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

Authors :
Joffe M
Necula AS
Chand R
McWhinney BC
Krishnamurthy B
Loudovaris T
Goodman D
Thomas HE
Kay TW
Mannering SI
Source :
International immunology [Int Immunol] 2012 Jul; Vol. 24 (7), pp. 447-53. Date of Electronic Publication: 2012 Feb 29.
Publication Year :
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 growth factor-β or CD152 (CTLA-4). It was also unaffected by denaturing the spleen extracts by heating, exposing to reducing agents or protease digestion. Because deceased organ donors are commonly given the immunosuppressive glucocorticoid methylprednisolone prior to death, we hypothesized that suppression was due to residual methylprednisolone in the spleen extracts. Methylprednisolone could be detected by mass spectrometry in spleen extracts at concentrations that suppress T-cell proliferation. Finally, the glucocorticoid receptor antagonist mifepristone completely reversed the suppression caused by the spleen extracts. We conclude that extracts of human spleen, but not islets, from deceased organ donors contain sufficient residual methylprednisolone to suppress the proliferation of T-cells in vitro.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1460-2377
Volume :
24
Issue :
7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
International immunology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
22378502
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/intimm/dxs042