Antigen location contributes to the pathological features of a transplanted heart graft

Y Chen, Y Demir, A Valujskikh, PS Heeger - The American journal of …, 2004 - Elsevier
Y Chen, Y Demir, A Valujskikh, PS Heeger
The American journal of pathology, 2004Elsevier
Organ-specific injury after transplantation presents with a variety of clinical and pathological
phenotypes, yet the factors influencing development of each outcome are poorly
understood. Because primed T lymphocytes must re-encounter their antigen within the target
organ to engage effector functions, we postulated that the cellular location of antigen within
that organ could significantly impact the induced pathology. We challenged female Marilyn
CD4 T-cell receptor transgenic mice, in which all T cells are specific for the male minor …
Organ-specific injury after transplantation presents with a variety of clinical and pathological phenotypes, yet the factors influencing development of each outcome are poorly understood. Because primed T lymphocytes must re-encounter their antigen within the target organ to engage effector functions, we postulated that the cellular location of antigen within that organ could significantly impact the induced pathology. We challenged female Marilyn CD4 T-cell receptor transgenic mice, in which all T cells are specific for the male minor transplantation antigen, with male heart transplants expressing the relevant peptide: major histocompatibility complex on either graft parenchymal/vascular cells or alternatively, on graft-infiltrating mononuclear cells. The two different graft donors led to equivalent activation of recipient T cells as assessed by frequency, cell surface marker expression, cytokine production, and the ability to traffic to the graft. Nonetheless, if the target antigen was expressed on graft vascular and/or parenchymal cells, the outcome was acute graft destruction. In contrast, if the antigen was expressed only on graft-infiltrating mononuclear cells the same effector T-cell repertoire caused chronic rejection and vasculopathy. This unique result, that target antigen location can influence pathological outcome, has significant implications for understanding the pathogenesis of chronic allograft injury in humans.
Elsevier