The purpose of the Animal and Microsurgery Core (Core B) is to establish a focused facility that provides investigators in each of the two projects with sufficient breeding of animals with specified genotypes and with standardized cardiac or skin transplantation and tolerance induction procedures for the proposed experiments. Core B will provide a key service role that will enable the Principal Investigators and their staff to focus on experimental and scientific efforts. Centralized breeding and screening of the progeny will ensure that animals of required genotypes are available for experiments. Transplantation performed by a centralized source will standardize the procedures, minimize surgically imposed disparities in the grafts used by the two projects and allow some long-term acceptors generated for Project 1 (studying novel T cell mechanisms in robust tolerance) to be used for Project 2 (studying the maintenance of tolerance) to minimize experimental costs. In addition, the purchase of supplies, such as sutures, anesthetics and immunosuppressants will be done in bulk for both projects to reduce cost. The specific tasks of Core B will be to: a) breed and genotype animals to be used for both projects; b) transplant heart allografts as directed by the project leaders and their personnel; c) prepare and inject donor splenocytes and administer indicated immunosuppressive therapies; d) monitor the beating of the transplanted hearts, the health of the transplant recipients, and record times of rejection; e) sacrifice transplanted animals as directed by the Principal Investigators and their personnel, and collect organs for histology, as well as to distribute to other project personnel for phenotypic and functional analysis of immune cells.
Alegre, Maria-Luisa (2018) What's new in transplantation tolerance? Curr Opin Organ Transplant 23:63-65 |
Miller, Michelle L; McIntosh, Christine M; Williams, Jason B et al. (2018) Distinct Graft-Specific TCR Avidity Profiles during Acute Rejection and Tolerance. Cell Rep 24:2112-2126 |
Chong, Anita S; Ansari, M Javeed (2018) Heterogeneity of memory B cells. Am J Transplant 18:779-784 |
Young, James S; Khiew, Stella H-W; Yang, Jinghui et al. (2017) Successful Treatment of T Cell-Mediated Acute Rejection with Delayed CTLA4-Ig in Mice. Front Immunol 8:1169 |
Khiew, Stella H; Yang, Jinghui; Young, James S et al. (2017) CTLA4-Ig in combination with FTY720 promotes allograft survival in sensitized recipients. JCI Insight 2: |
Young, James S; McIntosh, Christine; Alegre, Maria-Luisa et al. (2017) Evolving Approaches in the Identification of Allograft-Reactive T and B Cells in Mice and Humans. Transplantation 101:2671-2681 |
Young, J S; Daniels, M D; Miller, M L et al. (2017) Erosion of Transplantation Tolerance After Infection. Am J Transplant 17:81-90 |
Miller, Michelle L; Alegre, Maria-Luisa; Chong, Anita S (2017) Transplantation tolerance after allograft rejection. Curr Opin Organ Transplant 22:64-70 |
Chong, A S; Khiew, S H (2017) Transplantation tolerance: don't forget about the B cells. Clin Exp Immunol 189:171-180 |
Chong, Anita S (2017) Alone Again, Naturally: B Cells Encountering Antigen Without T cells. Transplantation 101:1956-1958 |
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