Administration of exogenous interleukin-2 abrogates spontaneous rat liver allograft acceptance but does not affect long-term established graft survival

Delrivière, L.;Havaux, Xavier;Latinne, Dominique;Bazin, Hervé;Gianello, Pierre;et.al.
(1997) Transplantation — Vol. 63, n° 11, p. 1698-1701 (1997)

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Authors
  • Delrivière, L.
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  • Latinne, DominiqueUCLouvain
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  • Bazin, HervéUCLouvain
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  • Gianello, Pierreorcid-logoUCLouvain
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Abstract
BACKGROUND: Spontaneous tolerance to the orthotopic liver allograft uniformly occurs in the DA (RT1a) to PVG (RT1c) rat combination despite a fully allogeneic barrier. METHODS: To assess whether spontaneous acceptance might be the consequence of a T cell help deficit at the time of the first exposure of alloantigens to the host, we studied the effect of exogenous interleukin (IL)-2 injections at the time of liver transplantation and during long-term follow-up. RESULTS: Although spontaneous acceptance of the liver allograft constantly ensued in the DA to PVG combination, a daily injection of recombinant IL-2 (3 x 10(5) U) uniformly provoked acute cellular rejection of the liver allograft and consequently the death of animals by postoperative day 5-6. Simultaneous to the graft loss, hepatic enzymes (alanine aminotransferase) increased more than 50-fold in IL-2-treated recipients, whereas similar IL-2 treatment did not produce any hepatic dysfunction in syngeneic animals. By immunohistology, the expression of the alpha chain of the IL-2 receptor, usually undetectable in untreated animals, was evident on CD4 and CD8 lymphocytes infiltrating the liver graft. In contrast, a similar IL-2 regimen and even higher IL-2 doses (x 10(6) U) did not abrogate the liver allograft survival during long-term follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: Our results demonstrate that spontaneous rat liver allograft acceptance may be abolished by exogenous IL-2 injections, which suggests that an "inherent T cell help deficit" might be implicated in the spontaneous acceptance mechanisms of DA to PVG liver allografts.
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Delrivière, L., Havaux, X., Latinne, D., Bazin, H., Kamada, N., Nordlinger, B., & Gianello, P. (1997). Administration of exogenous interleukin-2 abrogates spontaneous rat liver allograft acceptance but does not affect long-term established graft survival. Transplantation, 63(11), 1698-1701. https://doi.org/10.1097/00007890-199706150-00029 (Original work published 1997)