4.2 Article

Bacterial infections, alloinununity, and transplantation tolerance

Journal

TRANSPLANTATION REVIEWS
Volume 25, Issue 1, Pages 27-35

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.trre.2010.10.003

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Illinois Transplant Society Grant
  2. [NIAID RO1 AI071080]
  3. [ROTRF 979162997]
  4. [NIAID R01 AI072630]

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Transplantation of solid organs across histocompatibility barriers in the absence of immunosuppression is invariably followed by acute allograft rejection. Although several immunosuppressive regimens have been developed to prevent allograft rejection, these global immunosuppressive agents effectively inhibit all T cells, leaving the host vulnerable to infections. Thus, a major goal in transplantation immunology is to induce donor-specific tolerance that results in the extended suppression of allograft-specific immune responses, while leaving the remainder of the immune system competent to fight infections and malignancies. Initial successes in identifying approaches that successfully induce transplantation tolerance in experimental models have led to a newer research focus of identifying potential barriers to the induction of such tolerance as well as events that may reverse established allograft tolerance. Both clinical and experimental studies have identified bacterial infections as a possible trigger of allograft rejection. Recently, experimental models of transplantation tolerance have identified that bacterial signals can promote acute allograft rejection either by preventing the induction of transplantation tolerance or by reversing tolerance after it has been stably established. This review summarizes experimental and clinical literature supporting the hypothesis that bacterial infections and innate immunity can qualitatively and quantitatively alter adaptive alloreactivity through effects on innate immune responses. (C) 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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