Immunological tolerance - the liver effect

The developing immune system in the embryo is programmed to accept all its own tissues as self‐products and not react against them. It has been the aim of transplantation research for the past 40 years to try and manipulate the developed immune system temporarily to a similar status to that in the e...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inImmunological reviews Vol. 174; no. 1; pp. 280 - 282
Main Author Calne, R. Y.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Copenhagen Munksgaard International Publishers 01.04.2000
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Summary:The developing immune system in the embryo is programmed to accept all its own tissues as self‐products and not react against them. It has been the aim of transplantation research for the past 40 years to try and manipulate the developed immune system temporarily to a similar status to that in the embryo at the time of an organ graft, so that the organ graft is accepted but immunity generally is not interfered with. Such a state is known as immunological tolerance and can be produced in the laboratory by a number of special techniques, none of which is appropriate for clinical use in organ grafting. In pigs and rats, an allografted liver can sometimes survive permanently without any immunosuppressive treatment in immunologically mature animals.
Bibliography:istex:C5C5F6382300DE20C40FB54EDD4EC4421CC49647
ArticleID:190394
ark:/67375/WNG-JJZLZTRV-3
ObjectType-Article-2
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-3
content type line 23
ObjectType-Review-1
ISSN:0105-2896
1600-065X
DOI:10.1034/j.1600-0528.2002.017419.x