Journal article

Residual methylprednisolone suppresses human T-cell responses to spleen, but not islet, extracts from deceased organ donors

M Joffe, AS Necula, R Chand, BC Mcwhinney, B Krishnamurthy, T Loudovaris, D Goodman, HE Thomas, TWH Kay, SI Mannering

International Immunology | OXFORD UNIV PRESS | Published : 2012

Abstract

Pancreatic islets, transplanted into recipients with type 1 diabetes, are exposed to allogenic and auto-immune T-cell responses. We set out to develop an assay to measure these responses using PBMC. Our approach was to prepare spleen extract from the islet donors (allo-antigen) and islet extracts (auto-antigen). To our surprise, we found that spleen extracts potently inhibited the proliferation of human T cells driven by antigen (tetanus toxoid) and mitogen (anti-CD3 mAb, OKT3), whereas extracts prepared from pancreatic islets from the same donor did not suppress T-cell proliferation. Suppression mediated by spleen extracts was unaffected by blocking mAbs against the IL-10R, transforming gro..

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Grants

Awarded by Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation International


Funding Acknowledgements

Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC#559007); Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (JDRF 4-2006-1025); Diabetes Australia Research Trust; Operational Infrastructure Support Program of the Victorian Government.