Immune tolerance and transplantation Journal Article


Authors: Alpdogan, O.; van den Brink, M. R. M.
Article Title: Immune tolerance and transplantation
Abstract: Successful allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) and solid organ transplantation require development of a degree of immune tolerance against allogeneic antigens. T lymphocytes play a critical role in allograft rejection, graft failure, and graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). T-cell tolerance occurs by two different mechanisms: (1) depletion of self-reactive T cells during their maturation in the thymus (central tolerance), and (2) suppression/elimination of self-reactive mature T cells in the periphery (peripheral tolerance). Induction of transplant tolerance improves transplantation outcomes. Adoptive immunotherapy with immune suppressor cells including regulatory T cells, natural killer (NK)-T cells, veto cells, and facilitating cells are promising therapies for modulation of immune tolerance. Achieving mixed chimerism with the combination of thymic irradiation and T-cell-depleting antibodies, costimulatory molecule blockade with/without inhibitory signal activation, and elimination of alloreactive T cells with varying methods including pre- or post-transplant cyclophosphamide administration appear to be effective in inducing transplant tolerance. © 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Journal Title: Seminars in Oncology
Volume: 39
Issue: 6
ISSN: 0093-7754
Publisher: Elsevier Inc.  
Date Published: 2012-12-01
Start Page: 629
End Page: 642
Language: English
DOI: 10.1053/j.seminoncol.2012.10.001
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC3514882
PUBMED: 23206840
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Export Date: 2 January 2013" - "CODEN: SOLGA" - "Source: Scopus"
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors