The Journal of Clinical Investigation (Sep 2022)

Host-versus-commensal immune responses participate in the rejection of colonized solid organ transplants

  • Isabella Pirozzolo,
  • Martin Sepulveda,
  • Luqiu Chen,
  • Ying Wang,
  • Yuk Man Lei,
  • Zhipeng Li,
  • Rena Li,
  • Husain Sattar,
  • Betty Theriault,
  • Yasmine Belkaid,
  • Anita S. Chong,
  • Maria-Luisa Alegre

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 132, no. 17

Abstract

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Solid organ transplantation is the preferred treatment for end-stage organ failure. Although transplant recipients take life-long immunosuppressive drugs, a substantial percentage of them still reject their allografts. Strikingly, barrier organs colonized with microbiota have significantly shorter half-lives than non-barrier transplanted organs, even in immunosuppressed hosts. We previously demonstrated that skin allografts monocolonized with the common human commensal Staphylococcus epidermidis (S.epi) are rejected faster than germ-free (GF) allografts in mice because the presence of S.epi augments the effector alloimmune response locally in the graft. Here, we tested whether host immune responses against graft-resident commensal microbes, including S.epi, can damage colonized grafts independently from the alloresponse. Naive hosts mounted an anticommensal T cell response to colonized, but not GF, syngeneic skin grafts. Whereas naive antigraft commensal T cells modestly damaged colonized syngeneic skin grafts, hosts with prior anticommensal T cell memory mounted a post-transplant immune response against graft-resident commensals that significantly damaged colonized, syngeneic skin grafts. Importantly, allograft recipients harboring this host-versus-commensal immune response resisted immunosuppression. The dual effects of host-versus-commensal and host-versus-allograft responses may partially explain why colonized organs have poorer outcomes than sterile organs in the clinic.

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