Medium- and long-term renal graft survival depends on 4 main factors: the quality of the harvested graft, ischemia-reperfusion injury during harvesting and re-implantation, rejection, and the nephrotoxicity of certain drugs (especially immunosuppressants) used in this setting. The most nephrotoxic immunosuppressive drugs are the anticalcineurins (cyclosporine A and tacrolimus), a class discovered in the late 1970s and currently representing a basic component of all immunosuppressive protocols for solid organ graft recipients. The renal tubular and vascular toxicity of anticalcineurins is due to their immunosuppressive mechanism: they block the calcineurin pathway and thereby prevent transmission of the first signal from the T cell receptor to the nucleus, which normally triggers cytokine synthesis. New non-nephrotoxic immunosuppressants are therefore needed, especially for grafts of poor quality or subject to severe ischemia-reperfusion injury. Attention is turning to "old" molecules such as anti-thymocyte globulins, but exciting new immunosuppressants are now appearing. Alefacept is a fusion protein that binds to the immunological synapse-associated molecule CD2, which normally interacts with LFA-3. Belatacept, another fusion protein, blocks the T cell second signal CD 28-B7.1/B7.2. Finally, new chemical agents are being developed, such as sautrasporine, a tyrosine kinase inhibitor, and tofacitinib, a Jak inhibitor.