Allograft acceptance and rejection, mediated by a liver suppressor factor, LSF-1, purified from serum of liver transplanted rats

Catherine Edwards-Smith*, Shigeru Goto, Roger Lord, Yoshinori Shimizu, Frank Vari, Naoshi Kamada

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal Article peer-review

27 Scopus citations

Abstract

In certain rat strain combinations liver allografts are spontaneously accepted without immunesuppression and induce donor-specific tolerance to further skin and heart grafts in the recipient. Such an effect is also transferrable using serum from orthotopically liver transplanted rats (OLT serum). In the OLT serum of one such combination, DA (RT1a) donor into PVG (RT1(c)) recipient, a 40 kDa protein (liver suppressor factor, LSF-1) has been identified and shown to be immunosuppressive in vitro. The aim of the present study is to investigate the immunological effect of LSF-1 and a polyclonal antibody (anti-LSF-1) against this molecule; in a rat heterotopic heart transplant (HHT) model and OLT model, respectively. Intramuscular injection of 300 μg of LSF-1, 1 h postoperatively, into a PVG recipient of either a DA or BN (RT1(n)) cardiac allograft caused significant prolongation of graft survival. Intravenous injection of polyclonal rabbit sera raised against an N-terminal peptide of LSF-1 (anti-LSF-1), within 1 h postoperatively, had variable effects on the survival of DA liver grafts in PVG recipients. In 5/6 cases injection of between 1 and 2 ml of anti-LSF-1 resulted in death of the recipient. Histological examination of the liver showed severe rejection with lymphoid cell infiltration of the portal tract and sinusoids and extensive damage to the parenchyma. All control rats survived for more than 60 days without any signs of rejection. The anti-LSF-1 polyclonal antibody prevented the induction of tolerance in the normally tolerogenic model (DA into PVG). This, together with the in vivo results, suggests a role for LSF-1 in the induction of tolerance.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)287-292
Number of pages6
JournalTransplant Immunology
Volume4
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - 12 1996

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