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Graft IL-33 regulates infiltrating macrophages to protect against chronic rejection.

Authors :
Li T
Zhang Z
Bartolacci JG
Dwyer GK
Liu Q
Mathews LR
Velayutham M
Roessing AS
Lee YC
Dai H
Shiva S
Oberbarnscheidt MH
Dziki JL
Mullet SJ
Wendell SG
Wilkinson JD
Webber SA
Wood-Trageser M
Watkins SC
Demetris AJ
Hussey GS
Badylak SF
Turnquist HR
Source :
The Journal of clinical investigation [J Clin Invest] 2020 Oct 01; Vol. 130 (10), pp. 5397-5412.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Alarmins, sequestered self-molecules containing damage-associated molecular patterns, are released during tissue injury to drive innate immune cell proinflammatory responses. Whether endogenous negative regulators controlling early immune responses are also released at the site of injury is poorly understood. Herein, we establish that the stromal cell-derived alarmin interleukin 33 (IL-33) is a local factor that directly restricts the proinflammatory capacity of graft-infiltrating macrophages early after transplantation. By assessing heart transplant recipient samples and using a mouse heart transplant model, we establish that IL-33 is upregulated in allografts to limit chronic rejection. Mouse cardiac transplants lacking IL-33 displayed dramatically accelerated vascular occlusion and subsequent fibrosis, which was not due to altered systemic immune responses. Instead, a lack of graft IL-33 caused local augmentation of proinflammatory iNOS+ macrophages that accelerated graft loss. IL-33 facilitated a metabolic program in macrophages associated with reparative and regulatory functions, and local delivery of IL-33 prevented the chronic rejection of IL-33-deficient cardiac transplants. Therefore, IL-33 represents what we believe is a novel regulatory alarmin in transplantation that limits chronic rejection by restraining the local activation of proinflammatory macrophages. The local delivery of IL-33 in extracellular matrix-based materials may be a promising biologic for chronic rejection prophylaxis.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1558-8238
Volume :
130
Issue :
10
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Journal of clinical investigation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
32644975
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI133008