Loading…

Thymic Rejuvenation and the Induction of Tolerance by Adult Thymic Grafts

The thymus, the site of origin of T cell immunity, shapes the repertoire of T cell reactivity through positive selection of developing T cells and prevents autoimmunity through negative selection of autoreactive T cells. Previous studies have demonstrated an important role for the thymus not only in...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2006-12, Vol.103 (50), p.19081-19086
Main Authors: Nobori, Shuji, Shimizu, Akira, Okumi, Masayoshi, Samelson-Jones, Emma, Griesemer, Adam, Hirakata, Atsushi, Sachs, David H., Yamada, Kazuhiko
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:The thymus, the site of origin of T cell immunity, shapes the repertoire of T cell reactivity through positive selection of developing T cells and prevents autoimmunity through negative selection of autoreactive T cells. Previous studies have demonstrated an important role for the thymus not only in central deletional tolerance, but also in the induction of peripheral tolerance by vascularized renal allografts in juvenile miniature swine recipients. The same protocol did not induce tolerance in thymectomized recipients nor in recipients beyond the age of thymic involution. We subsequently reported that vascularized thymic lobe grafts from juvenile donors were capable of inducing tolerance in thymectomized juvenile hosts. However, the important question remained whether aged, involuted thymus could also induce tolerance if transplanted into thymectomized hosts, which, if true, would imply that thymic involution is not an intrinsic property of thymic tissue but is rather determined by host factors extrinsic to the thymus. We report here that aged, involuted thymus transplanted as a vascularized graft into juvenile recipients leads to rejuvenation of both thymic structure and function, suggesting that factors extrinsic to the thymus are capable of restoring juvenile thymic function to aged recipients. We show furthermore that rejuvenated aged thymus has the ability to induce transplant tolerance across class I MHC barriers. These findings indicate that it may be possible to manipulate thymic function in adults to induce transplantation tolerance after the age of thymic involution.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.0605159103