Donor CD4 T cells contribute to cardiac allograft vasculopathy by providing help for autoantibody production

Circ Heart Fail. 2009 Jul;2(4):361-9. doi: 10.1161/CIRCHEARTFAILURE.108.827139. Epub 2009 May 13.

Abstract

Background: The development of autoantibody after heart transplantation is increasingly associated with poor graft outcome, but what triggers its development and whether it has a direct causative role in graft rejection is not clear. Here, we study the development of antinuclear autoantibody in an established mouse model of heart allograft vasculopathy.

Methods and results: Humoral vascular changes, including endothelial complement staining, were present in bm12 heart grafts, explanted 50 days after transplantation. Alloantibody was not detectable, but long-lasting autoantibody responses developed in C57BL/6 recipients from the third week after transplantation. No autoantibody was generated if donor CD4 T cells were depleted before heart graft retrieval or in recipients that lacked B-cell major histocompatibility complex class II expression, indicating that humoral autoimmunity is a consequence of donor CD4 T-cell allorecognition of the major histocompatibility complex class II complex on recipient autoreactive B cells. An effector role for autoantibody in graft rejection was confirmed by abrogation of humoral vascular rejection, and attenuation of vasculopathy, in B-cell deficient recipients and by development of vascular obliteration and accelerated rejection in recipients primed for autoantibody before transplantation.

Conclusions: Passenger CD4 T cells within heart transplants can contribute to allograft vasculopathy by providing help to recipient B cells for autoantibody generation.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Antibodies, Antinuclear / immunology*
  • Autoantibodies / biosynthesis*
  • CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes / immunology*
  • Graft Rejection / immunology*
  • Heart Transplantation / immunology*
  • Mice
  • Mice, Inbred C57BL
  • Transplantation, Homologous / immunology

Substances

  • Antibodies, Antinuclear
  • Autoantibodies