MHC class I–specific antibody binding to nonhematopoietic cells drives complement activation to induce transfusion-related acute lung injury in mice

Author:

Strait Richard T.12,Hicks Wyenona3,Barasa Nathaniel1,Mahler Ashley1,Khodoun Marat2,Köhl Jörg14,Stringer Keith12,Witte David12,Van Rooijen Nico5,Susskind Brian M.6,Finkelman Fred D.127

Affiliation:

1. Division of Emergency Medicine, Division of Pathology, Division of Molecular Immunology, and Division of Immunobiology, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH 45229

2. Department of Pediatrics, Division of Pathology, and Department of Internal Medicine, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, OH 45267

3. Department of Clinical Laboratory Sciences, The University of Tennessee College of Allied Health Sciences, Memphis, TN 38163

4. Institute for Systemic Inflammation Research, University of Lübeck, 23538 Lübeck, Germany

5. Department of Molecular Cell Biology, Vrije University Medical Center, 1081 HV Amsterdam, Netherlands

6. Department of Pathology, Baylor University Medical Center, Dallas, TX 75246

7. Department of Medicine, Cincinnati Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH 45220

Abstract

Transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI), a form of noncardiogenic pulmonary edema that develops during or within 6 h after a blood transfusion, is the most frequent cause of transfusion-associated death in the United States. Because development of TRALI is associated with donor antibodies (Abs) reactive with recipient major histocompatibility complex (MHC), a mouse model has been studied in which TRALI-like disease is caused by injecting mice with anti–MHC class I monoclonal Ab (mAb). Previous publications with this model have concluded that disease is caused by FcR-dependent activation of neutrophils and platelets, with production of reactive oxygen species that damage pulmonary vascular endothelium. In this study, we confirm the role of reactive oxygen species in the pathogenesis of this mouse model of TRALI and show ultrastructural evidence of pulmonary vascular injury within 5 min of anti–MHC class I mAb injection. However, we demonstrate that disease induction in this model involves macrophages rather than neutrophils or platelets, activation of complement and production of C5a rather than activation of FcγRI, FcγRIII, or FcγRIV, and binding of anti–MHC class I mAb to non-BM–derived cells such as pulmonary vascular endothelium. These observations have important implications for the prevention and treatment of TRALI.

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Immunology,Immunology and Allergy

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