Journal of Translational Medicine (Oct 2023)
Acellular ex vivo lung perfusate silences pro-inflammatory signaling in human lung endothelial and epithelial cells
Abstract
Abstract Background Ischemia–reperfusion injury is a key complication following lung transplantation. The clinical application of ex vivo lung perfusion (EVLP) to assess donor lung function has significantly increased the utilization of “marginal” donor lungs with good clinical outcomes. The potential of EVLP on improving organ quality and ameliorating ischemia–reperfusion injury has been suggested. Methods To determine the effects of ischemia–reperfusion and EVLP on gene expression in human pulmonary microvascular endothelial cells and epithelial cells, cell culture models were used to simulate cold ischemia (4 °C for 18 h) followed by either warm reperfusion (DMEM + 10% FBS) or EVLP (acellular Steen solution) at 37 °C for 4 h. RNA samples were extracted for bulk RNA sequencing, and data were analyzed for significant differentially expressed genes and pathways. Results Endothelial and epithelial cells showed significant changes in gene expressions after ischemia–reperfusion or EVLP. Ischemia–reperfusion models of both cell types showed upregulated pro-inflammatory and downregulated cell metabolism pathways. EVLP models, on the other hand, exhibited downregulation of cell metabolism, without any inflammatory signals. Conclusion The commonly used acellular EVLP perfusate, Steen solution, silenced the activation of pro-inflammatory signaling in both human lung endothelial and epithelial cells, potentially through the lack of serum components. This finding could establish the basic groundwork of studying the benefits of EVLP perfusate as seen from current clinical practice.
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