TLR signals promote IL-6/IL-17-dependent transplant rejection

L Chen, E Ahmed, T Wang, Y Wang… - The Journal of …, 2009 - journals.aai.org
L Chen, E Ahmed, T Wang, Y Wang, J Ochando, AS Chong, ML Alegre
The Journal of Immunology, 2009journals.aai.org
Acute allograft rejection has often been correlated with Th1 differentiation, whereas
transplantation tolerance is frequently associated with induction of regulation. The discovery
of the Th17 phenotype has prompted its scrutiny in transplant rejection. Although IL-17 has
recently been observed in settings of acute allograft rejection and drives rejection in T-bet-
deficient mice that have impaired type 1 T cell responses, there is little evidence of its
requirement during acute rejection in wild-type animals. We and others have previously …
Abstract
Acute allograft rejection has often been correlated with Th1 differentiation, whereas transplantation tolerance is frequently associated with induction of regulation. The discovery of the Th17 phenotype has prompted its scrutiny in transplant rejection. Although IL-17 has recently been observed in settings of acute allograft rejection and drives rejection in T-bet-deficient mice that have impaired type 1 T cell responses, there is little evidence of its requirement during acute rejection in wild-type animals. We and others have previously shown that TLR9 signaling by exogenous CpG at the time of transplantation is sufficient to abrogate anti-CD154-mediated acceptance of fully mismatched cardiac allografts. In this study, we investigated the mechanism by which acute rejection occurs in this inflammatory context. Our results indicate that CpG targets recipient hemopoietic cells and that its pro-rejection effects correlate both with prevention of anti-CD154-mediated conversion of conventional CD4+ T cells into induced regulatory T cells and with the expression of IFN-γ and IL-17 by intragraft CD4+ T cells. Moreover, the combined elimination of IL-6 and IL-17 signaling abrogated the ability of CpG to promote acute cardiac allograft rejection. Thus, proinflammatory signals at the time of transplantation can change the quality of the effector immune response and reveal a pathogenic function for IL-6 and IL-17 in wild-type recipients.
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