Reperfusion Injury Intensifies the Adaptive Human T Cell Alloresponse in a Human-Mouse Chimeric Artery Model

Author:

Yi Tai1,Fogal Birgit1,Hao Zhengrong1,Tobiasova Zuzana1,Wang Chen1,Rao Deepak A.1,Al-Lamki Rafia S.1,Kirkiles-Smith Nancy C.1,Kulkarni Sanjay1,Bradley John R.1,Bothwell Alfred L.M.1,Sessa William C.1,Tellides George1,Pober Jordan S.1

Affiliation:

1. From the Departments of Immunobiology (T.Y., B.F., Z.T., C.W., D.A.R., N.C.K.-S., A.L.M.B., J.S.P.), Pharmacology (Z.H., W.C.S.), Surgery (S.K., G.T.), Pathology (J.S.P.), and Dermatology (J.S.P.), Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT; and National Institute for Health Research, Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre, Department of Medicine, University of Cambridge, Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge, United Kingdom (R.S.A.-L., J.R.B.). Current addresses: Boehringer-Ingelheim...

Abstract

Objective— Perioperative nonimmune injuries to an allograft can decrease graft survival. We have developed a model for studying this process using human materials. Methods and Results— Human artery segments were transplanted as infrarenal aortic interposition grafts into an immunodeficient mouse host, allowed to “heal in” for 30 days, and then retransplanted into a second mouse host. To induce a reperfusion injury, the healed-in artery segments were incubated for 3 hours under hypoxic conditions ex vivo before retransplantation. To induce immunologic rejection, the animals receiving the retransplanted artery segment were adoptively transferred with human peripheral blood mononuclear cells or purified T cells from a donor allogeneic to the artery 1 week before surgery. To compare rejection of injured versus healthy tissues, these manipulations were combined. Results were analyzed ex vivo by histology, morphometry, immunohistochemistry, and mRNA quantitation or in vivo by ultrasound. Our results showed that reperfusion injury, which otherwise heals with minimal sequelae, intensifies the degree of allogeneic T cell–mediated injury to human artery segments. Conclusion— We developed a new human-mouse chimeric model demonstrating interactions of reperfusion injury and alloimmunity using human cells and tissues that may be adapted to study other forms of nonimmune injury and other types of adaptive immune responses.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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