期刊
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPLANTATION
卷 18, 期 3, 页码 604-616出版社
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ajt.14543
关键词
basic (laboratory) research; science; heart (allograft) function; dysfunction; heart transplantation; cardiology; macrophage; monocyte biology: differentiation; maturation; rejection: chronic; vasculopathy
资金
- National Institutes of Health [R01AI080779]
- Kleberg Foundation
- NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF ALLERGY AND INFECTIOUS DISEASES [R01AI080779] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER
Macrophages infiltrating the allografts are heterogeneous, consisting of proinflammatory (M1 cells) as well as antiinflammatory and fibrogenic phenotypes (M2 cells); they affect transplantation outcomes via diverse mechanisms. Here we found that macrophage polarization into M1 and M2 subsets was critically dependent on tumor necrosis factor receptor-associated factor 6 (TRAF6) and mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR), respectively. In a heart transplant model we showed that macrophage-specific deletion of TRAF6 (LysM(Cre)Traf6(fl/fl)) or mTOR (LysM(Cre)Mtor(fl/fl)) did not affect acute allograft rejection. However, treatment of LysM(Cre)Mtor(fl/fl) recipients with CTLA4-Ig induced long-term allograft survival (>100days) without histological signs of chronic rejection, whereas the similarly treated LysM(Cre)Traf6(fl/fl) recipients developed severe transplant vasculopathy (chronic rejection). The presentation of chronic rejection in CTLA4-Ig-treated LysM(Cre)Traf6(fl/fl) mice was similar to that of CTLA4-Ig-treated wild-type B6 recipients. Mechanistically, we found that the graft-infiltrating macrophages in LysM(Cre)Mtor(fl/fl) recipients expressed high levels of PD-L1, and that PD-L1 blockade readily induced rejection of otherwise survival grafts in the LysM(Cre)Mtor(fl/fl) recipients. Our findings demonstrate that targeting mTOR-dependent M2 cells is critical for preventing chronic allograft rejection, and that graft survival under such conditions is dependent on the PD-1/PD-L1 coinhibitory pathway. Suppression of M2 cells by conditional deletion of mTOR in macrophages inhibits the development of chronic allograft rejection in a mouse heart transplant model.
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