Hidenobu Kojima, Thomas A Morinelli, Yue Wang, Jackson L Chin, Aaron S Meyer, Yi-Chu Kao, Kentaro Kadono, Siyuan Yao, Taylor Torgerson, Kenneth J Dery, Adil Bhat, Elaine F Reed, Fady M Kaldas, Dirk J van der Windt, Douglas G Farmer, Jerzy W Kupiec-Weglinski, Yuan Zhai
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
As important immune regulatory cells, whether innate lymphoid cells (ILCs) are involved in liver transplantation (LT) remains unclear. In a murine orthotopic LT model, we dissected roles of ILCs in liver ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI). Wild-type (WT) grafts suffered significantly higher IRI in Rag2-γc double knockout (DKO) than Rag2 knockout (KO) recipients, in association with downregulation of group 1 ILCs genes, including interferon gamma. Antibody-mediated ILC depletion or interferon gamma neutralization in Rag2 KO recipients increased, while interferon gamma treatment in DKO recipients reduced, liver graft injuries. At the donor side, grafts from DKO mice or anti-NK1.1-treated WT mice suffered significantly higher IRI, while grafts treated with interferon gamma during cold preservation decreased IRI. Thus, both recipient and donor group 1 ILCs protect liver grafts from IRI. Low-dose interferon gamma upregulated c-FLIP expression in vitro and in vivo and protected hepatocytes from inflammatory cell death. In human liver graft biopsies, single-cell RNA-sequencing analysis revealed group 1 ILCs produce interferon gamma. The c-FLIP levels were positively correlated with interferon gamma in pretransplant biopsies. Grafts with higher c-FLIP were associated with lower caspase-8 activation, IRI gradings, and frequency of early allograft dysfunction post-LT. Our study reveals a novel interferon gamma-mediated cytoprotective role of group 1 ILCs in LT.
期刊介绍:
The American Journal of Transplantation is a leading journal in the field of transplantation. It serves as a forum for debate and reassessment, an agent of change, and a major platform for promoting understanding, improving results, and advancing science. Published monthly, it provides an essential resource for researchers and clinicians worldwide.
The journal publishes original articles, case reports, invited reviews, letters to the editor, critical reviews, news features, consensus documents, and guidelines over 12 issues a year. It covers all major subject areas in transplantation, including thoracic (heart, lung), abdominal (kidney, liver, pancreas, islets), tissue and stem cell transplantation, organ and tissue donation and preservation, tissue injury, repair, inflammation, and aging, histocompatibility, drugs and pharmacology, graft survival, and prevention of graft dysfunction and failure. It also explores ethical and social issues in the field.