slides

Diagnosis of Rejection in the Allografted Rat Lung: Using Monoclonal Antibodies to T Cell Subsets for Immunologic Monitoring

Abstract

Early diagnosis of rejection and timely immunosuppression are absolutely important in clinical lung transplantation. We studied surface markers of peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL), graft infiltrating lymphocytes (GIF) and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) in a rat using flow cytometric monitoring to diagnose rejection. Left lung transplantation was performed on Brown Norway (BN) rats and Lewis (LEW) rats in the following groups; Group 1: LEW-LEW (isograft), Group 2: BN-LEW (allograft; no immunosuppression), Group 3: BN-LEW (allograft; treated with Cyclosporine A at a dose of 15 mg/kg/day i.m.). In each group, rats were killed 3, 5, 7 days postoperatively (n = 6 on each day). Monoclonal antibodies investigated in this study were W3/25 (anti-helper T lymphocyte), OX8 (anti-suppressor/cytotoxic T lymphocyte), and OX39 (anti-interleukin 2 receptor). Histological classification of rejection in Group 2 showed vascular phase at 3 days, alveolar phase at 5 days, and destructive phase at 7 days, respectively. No evidence of rejection was found in Group 1 or 3. In Group 2, W3/25 positive cell proportion in GIL and BALF significantly decreased as the rejection progressed, but OX8 positive and OX39 positive cell proportion increases were significantly greater than in Groups 1 and 3 as the rejection progressed. These results lead us to speculate that the studies of T cell subsets in GIL and BALF lymphocytes are useful for diagnosis of rejection in lung transplantation.</p

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