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Microvascular destruction identifies murine allografts that cannot be rescued from airway fibrosis

Authors :
Joshua M. Thurman
Ashok N. Babu
Peter M. Henson
Tomohiro Murakawa
Edmund J. Miller
Martin R. Zamora
Norbert F. Voelkel
Mark R. Nicolls
Source :
Journal of Clinical Investigation. 117:3774-3785
Publication Year :
2007
Publisher :
American Society for Clinical Investigation, 2007.

Abstract

Small airway fibrosis (bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome) is the primary obstacle to long-term survival following lung transplantation. Here, we show the importance of functional microvasculature in the prevention of epithelial loss and fibrosis due to rejection and for the first time, relate allograft microvascular injury and loss of tissue perfusion to immunotherapy-resistant rejection. To explore the role of alloimmune rejection and airway ischemia in the development of fibroproliferation, we used a murine orthotopic tracheal transplant model. We determined that transplants were reperfused by connection of recipient vessels to donor vessels at the surgical anastomosis site. Microcirculation through the newly formed vascular anastomoses appeared partially dependent on VEGFR2 and CXCR2 pathways. In the absence of immunosuppression, the microvasculature in rejecting allografts exhibited vascular complement deposition, diminished endothelial CD31 expression, and absent perfusion prior to the onset of fibroproliferation. Rejecting grafts with extensive endothelial cell injury were refractory to immunotherapy. After early microvascular loss, neovascularization was eventually observed in the membranous trachea, indicating a reestablishment of graft perfusion in established fibrosis. One implication of this study is that bronchial artery revascularization at the time of lung transplantation may decrease the risk of subsequent airway fibrosis.

Details

ISSN :
00219738
Volume :
117
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Investigation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ddbf4272c26d1681221458e3020e3447
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/jci32311