Cell Reports (May 2016)

Augmentation of Recipient Adaptive Alloimmunity by Donor Passenger Lymphocytes within the Transplant

  • Ines G. Harper,
  • Jason M. Ali,
  • Simon J.F. Harper,
  • Elizabeth Wlodek,
  • Jawaher Alsughayyir,
  • Margaret C. Negus,
  • M. Saeed Qureshi,
  • Reza Motalleb-Zadeh,
  • Kourosh Saeb-Parsy,
  • Eleanor M. Bolton,
  • J. Andrew Bradley,
  • Menna R. Clatworthy,
  • Thomas M. Conlon,
  • Gavin J. Pettigrew

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2016.04.009
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 6
pp. 1214 – 1227

Abstract

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Chronic rejection of solid organ allografts remains the major cause of transplant failure. Donor-derived tissue-resident lymphocytes are transferred to the recipient during transplantation, but their impact on alloimmunity is unknown. Using mouse cardiac transplant models, we show that graft-versus-host recognition by passenger donor CD4 T cells markedly augments recipient cellular and humoral alloimmunity, resulting in more severe allograft vasculopathy and early graft failure. This augmentation is enhanced when donors were pre-sensitized to the recipient, is dependent upon avoidance of host NK cell recognition, and is partly due to provision of cognate help for allo-specific B cells from donor CD4 T cells recognizing B cell MHC class II in a peptide-degenerate manner. Passenger donor lymphocytes may therefore influence recipient alloimmune responses and represent a therapeutic target in solid organ transplantation.