1. Development of a combined cardiac and aortic transplant model to investigate the development of transplant arteriosclerosis in the mouse
- Author
-
Kathryn J. Wood, Peter J. Morris, S.M. Ensminger, and J S Billing
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Intimal hyperplasia ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Organ transplantation ,Coronary artery disease ,Mice ,Postoperative Complications ,medicine.artery ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Fibromuscular Dysplasia ,Transplantation, Homologous ,Aorta ,Heart transplantation ,Transplantation ,business.industry ,Vascular disease ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Disease Models, Animal ,surgical procedures, operative ,Mice, Inbred CBA ,cardiovascular system ,Cardiology ,Heart Transplantation ,Tunica Intima ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Complication - Abstract
Background: The degree of transplant arteriosclerosis in murine cardiac allografts is difficult to assess. Aortic allografts represent an alternative model for evaluating the impact of novel transplant strategies on transplant arteriosclerosis in which the vascular changes can be quantified easily. However, it remains controversial as to whether vascular lesions seen in this model are equivalent to those that develop in solid-organ transplants. The aim of this study was to develop a model of combined cardiac and aortic transplantation to allow more precise quantification of transplant arteriosclerosis and to establish a correlation between the lesions that develop in the 2 types of graft. Methods CBA (H2 k ) recipients received a C57BL/10 (H2 b ) cervical cardiac allograft on Day 0 and a C57BL/10 (H2 b ) abdominal aortic allograft on Day 1. Recipients were treated with anti-CD154 mAb (MR1) on Days 0, 2, and 4. We performed histology and morphometric measurements for both grafts 30 days after transplantation. Results We observed significant intimal proliferation in both the cervical cardiac and abdominal aortic allografts from recipients treated with anti-CD154 mAb (heart, 64% ± 9%; aorta, 67% ± 8%; n = 5). Abdominal aortic grafts transplanted alone into anti-CD154–treated recipients developed a degree of transplant arteriosclerosis equivalent to that seen in the aortic grafts of the combined group (aorta alone, 68% ± 9%, vs aorta + heart, 67% ± 8%; n = 5). Conclusions This combined cardiac and aortic transplant model permitted quantitative assessment of transplant arteriosclerosis while monitoring graft survival by cardiac palpation. Furthermore, development of transplant arteriosclerosis was equivalent in abdominal aortic allografts either in the presence or absence of an additional solid- organ transplant.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF