Low molecular weight hyaluronate (LMW-HA) blocks interactions between T lymphocyte CD44 and hyaluronate (HA), a heteropolysaccharide that is expressed on the surface of endothelial cells and ubiquitously in the extracellular matrix. This study was undertaken to assess the ability of LMW-HA to modify the course of experimental acute renal allograft rejection. Lewis (LEW) rats were bilaterally nephrectomized and received an orthotopic, fully MHC-mismatched, Wistar-Furth (WF) kidney transplant. Animals received either no treatment, low doses of cyclosporin A (CsA) on days 0 to 5, LMW-HA on days 0 to 5, or CsA plus LMW-HA on days 0 to 5 after transplantation. With no treatment, CsA monotherapy, or HA monotherapy, animals rejected their allografts at a median of 15, 13, and 7.5 d, respectively (P = NS). In contrast, combined CsA plus LMW-HA therapy prevented acute rejection and significantly prolonged graft survival (P = 0.008) to a median of 49.0 d. CsA/LMW-HA-treated grafts also demonstrated better preservation of renal function at day 30 (serum creatinine level, 1.38+/-0.8 mg/dl), compared with surviving animals treated with CsA alone (2.9+/-0.55 mg/dl, P<0.05). Histologic graft analysis of CsA/LMW-HA-treated animals at day 7 after transplantation showed minimal rejection and leukocyte infiltration, compared with all other groups. Intragraft gene expression analysis, using semiquantitative reverse transcription-PCR, at the same time point showed reductions of CD4, CD8, and interferon-gamma transcript levels in the combined-treatment group. This is the first study demonstrating the immunomodulatory functions of LMW-HA in vivo in the setting of organ transplantation. Defining the exact mechanisms that underlie this immunomodulation may provide the rationale to develop novel strategies for use in clinical transplantation.