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Blocking the IL-1 receptor reduces cardiac transplant ischemia and reperfusion injury and mitigates CMV-accelerated chronic rejection.

Iris K A JonesSusan OrloffJennifer M BurgNicole N HaeseTakeshi F AndohAshley ChambersSuzanne S FeiLina GaoCraig N KreklywichZachary J StreblowKristian EnesthvedtAlan WandererJames BakerDaniel N Streblow
Published in: American journal of transplantation : official journal of the American Society of Transplantation and the American Society of Transplant Surgeons (2020)
Ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI) is an important risk factor for accelerated cardiac allograft rejection and graft dysfunction . Utilizing a rat heart isogeneic transplant model, we identified inflammatory pathways involved in IRI in order to identify therapeutic targets involved in disease. Pathway analyses identified several relevant targets, including cytokine signaling by the IL-1 receptor (IL-1R) pathway and inflammasome activation. To investigate the role of IL-1R signaling pathways during IRI, we treated syngeneic cardiac transplant recipients at 1-hour posttransplant with Anakinra, a US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved IL-1R antagonist; or parthenolide, a caspase-1 and nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells inhibitor that blocks IL-1β maturation. Both Anakinra and parthenolide significantly reduced graft inflammation and cellular recruitment in the treated recipients relative to nontreated controls. Anakinra treatment administered at 1-hour posttransplant to recipients of cardiac allografts from CMV-infected donors significantly increased the time to rejection and reduced viral loads at rejection. Our results indicate that reducing IRI by blocking IL-1Rsignaling pathways with Anakinra or inflammasome activity with parthenolide provides a promising approach for extending survival of cardiac allografts from CMV-infected donors.
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