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Residual endotoxin induces primary graft dysfunction through ischemia/reperfusion-primed alveolar macrophages.

Authors :
Akbarpour, Mahzad
Lecuona, Emilia
Chiu, Stephen F.
Qiang Wu
Querrey, Melissa
Fernandez, Ramiro
Núñez-Santana, Félix L.
Haiying Sun
Ravi, Sowmya
Chitaru Kurihara
Walter, James M.
Joshi, Nikita
Ziyou Ren
Roberts, Scott C.
Hauser, Alan
Kreisel, Daniel
Wenjun Li
Chandel, Navdeep S.
Misharin, Alexander V.
Mohanakumar, Thalachallour
Source :
Journal of Clinical Investigation. Aug2020, Vol. 130 Issue 8, p4456-4469. 14p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Despite the widespread use of antibiotics, bacterial pneumonias in donors strongly predispose to the fatal syndrome of primary graft dysfunction (PGD) following lung transplantation. We report that bacterial endotoxin persists in human donor lungs after pathogen is cleared with antibiotics and is associated with neutrophil infiltration and PGD. In mouse models, depletion of tissue-resident alveolar macrophages (TRAMs) attenuated neutrophil recruitment in response to endotoxin as shown by compartmental staining and intravital imaging. Bone marrow chimeric mice revealed that neutrophils were recruited by TRAM through activation of TLR4 in a MyD88-dependent manner. Intriguingly, low levels of endotoxin, insufficient to cause donor lung injury, promoted TRAM-dependent production of CXCL2, increased neutrophil recruitment, and led to PGD, which was independent of donor NCMs. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) increased in human donor lungs starting from the warm-ischemia phase and were associated with increased transcription and translocation to the plasma membrane of TLR4 in donor TRAMs. Consistently, scavenging ROS or inhibiting their production to prevent TLR4 transcription/translocation or blockade of TLR4 or coreceptor CD14 on donor TRAMs prevented neutrophil recruitment in response to endotoxin and ameliorated PGD. Our studies demonstrate that residual endotoxin after successful treatment of donor bacterial pneumonia promotes PGD through ischemia/reperfusion-primed donor TRAMs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00219738
Volume :
130
Issue :
8
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Investigation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
144987010
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI135838