4.5 Article

Prenatal tolerance induction: relationship between cell dose, marrow T-cells, chimerism, and tolerance

Journal

CELL TRANSPLANTATION
Volume 17, Issue 5, Pages 495-506

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.3727/096368908785095971

Keywords

cell dose; chimerism; graft-versus-host disease; immune tolerance; in utero transplantation; T cell

Funding

  1. NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF DIABETES AND DIGESTIVE AND KIDNEY DISEASES [R21DK068441] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER
  2. NIDDK NIH HHS [DK068441, R21 DK068441] Funding Source: Medline

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It was reported that the dose of self-antigens can determine the consequence of deletional tolerance and donor T cells are critical for tolerance induction in mixed chimeras. This study aimed at assessing the effect of cell doses and marrow T cells on engraftment and tolerance induction after prenatal bone marrow transplantation. Intraperitoneal cell transplantation was performed in FVB/N (H-2Kq) mice at gestational day 14 with escalating doses of adult C57BL/6 (H-2K11) marrows. Peripheral chimerism was examined postnatally by flow cytometry and tolerance was tested by skin transplantation. Transplantation of light-density marrow cells showed a dose response. High-level chimerism emerged with a threshold dose of 5.0 x 101 and host leukocytes could be nearly replaced at a dose of 7.5-10.0 x 106. High-dose transplants conferred a steady long-lasting donor-specific tolerance but were accompanied by >50% incidence of graft- versus-host disease. Depletion of marrow T cells lessened graft-vers us- host disease to the detriment of engraftment. With low-level chimerism, tolerance was a graded phenomenon dependent upon the level of chimerism. Durable chimerism within 6 months required a threshold of ! 2% chimerism at I month of age and predicted a 50% chance of long-term tolerance, whereas transient chimerism (<2%) only caused hyporesponsiveness to the donor. Tolerance induction did not succeed without peripheral chimerism even if a large amount of injected donor cells persisted in the peritoneum. Neither did an increase in cell doses or donor T-cell contents benefit skin graft survivals unless it had substantially improved peripheral chimerism. Thus, peripheral chimerism level can be a simple and straightforward test to predict the degree of prenatal immune tolerance.

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