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Tolerance to noninherited maternal antigens, reproductive microchimerism and regulatory T cell memory: 60 years after ‘Evidence for actively acquired tolerance to Rh antigens’

Authors :
Sing Sing Way
Jeremy M. Kinder
James M. Ertelt
Aimen F. Shaaban
Lijun Xin
Beverly S. Strong
Tony T. Jiang
Source :
Chimerism
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Informa UK Limited, 2015.

Abstract

Compulsory exposure to genetically foreign maternal tissue imprints in offspring sustained tolerance to noninherited maternal antigens (NIMA). Immunological tolerance to NIMA was first described by Dr. Ray D. Owen for women genetically negative for erythrocyte rhesus (Rh) antigen with reduced sensitization from developmental Rh exposure by their mothers. Extending this analysis to HLA haplotypes has uncovered the exciting potential for therapeutically exploiting NIMA-specific tolerance naturally engrained in mammalian reproduction for improved clinical outcomes after allogeneic transplantation. Herein, we summarize emerging scientific concepts stemming from tolerance to NIMA that includes postnatal maintenance of microchimeric maternal origin cells in offspring, expanded accumulation of immune suppressive regulatory T cells with NIMA-specificity, along with teleological benefits and immunological consequences of NIMA-specific tolerance conserved across mammalian species.

Details

ISSN :
19381964 and 19381956
Volume :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Chimerism
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....424322a6421222c45bb873883a524405
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/19381956.2015.1107253