학술논문

Th17 Cells Induce a Distinct Graft Rejection Response That Does Not Require IL-17A
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
American Journal of Transplantation. Apr 01, 2012 12(4):835-845
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
1600-6135
Abstract
IL-17A-producing helper T (Th17) cells have been implicated in the pathogenesis of autoimmune disease, inflammatory bowel disease and graft rejection, however the mechanisms by which they cause tissue damage remain ill-defined. We examined what damage Th17 cell lines could inflict on allogeneic skin grafts in the absence of other adaptive lymphocytes. CD4 Th17 cell lines were generated from two TCR transgenic mouse strains, A1(M).RAG1 and Marilyn, each monospecific for the male antigen Dby. After prolonged in vitro culture in polarizing conditions, Th17 lines produced high levels of IL-17A with inherently variable levels of interferon gamma (IFNγ) and these cells were able to maintain IL-17A expression following adoptive transfer into lymphopenic mice. When transferred into lymphopenic recipients of male skin grafts, Th17 lines elicited a damaging reaction within the graft associated with pathological findings of epidermal hyperplasia and neutrophil infiltration. Th17 cells could be found in the grafted skins and spleens of recipients and maintained their polarized phenotype both in vivo and after ex vivo restimulation. Antibody-mediated neutralization of IL-17A or IFNγ did not interfere with Th17-induced pathology, nor did it prevent neutrophil infiltration. In conclusion, tissue damage by Th17 cells does not require IL-17A.The adoptive transfer of male antigen specific, stably polarized Th17 cells into lymphopenic, female recipients of male skin grafts caused a rejection response characterized by an epidermal hyperplasia that was distinct from the acute rejection caused by Th1 cells, and which could not be blocked by neutralizing antibodies to IL17A or IFNg.