Approaching tolerance in transplantation

The past 15 years have seen a substantial increase in our knowledge of how short-term therapy with a range of antibodies that block immune function can induce a state of immunological tolerance to transplants. The paradigm established with CD4 antibodies now seems equally applicable to many other to...

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Egile Nagusiak: Lin, C, Graca, L, Cobbold, S, Waldmann, H
Formatua: Journal article
Hizkuntza:English
Argitaratua: 2002
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author Lin, C
Graca, L
Cobbold, S
Waldmann, H
author_facet Lin, C
Graca, L
Cobbold, S
Waldmann, H
author_sort Lin, C
collection OXFORD
description The past 15 years have seen a substantial increase in our knowledge of how short-term therapy with a range of antibodies that block immune function can induce a state of immunological tolerance to transplants. The paradigm established with CD4 antibodies now seems equally applicable to many other tolerance inducing agents. It would seem that antibody therapy is required to create a complete ceasefire in the immune system's attack on the transplant. During this ceasfire donor antigen is processed by host antigen-presenting cells and made available in a form that allows selective expansion of specialised T-cells with regulatory function. Such T-cells police the immune system and stop attack directed to antigens physically associated with those from the transplanted tissue. Antigens from the transplanted tissue provide a constant impetus to keep regulatory T-cell activity dominant so that the system remains effectively policed. New cohorts of regulatory T-cells replenish effete cells over time through « infectious tolerance ». Knowledge of these dominant tolerance mechanisms may allow for optimisation of combined strategies for tolerance, and for evolution of tolerogenic vaccines in transplantation.
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spelling oxford-uuid:8703be46-24ea-41f6-9faf-4266f074781b2022-03-26T22:07:58ZApproaching tolerance in transplantationJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:8703be46-24ea-41f6-9faf-4266f074781bEnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2002Lin, CGraca, LCobbold, SWaldmann, HThe past 15 years have seen a substantial increase in our knowledge of how short-term therapy with a range of antibodies that block immune function can induce a state of immunological tolerance to transplants. The paradigm established with CD4 antibodies now seems equally applicable to many other tolerance inducing agents. It would seem that antibody therapy is required to create a complete ceasefire in the immune system's attack on the transplant. During this ceasfire donor antigen is processed by host antigen-presenting cells and made available in a form that allows selective expansion of specialised T-cells with regulatory function. Such T-cells police the immune system and stop attack directed to antigens physically associated with those from the transplanted tissue. Antigens from the transplanted tissue provide a constant impetus to keep regulatory T-cell activity dominant so that the system remains effectively policed. New cohorts of regulatory T-cells replenish effete cells over time through « infectious tolerance ». Knowledge of these dominant tolerance mechanisms may allow for optimisation of combined strategies for tolerance, and for evolution of tolerogenic vaccines in transplantation.
spellingShingle Lin, C
Graca, L
Cobbold, S
Waldmann, H
Approaching tolerance in transplantation
title Approaching tolerance in transplantation
title_full Approaching tolerance in transplantation
title_fullStr Approaching tolerance in transplantation
title_full_unstemmed Approaching tolerance in transplantation
title_short Approaching tolerance in transplantation
title_sort approaching tolerance in transplantation
work_keys_str_mv AT linc approachingtoleranceintransplantation
AT gracal approachingtoleranceintransplantation
AT cobbolds approachingtoleranceintransplantation
AT waldmannh approachingtoleranceintransplantation