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Role of resident macrophages in the immunologic response and smooth muscle dysfunction during acute allograft rejection after intestinal transplantation

32

Citations

46

References

2008

Year

Abstract

Resident muscularis macrophages initiate an inflammatory cascade during ischemia/reperfusion that is associated with dysmotility and the activation of immunologic processes. We hypothesized that these muscularis macrophages may also play a potential immunologic role for acute allograft rejection in intestinal transplantation. Orthotopic SBTx (BN-Lew) was performed without immunosuppression. Animals were sacrificed 7 days after SBTx. The role of resident macrophages was evaluated by transplantation of macrophage-depleted and gadolinium chloride-treated gut. Leukocyte infiltration was investigated in muscularis whole mounts by immunohistochemistry. Mediator mRNA expression was determined by Real-Time-RT-PCR. Apoptosis was evaluated by TUNEL. Smooth muscle contractility was assessed in a standard organ bath. In comparison to vehicle-treated grafts, macrophage-depleted grafts exhibited significantly lower mediator mRNA peak expression (IL-6, IL-2, IL-10, MCP-1, iNOS, TNFalpha, IFNgamma, FasL), leukocyte infiltrates (ED1- and ED2 positive monocytes and macrophages, neutrophils, CD4(+) and CD8(+) lymphocytes), apoptosis rates and an improved histologic rejection grading. Vehicle-treated grafts showed a 77% decrease in smooth muscle contractility compared to naïve controls, while macrophage-depleted gut exhibited only a 51% decrease in contractile activity. Transplantation of macrophage-depleted gut attenuates the functionally relevant molecular and cellular immunologic response within the graft muscularis in acute allograft rejection. Resident macrophages participate in initiating these processes.

References

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