4.8 Article

T cell receptor repertoires within liver allografts are different to those in the peripheral blood

期刊

JOURNAL OF HEPATOLOGY
卷 74, 期 5, 页码 1167-1175

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhep.2020.12.014

关键词

Liver transplantation; Allogeneic immune response; T cell receptor repertoire analysis; Graft rejection

资金

  1. European Research Consortium ReSHAPE (H2020 Program)
  2. German Research Foundation [CRC 738, CRC TR127]
  3. Young Faculty Program of Hannover Medical School

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This study compared TCR repertoires between liver grafts and blood in liver transplant recipients with different rejection statuses. The results revealed that donor-specific T cells clonally expanded and accumulated in the transplanted liver, with distinct TCR repertoires between the liver and peripheral blood. This highlights the importance of conducting protocol liver biopsies to investigate intragraft immune responses for allo-directed immune responses.
Background & Aims: T cells are the main mediators of allogeneic immune responses. Specific T cell clones can be tracked by their unique T cell receptor (TCR), but specificity and function remain elusive and have not been investigated in human liver biopsies thus far. Methods: TCR repertoire analysis of CD4+, CD8+, and regulatory T cells of the peripheral blood and liver graft was performed in 7 liver transplant recipients with either stable course (non rejector, NR), subclinical cellular rejection (SCR), or acute cellular rejection (ACR) during an observation period from pre transplant to 6 years post-transplant. Furthermore, donor reactive T cells, identified by their expression of CD154 and glycoprotein A repetitions predominant (GARP) after allogeneic activation, were tracked longitudinally in peripheral blood and within the liver allograft. Results: Although overall clonality of the TCR repertoire did not increase in peripheral blood after liver transplantation, clonality of donor-reactive CD4+ and regulatory T cells increased and these clones accumulated within the liver graft. Surprisingly, the TCR repertoires between the liver graft and the periphery were distinct and showed only limited overlap. Notably, during ACR, TCR repertoires aligned suggesting either graft-specific homing or release of activated T cells from the graft. Conclusions: This is the first study comparing TCR repertoires between liver grafts and blood in patients with NR, SCR, and ACR. Moreover, we attribute specificity and function to a subgroup of intragraft T cell populations. Given the limited overlap between-peripheral blood and intragraft repertoires, future studies investigating function and specificities of T cells after liver transplantation should focus on the intragraft immune response. Lay summary: In solid organ transplantation, T cells are key mediators of the recipient's immune response directed at the transplanted organ. In our study, we characterised the T cell repertoire in a cohort of 7 liver transplant recipients. We demonstrate that donor-specific T cells expand clonally and accumulate in the transplanted liver. Moreover, we show that the composition of T cells in peripheral blood differs from the T cells in the liver allograft, only aligning in the context of acute cellular rejection but not in normal graft or subclinical cellular rejection. This indicates that the intragraft immune response is not mirrored in the peripheral blood. Our findings clarify the importance of protocol liver biopsies in identifying intragraft immune responses for future investigations of allo-directed immune responses. (C) 2020 European Association for the Study of the Liver. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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