Chapter19 Transplantation Immunology
Chapter19 Transplantation Immunology
Chapter19 Transplantation Immunology
Transplantation Immunology
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Contents
Introduction
Immunologic Basis of Allograft
Rejection
Classification and Effector
Mechanisms of allograft rejection
Prevention and Treatment of Allograft
Rejection
Xenotransplantation
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Introduction
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Conceptions
Transplantation
Grafts
Donors
Recipients or hosts
Orthotopic transplantation
Heterotopic transplantation
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_obel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
1912
þ
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_obel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
1960
þ
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þ
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_obel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
1980
George D. Snell (1/3), Jean Dausset (1/3)
Discoveries concerning genetically
determined structures on the cell surface
that regulate immunological reactions
å H-genes (histocompatibility genes), H-
H-2 gene
å Human transplantation antigens (HLA) ----
----MHC
MHC
þ
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_obel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
1988
Gertrude B. Elion (1/3) , George H. Hitchings (1/3)
Discoveries of important principles for drug
treatment
å Immunosuppressant drug (The first cytotoxic drugs)
----- azathioprine
þ
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Today, kidney, pancreas, heart,
lung, liver, bone marrow, and cornea
transplantations are performed
among non-
non-identical individuals with
ever increasing frequency and
success
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Classification of grafts
Autologous grafts (Autografts)
å Grafts transplanted from one part of the body
to another in the same individual
Syngeneic grafts (Isografts)
å Grafts transplanted between two genetically
identical individuals of the same species
Allogeneic grafts (Allografts)
å Grafts transplanted between two genetically
different individuals of the same species
Xenogeneic grafts (Xenografts)
å Grafts transplanted between individuals of
different species
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Genetic basis of transplant rejection
Inbred mouse strains - all genes are identical
ACCEPTED
Skin from an inbred mouse grafted onto the same strain of mouse
REJECTED
Primary rejection of
strain skin
e.g. 10 days
Transfer lymphocytes
from primed mouse 6 months
Secondary rejection of
strain skin
e.g. 3 days
Primary rejection of
strain skin
Transplant rejection is due to an antigen-
e.g. 10 days
specific immune response with
immunological memory
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Grafts rejection is a kind of specific
immune response
å Specificity
å Immune memory
Grafts rejection
å First set rejection
å Second set rejection
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Part one
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I. Transplantation antigens
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1. Major histocompatibility antigens
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2. Minor histocompatibility antigens
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3. Other alloantigens
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II. Mechanism of allograft
rejection
Cell-
Cell-mediated Immunity
Humoral Immunity
Role of _K cells
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1. Cell-
Cell-mediated Immunity
Recipient's T cell-
cell-mediated cellular
immune response against alloantigens
on grafts
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Molecular Mechanisms of
Allogeneic Recognition
ëT cells of the recipient recognize the
allogenetic MHC molecules
ëMany T cells can recognize allogenetic
MHC molecules
å 10-5-10-4 of specific T cells recognize
conventional antigens
å 1%
1%--10% of T cells recognize allogenetic
MHC molecules
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ëThe recipient· T cells recognize the
allogenetic MHC molecules
Direct Recognition
Indirect Recognition
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Direct Recognition
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ëMany T cells can recognize
allogenetic MHC molecules
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Indirect recognition
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Slow and weak
Late phase of acute rejection and chronic
rejection
Coordinated function with direct recognition in
early phase of acute rejection
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Difference between Direct Recognition
and Indirect Recognition
Direct Indirect
Recognition Recognition
Allogeneic MHC Intact allogeneic Peptide of allogeneic
molecule MHC molecule MHC molecule
APCs Recipient APCs are Recipient APCs
not necessary
Activated T cells CD4:T cells and/or CD4:T cells and/or
CD8:T cells CD8:T cells
Roles in rejection Acute rejection Chronic rejection
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Role of CD4:T cells and CD8:T cells
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Role of CD4:T cells and CD8:T cells
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2. Humoral immunity
Important role in hyperacute rejection
(Preformed antibodies)
å Complements activation
å ADCC
å Opsonization
Enhancing antibodies
/Blocking antibodies
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3 .Role of _K cells
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Mechanisms of graft rejection
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Rejection
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Part two
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Classification of Allograft
Rejection
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I. Host versus graft reaction
(HGR)
' Hyperacute rejection
Acute rejection
Chronic rejection
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1. Hyperacute rejection
Occurrence time
å Occurs within minutes to hours after host
blood vessels are anastomosed to graft
vessels
Pathology
å Thrombotic occlusion of the graft vasculature
å Ischemia, denaturation, necrosis
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Mechanisms
å Preformed antibodies
Antibody against ABO blood type antigen
Antibody against EC antigen
Antibody against HLA antigen
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å Complement activation
Endothelial cell damage
å Platelets activation
Thrombosis, vascular occlusion, ischemic
damage
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Hyperacute rejection of a kidney allograft with
endothelial damage, platelet and thrombin thrombi,
and early neutrophil infiltration in a glomerulus
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2. Acute rejection
Occurrence time
å Occurs within days to 2 weeks after
transplantation, 80-
80-90% of cases occur
within 1 month
Pathology
å Acute humoral rejection
Acute vasculitis manifested mainly by
endothelial cell damage
å Acute cellular rejection
Parenchymal cell necrosis along with
infiltration of lymphocytes and MÕ
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Mechanisms
å asculitis
IgG antibodies against alloantigens on
endothelial cell
CDC
å Parenchymal cell damage
Delayed hypersensitivity mediated by
CD4+Th1
Killing of graft cells by CD8+Tc
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Acute rejection of a kidney with inflammatory cells in the
interstitium and between epithelial cells of the tubules
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3. Chronic rejection
Occurrence time
å Develops months or years after acute
rejection reactions have subsided
Pathology
å Fibrosis and vascular abnormalities with loss
of graft function
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Mechanisms
å _ot clear
å Extension and results of cell necrosis in
acute rejection
å Chronic inflammation mediated by CD4+T
Õ
cell/MÕ
cell/M
å Organ degeneration induced by non
immune factors
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Kidney Transplantation----Graft Rejection
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II.Graft versus host reaction
(GHR)
Graft versus host reaction (GHR)
å Allogenetic bone marrow transplantation
å Rejection to host alloantigens
å Mediated by immune competent cells in
bone marrow
Graft versus host disease (GHD)
å A disease caused by GHR, which can
damage the host
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Graft versus host disease
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Graft versus host disease
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Conditions
Enough immune competent cells in grafts
Immunocompromised host
Histocompatability differences between
host and graft
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Bone marrow transplantation
Thymus transplantation
Spleen transplantation
Blood transfusion of neonate
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Acute graft-
graft-versus
versus--host reaction with
vivid palmar erythema
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2. Chronic GHD
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Early, chronic graft-
graft-versus
versus--host reaction with widespread,
almost confluent hyperpigmented lichenoid papules and
toxic epidermal necrosis-
necrosis-like appearance on knee
Late, chronic graft-
graft-versus -host reaction with
hyperpigmented sclerotic plaques on the back
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Part three
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Tissue Typing
Immunosuppressive Therapy
Induction of Immune Tolerance
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I. Tissue Typing
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Laws of transplantation
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II. Immunosuppressive Therapy
Cyclosporine(CsA), FK506
å Inhibit _FAT transcription factor
Azathioprine, Cyclophosphamide
å Block the proliferation of lymphocytes
Ab against T cell surface molecules
å Anti
Anti--CD3 mAb
mAb----
----Deplete
Deplete T cells
Anti
Anti--inflammatory agents
å Corticosteroids
Corticosteroids----
----Block
Block the synthesis and
secretion of cytokines
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Removal of T cells from marrow graft
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III. Induction of Immune
Tolerance
Inhibition of T cell activation
å Soluble MHC molecules
å CTLA4
CTLA4--Ig
å Anti
Anti--IL2R mAb
Th2 cytokines
å Anti T_F-->'Anti
Anti--T_F Anti--IL
IL--2'Anti IF_--U mAb
Anti--IF_
Microchimerism
å The presence of a small number of cells of
donor, genetically distinct from those of the
host individual
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Part I
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Lack of organs for transplantation
Pig
Pig--human xenotransplantation
Barrier
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