Pierpaoli W, Lesnikov V, Lesnikova M, Arrighi S
Biancalana-Masera Foundation for the Aged, Neuroimmunomodulation Laboratory, Ancona, Italy.
Bone Marrow Transplant. 1996 Jul;18(1):203-7.
Endogenous factors originally found in the bone marrow (BM) and facilitating the engraftment of xenogeneic (rat) BM in lethally irradiated mice have been recently identified as transferrins (Tf). Tf have been separated and purified from plasma pools of inbred Rii/2 rats and injected in lethally irradiated BALB/c and C57BL/6 mice 1 h before the infusion of BM and for several days after BM transplantation. Other groups of irradiated mice have been similarly treated with human Tf, Tf from other strains of rats different from the BM donors and with human or rat serum albumin. A remarkable facilitation of BM engraftment and a durable graft-versus-host disease (GVHD)-free hemopoietic chimerism have been achieved in the irradiated mice when a combination of BM and Tf from the same donor rat (Rii/2) strain was used for transplantation. Durable survival and persistent chimerism were not observed in the control groups. It seems that donor Tf profoundly affects the outcome of BM transplantation when combined with donor BM. These results indicate that the mechanism by which Tf promotes engraftment of xenogeneic BM deserves investigation in order to improve this novel procedure and to extend it to other species and possibly to man.