six recipients and persisted for at least 15 months in 2/4 recipients studied longtutudinally. Donor-derived skin grafts survived twice as long as third party grafts in unimmunosuppressed recipients. In xenogeneic protocols, human male (donor) cells were demonstrable for 7 and 15 months, respectively, in two baboon recipients with evidence that implanted human CD34+cells had produced lymphoid progeny. Survival of donor-specific skin xenografts was prolonged in one of two recipients. These experiments demonstrate that the intrathymic injection of CD34+marrow cells can result in long-lasting lymphohematopoeitic microchimerism in unrelated primates even without immunosuppression and can alter donor-specific skin graft survival. |
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ISSN: | 0008-8749 1090-2163 |
DOI: | 10.1006/cimm.1997.1194 |