Login / Signup

Donor extracellular vesicle trafficking via the pleural space represents a novel pathway for allorecognition after lung transplantation.

Andreas HabertheuerShampa ChatterjeeAlberto Sada JappChirag RamLaxminarayana KorutlaTakahiro OchiyaWenjun LiYuriko TeradaTsuyoshi TakahashiRuben G NavaVarun PuriDaniel KreiselPrashanth Vallabhajosyula
Published in: American journal of transplantation : official journal of the American Society of Transplantation and the American Society of Transplant Surgeons (2022)
Restoration of lymphatic drainage across the bronchial anastomosis after lung transplantation requires several weeks. As donor antigen and antigen presenting cell trafficking via lymphatics into graft-draining lymph nodes is an important component of the alloresponse, alternative pathways must exist that account for rapid rejection after pulmonary transplantation. Here, we describe a novel allorecognition pathway mediated through donor extracellular vesicle (EV) trafficking to mediastinal lymph nodes via the pleural space. Pleural fluid collected early after lung transplantation in rats and humans contains donor-specific EVs. In a fully MHC mismatched rat model of lung transplantation, we demonstrate EVs carrying donor antigen preferentially accumulate in mediastinal lymph nodes and colocalize with MHC II expressing cells within 4 h of engraftment. Injection of allogeneic EVs into pleural space of syngeneic lung transplant recipients confirmed their selective trafficking to mediastinal lymph nodes and resulted in activation of T cells in mediastinal, but not peripheral lymph nodes. Thus, we have uncovered an alternative pathway of donor antigen trafficking where pulmonary EVs released into the pleural space traffic to locoregional lymph nodes via pleural lymphatics. This pathway obviates the need for restoration of lymphatics across the bronchial anastomosis for trafficking of donor antigen to draining lymph nodes.
Keyphrases