1.Liver Non-Parenchymal Cells Induce Apoptosis in Activated T Cells in Vitro.
Young Cheol LEE ; Lina LU ; Fumin FU ; Wei LI ; Angus W THOMSON ; John J FUNG
The Journal of the Korean Society for Transplantation 2001;15(1):73-78
PURPOSE: Liver, unlike heart or skin, allografts transplanted between MHC-disparate mouse strains are spontaneously accepted without any immunosuppressive therapy. Despite the allograft acceptance, the recipients continue to exhibit donor-specific immune responses in vitro (MLR and generation of CTL). High levels of CTL apoptosis evident within tolerated liver grafts have been postulated as a mechanism underlying this 'split' tolerance. METHODS and RESULTS: By using radiometric DNA fragmentation test ("JAM" assay) and TUNEL staining, we present the evidence here that liver nonparenchymal cells (NPC) are quite strong inducers of activated T cell apoptotic death in allogeneic mice. This phenomenon occurs the similar level in activated T cells of syngeneic or third-party mice. Liver cells from gld (FasL-deficient) mice exert similar apoptosis-inducing effect on activated T cells from normal mice. Tumor necrosis factor receptor (TNFR): Fc fusion protein, and concanamycin A, an inhibitor of perforin pathway, fail to inhibit the apoptotic activity. CONCLUSION: These data indicate that liver NPC play important role in causing active apoptosis in graft-infiltratingCTL which favors liver graft acceptance, and liver-induced activated T cell apoptosis may not mediated by Fas, TNF or perforin pathways.
Allografts
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Animals
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Apoptosis*
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DNA Fragmentation
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Heart
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Immune Tolerance
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In Situ Nick-End Labeling
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Liver*
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Mice
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Perforin
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Receptors, Tumor Necrosis Factor
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Skin
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T-Lymphocytes*
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Transplantation
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Transplants