Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Complement Dependence of Murine Costimulatory Blockade-Resistant Cellular Cardiac Allograft Rejection

2017; Elsevier BV; Volume: 17; Issue: 11 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1111/ajt.14328

ISSN

1600-6143

Autores

Nicholas Chun, Robert L. Fairchild, Yun Li, J. Liu, M. Zhang, William M. Baldwin, Peter S. Heeger,

Tópico(s)

Renal Transplantation Outcomes and Treatments

Resumo

Building on studies showing that ischemia-reperfusion-(I/R)-injury is complement dependent, we tested links among complement activation, transplantation-associated I/R injury, and murine cardiac allograft rejection. We transplanted BALB/c hearts subjected to 8-h cold ischemic storage (CIS) into cytotoxic T-lymphocyte associated protein 4 (CTLA4)Ig-treated wild-type (WT) or c3-/- B6 recipients. Whereas allografts subjected to 8-h CIS rejected in WT recipients with a median survival time (MST) of 37 days, identically treated hearts survived >60 days in c3-/- mice (p < 0.05, n = 4-6/group). Mechanistic studies showed recipient C3 deficiency prevented induction of intragraft and serum chemokines/cytokines and blunted the priming, expansion, and graft infiltration of interferon-γ-producing, donor-reactive T cells. MST of hearts subjected to 8-h CIS was >60 days in mannose binding lectin (mbl1-/- mbl2-/- ) recipients and 42 days in factor B (cfb-/- ) recipients (n = 4-6/group, p < 0.05, mbl1-/- mbl2-/- vs. cfb-/- ), implicating the MBL (not alternative) pathway. To pharmacologically target MBL-initiated complement activation, we transplanted BALB/c hearts subjected to 8-h CIS into CTLA4Ig-treated WT B6 recipients with or without C1 inhibitor (C1-INH). Remarkably, peritransplantation administration of C1-INH prolonged graft survival (MST >60 days, p < 0.05 vs. controls, n = 6) and prevented CI-induced increases in donor-reactive, IFNγ-producing spleen cells (p < 0.05). These new findings link donor I/R injury to T cell-mediated rejection through MBL-initiated, complement activation and support testing C1-INH administration to prevent CTLA4Ig-resistant rejection of deceased donor allografts in human transplant patients.

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