Abstract
ABSTRACTCytomegalovirus (CMV) infection is associated with renal allograft failure by unknown mechanisms. In a murine renal transplant model, murine CMV (MCMV) induces intragraft infiltration of Th17 cells co-expressing Th1 cytokines, IFN-γ and TNF-α, but only a minority of intragraft Th17 cells are specific for MCMV antigens. Instead, MCMV promotes viral antigen-independent Th17 cell recruitment via CCL20-CCR6 and CXCL10-CXCR3 interactions. Th17 cells correlate directly with Th1 cell frequencies and inversely with Tregs in MCMV infected grafts. Pharmacologic inhibition of IL-17A reduces intragraft Th17 cells and neutrophils, increases Tregs, and reduces total but not MCMV-specific Th1 cells. Among a clinical renal transplant cohort with acute rejection, patients with CMV DNAemia had significantly higher serum IL-17A quantities compared to those without CMV DNAemia. Together, these findings indicate that CMV infection upregulates Th17 cell activity during acute rejection and suggests that inhibition of IL-17A may ameliorate CMV-associated allograft injury without impairing antiviral Th1 cells.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
2 articles.
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