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Inverted direct allorecognition triggers early donor-specific antibody responses after transplantation.

Xavier CharmetantChien-Chia ChenSarah HamadaDavid GoncalvesCarole SaisonMaud RabeyrinMarion RabantJean-Paul Duong van HuyenAlice KoenigVirginie MathiasThomas BarbaFlorence LacailleJérôme le PavecOlivier BrugièreJean-Luc TaupinLara ChalabreysseJean-François MornexLionel CouziStéphanie Graff-DuboisRaphaël Jeger-MadiotAlexy Tran-DinhPierre MordantHelena PaidassiThierry DefranceEmmanuel MorelonLionel BadetAntonino NicolettiValérie DuboisOlivier Thaunat
Published in: Science translational medicine (2022)
The generation of antibodies against donor-specific major histocompatibility complex (MHC) antigens, a type of donor-specific antibodies (DSAs), after transplantation requires that recipient's allospecific B cells receive help from T cells. The current dogma holds that this help is exclusively provided by the recipient's CD4<sup>+</sup> T cells that recognize complexes of recipient's MHC II molecules and peptides derived from donor-specific MHC alloantigens, a process called indirect allorecognition. Here, we demonstrated that, after allogeneic heart transplantation, CD3ε knockout recipient mice lacking T cells generate a rapid, transient wave of switched alloantibodies, predominantly directed against MHC I molecules. This is due to the presence of donor CD4<sup>+</sup> T cells within the graft that recognize intact recipient's MHC II molecules expressed by B cell receptor-activated allospecific B cells. Indirect evidence suggests that this inverted direct pathway is also operant in patients after transplantation. Resident memory donor CD4<sup>+</sup> T cells were observed in perfusion liquids of human renal and lung grafts and acquired B cell helper functions upon in vitro stimulation. Furthermore, T follicular helper cells, specialized in helping B cells, were abundant in mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue of lung and intestinal grafts. In the latter, more graft-derived passenger T cells correlated with the detection of donor T cells in recipient's circulation; this, in turn, was associated with an early transient anti-MHC I DSA response and worse transplantation outcomes. We conclude that this inverted direct allorecognition is a possible explanation for the early transient anti-MHC DSA responses frequently observed after lung or intestinal transplantations.
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