Neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) have been shown to worsen acute pulmonary injury including after lung transplantation. The breakdown of NETs by DNAse-1 can help restore lung function, but whether there is an impact on allograft tolerance remains less clear. Using intravital 2-photon microscopy, we analyzed the effects of DNAse-1 on NETs in mouse orthotopic lung allografts damaged by ischemia-reperfusion injury. Although DNAse-1 treatment rapidly degrades intragraft NETs, the consequential release of NET fragments induces prolonged interactions between infiltrating CD4 + T cells and donor-derived antigen presenting cells. DNAse-1 generated NET fragments also promote human alveolar macrophage inflammatory cytokine production and prime dendritic cells for alloantigen-specific CD4 + T cell proliferation through activating toll-like receptor (TLR) — Myeloid Differentiation Primary Response 88 (MyD88) signaling pathways. Furthermore, and in contrast to allograft recipients with a deficiency in NET generation due to a neutrophil-specific ablation of Protein Arginine Deiminase 4 (PAD4), DNAse-1 administration to wild-type recipients promotes the recognition of allo- and self-antigens and prevents immunosuppression-mediated lung allograft acceptance through a MyD88-dependent pathway. Taken together, these data show that the rapid catalytic release of NET fragments promotes innate immune responses that prevent lung transplant tolerance. © 2018 The American Society of Transplantation and the American Society of Transplant Surgeons
Neutrophil extracellular trap fragments stimulate innate immune responses that prevent lung transplant tolerance / Scozzi, D.; Wang, X.; Liao, F.; Liu, Z.; Zhu, J.; Pugh, K.; Ibrahim, M.; Hsiao, H. M.; Miller, M. J.; Yizhan, G.; Mohanakumar, T.; Krupnick, A. S.; Kreisel, D.; Gelman, A. E.. - In: AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPLANTATION. - ISSN 1600-6135. - (2019), pp. 1011-1023. [10.1111/ajt.15163]
Neutrophil extracellular trap fragments stimulate innate immune responses that prevent lung transplant tolerance
Scozzi D.;Ibrahim M.;Gelman A. E.
2019
Abstract
Neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) have been shown to worsen acute pulmonary injury including after lung transplantation. The breakdown of NETs by DNAse-1 can help restore lung function, but whether there is an impact on allograft tolerance remains less clear. Using intravital 2-photon microscopy, we analyzed the effects of DNAse-1 on NETs in mouse orthotopic lung allografts damaged by ischemia-reperfusion injury. Although DNAse-1 treatment rapidly degrades intragraft NETs, the consequential release of NET fragments induces prolonged interactions between infiltrating CD4 + T cells and donor-derived antigen presenting cells. DNAse-1 generated NET fragments also promote human alveolar macrophage inflammatory cytokine production and prime dendritic cells for alloantigen-specific CD4 + T cell proliferation through activating toll-like receptor (TLR) — Myeloid Differentiation Primary Response 88 (MyD88) signaling pathways. Furthermore, and in contrast to allograft recipients with a deficiency in NET generation due to a neutrophil-specific ablation of Protein Arginine Deiminase 4 (PAD4), DNAse-1 administration to wild-type recipients promotes the recognition of allo- and self-antigens and prevents immunosuppression-mediated lung allograft acceptance through a MyD88-dependent pathway. Taken together, these data show that the rapid catalytic release of NET fragments promotes innate immune responses that prevent lung transplant tolerance. © 2018 The American Society of Transplantation and the American Society of Transplant SurgeonsFile | Dimensione | Formato | |
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