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Review
. 2009 Aug;14(4):357-63.
doi: 10.1097/mot.0b013e32832ceef4.

Tolerance induction by removal of alloreactive T cells: in-vivo and pruning strategies

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Review

Tolerance induction by removal of alloreactive T cells: in-vivo and pruning strategies

Debbie Watson et al. Curr Opin Organ Transplant. 2009 Aug.

Abstract

Purpose of review: Current depletion strategies used in clinical transplantation can prevent acute rejection of a transplanted organ; however, they are nonspecific and are limited by their efficacy or the side effects of wide ranging cellular depletion. This review will focus on strategies that prevent rejection of allografts using specific allodepletion of the T cells that mediate rejection.

Recent findings: Strategies that use either in-vivo targeting of alloreactive T cells or ex-vivo manipulation to specifically reduce the alloreactive T-cell pool have been developed. The advantage of these approaches is that they are specific, by depleting cells that cause rejection while leaving the remaining immune system intact, thereby minimizing the detrimental complications associated with standard immunosuppression.

Summary: Strategies to reduce the proportion of alloreactive T cells that initiate transplant rejection are emphasized. This factor has the specific advantage of leaving the remaining T-cell repertoire intact and may therefore be used in combination with other immunemodulating and tolerance strategies.

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