Starzl T E
Thomas E. Starzl Transplantation Institute, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, PA 15213, USA.
World J Surg. 2000 Jul;24(7):759-82. doi: 10.1007/s002680010124.
The emergence of transplantation has seen the development of increasingly potent immunosuppressive agents, progressively better methods of tissue and organ preservation, refinements in histocompatibility matching, and numerous innovations in surgical techniques. Such efforts in combination ultimately made it possible to successfully engraft all of the organs and bone marrow cells in humans. At a more fundamental level, however, the transplantation enterprise hinged on two seminal turning points. The first was the recognition by Billingham, Brent, and Medawar in 1953 that it was possible to induce chimerism-associated neonatal tolerance deliberately. This discovery escalated over the next 15 years to the first successful bone marrow transplantations in humans in 1968. The second turning point was the demonstration during the early 1960s that canine and human organ allografts could self-induce tolerance with the aid of immunosuppression. By the end of 1962, however, it had been incorrectly concluded that turning points one and two involved different immune mechanisms. The error was not corrected until well into the 1990s. In this historical account, the vast literature that sprang up during the intervening 30 years has been summarized. Although admirably documenting empiric progress in clinical transplantation, its failure to explain organ allograft acceptance predestined organ recipients to lifetime immunosuppression and precluded fundamental changes in the treatment policies. After it was discovered in 1992 that long-surviving organ transplant recipients had persistent microchimerism, it was possible to see the mechanistic commonality of organ and bone marrow transplantation. A clarifying central principle of immunology could then be synthesized with which to guide efforts to induce tolerance systematically to human tissues and perhaps ultimately to xenografts.
随着移植技术的出现,越来越有效的免疫抑制剂得到了发展,组织和器官保存方法也日益完善,组织相容性匹配得到了改进,手术技术也有了许多创新。这些努力共同作用,最终使得在人类身上成功移植所有器官和骨髓细胞成为可能。然而,从更根本的层面来看,移植事业取决于两个具有开创性的转折点。第一个转折点是1953年比林厄姆、布伦特和梅达瓦尔认识到可以有意诱导与嵌合体相关的新生儿耐受性。这一发现经过接下来的15年发展,到1968年实现了人类首例成功的骨髓移植。第二个转折点是在20世纪60年代初证明犬类和人类器官同种异体移植在免疫抑制的帮助下可以自我诱导耐受性。然而,到1962年底,人们错误地得出结论,认为第一个和第二个转折点涉及不同的免疫机制。直到20世纪90年代中期,这个错误才得到纠正。在这篇历史记述中,总结了在此期间涌现的大量文献。尽管这些文献令人钦佩地记录了临床移植的经验性进展,但由于未能解释器官同种异体移植的接受机制,注定器官接受者要终身接受免疫抑制,并且排除了治疗策略的根本性改变。1992年发现长期存活的器官移植受者存在持续性微嵌合体后,才有可能看到器官移植和骨髓移植在机制上的共性。然后可以综合出一条清晰的免疫学核心原则,用以指导系统性诱导对人类组织乃至最终对异种移植物产生耐受性的努力。