Donor WBCs can persist and transiently mediate immunologic function in a murine transfusion model: effects of irradiation, storage, and histocompatibility |
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Authors: | Lee T H Reed W Mangawang-Montalvo L Watson J Busch M P |
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Institution: | Blood Centers of the Pacific, San Francisco, CA, USA. thlee@qpcr.com |
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Abstract: | BACKGROUND: Donor WBCs are responsible for numerous transfusion complications, but little is known concerning the natural history of their clearance following transfusion or of their function in the recipient's circulation. A murine transfusion model was developed to investigate the effects of blood component characteristics and histocompatibility on donor WBC survival kinetics and function. STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS: To investigate the effects of storage and irradiation, fresh whole blood and blood stored for 1, 2, and 6 weeks at 4 degrees C, all from male C57b (H2K(b)) mice, was transfused to female Balb/c (H2K(d)) mice. To study the effect of histocompatibility, blood was also transfused from C57b mice to Balb/c, FVB, C3H, and SW (outbred) mice. To investigate the xenogeneic setting, blood from humans, rats, and rabbits was transfused to Balb/c mice. Samples were collected weekly after transfusion, and the donor WBCs were analyzed, targeting the Y-chromosome with quantitative PCR. To investigate donor WBC function, dinitrochlorobenzene (DNCB) sensitivity was induced in donor and recipient mice, and the transfusion recipients were observed for hypersensitivity to DNCB. RESULTS: Donor WBCs had reduced in vivo survival equivalent to their period of storage ex vivo at 4 degrees C. Irradiation of donor blood produced no observable difference in donor WBC survival. Allogeneic male donor WBCs persisted (100-<1 cell/microL) in female Balb/c recipient mice blood over 6 weeks. Donor WBC survival kinetics displayed an early MHC-dependent phase, which was followed by a more rapid phase that was not influenced by donor-recipient MHC differences. All donor WBCs were cleared within 24 to 48 hours. DNCB sensitivity was passed through transfusion, where it was transiently expressed in naive recipients. CONCLUSION: The clearance of donor WBCs in the murine transfusion model is much slower than that in humans. Allogeneic donor WBC clearance may be biphasic, involving MHC-dependent as well as MHC-independent mechanisms. DNCB sensitivity can be transferred transiently to a naive recipient. |
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Keywords: | DNCB = dinitrochlorobenzene |
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