4.7 Article

Turkey ovarian tissue transplantation: effects of surgical technique on graft attachment and immunological status of the grafts, 6 days post-surgery

Journal

POULTRY SCIENCE
Volume 101, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.psj.2021.101648

Keywords

Turkey; ovary; transplantation; immunology; rejection

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This study tested the effect of removing different proportions of recipient ovarian tissue and using the abdominal air sac membrane as an anchor on transplant attachment rates. The study also evaluated the immune response in the transplants. The results showed that removing the entire recipient ovary can prevent gonadal chimeras, and the use of the abdominal air sac membrane did not affect attachment rates. The high levels of lymphocytes in the transplants indicate a potential tissue rejection.
Biobanked poultry ovaries can be revived via transplantation into a recipient female, which upon maturity will produce donor-derived progeny. Previously, a large portion of these recipients also produced recipient-derived progeny, making them gonadal chimeras. These were potentially created when portions of the recipient's ovary were inadvertently left behind. Completely removing the recipient ovary would solve this problem; however, leaving a portion of the recipient's ovary may have inadvertently increased the transplant attachment rate by providing a damaged area for attachment. To test this hypothesis in the turkey, we removed various portions (33-100%) of recipient ovarian tissue and determined the transplant attachment rate. Furthermore, the use of the abdominal air sac membrane as an additional anchoring point was tested. The overall attachment rate of transplants was 91% (27/30), while the average size of the transplants was 4.2 +/- 0.6 mm(2), 6 d postsurgery. There was no difference (P > 0.05) in the attachment rates, or transplant size between groups with varying amounts of recipent tissue removed, or by using the abdominal air sac membrane as an anchor. Finally, the immunological status of the grafts were evaluated by analyzing the presences of CD3 and MUM-1 (T and B cell markers). This showed that all transplants were infiltrated by large numbers of T and B cells. Shown by a high (P <= 0.001) percentage of CD3-positive immunostained cytoplasmic area (49.78 +/- 3.90%) in transplants compared to remnant recipient tissue (0.30 +/- 0.10%), as well as a high (P <= 0.001) percentage of MUM-1-positive immunostained nuclear area (9.85 +/- 1.95%) in transplants over remnant recipient tissues (0.39 +/- 0.12%). From this study we would recommend removing the entire recipient ovary, and not covering the transplants with the abdominal air sac membrane, to prevent gonadal chimeras. The high levels of lymphocytes within the grafts indicate possible tissue rejection, which could be overcome via immunosuppression with or without histocompatibility matching between donors and recipients.

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