4.2 Article

Induction of transplantation tolerance - the potential of regulatory T cells

Journal

TRANSPLANT IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 14, Issue 3-4, Pages 225-230

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.trim.2005.03.011

Keywords

transplantation; tolerance; T regulatory cells; CD25(+)CD4(+)

Funding

  1. Wellcome Trust Funding Source: Medline

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Solid organ transplantation is widely accepted as an effective treatment for end organ failure. Although the treatment with immunosuppressive drugs has undoubtedly greatly improved graft survival, chronic rejection still has considerable impact on long term outcome. This, together with the undesirable side effects associated with life long treatment with immunosuppressive drugs, have significant implications for long term outcomes. In a small number of patients, drug non-compliance as well as controlled reduction or removal of maintenance immune suppressive drug therapy has led to the uncovering of a tolerant state. The challenge of achieving improved monitoring of all transplant patients may allow tailoring of immunosupression in a proportion of recipients thereby increasing the opportunities for the induction of specific unresponsiveness to donor alloantigens in the future. The immune system using several mechanisms to both induce and maintain tolerance to alloantigens, including the deletion of allo-reactive T cells, the induction of anergy, clonal exhaustion, ignorance and active suppression (immunoregulation) of allo-responses. A minor subpopulation of CD4(+) T cells, regulatory or suppressor CD4(+) T cells that co-express the cell-surface molecule CD25 (IL2 alpha subunit) at a high level may play a major role in the maintenance of specific unresponsiveness and operational tolerance to donor antigens in vivo. Intensive investigation of these cells in recent years has started to uncover the mechanisms of active suppression by regulatory T cells in this setting. (C) 2005 Elsevier B.V All rights reserved.

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