• Am. J. Transplant. · Jun 2005

    Recruitment of CXCR3+ and CCR5+ T cells and production of interferon-gamma-inducible chemokines in rejecting human arteries.

    • William R Burns, Yinong Wang, Paul C Y Tang, Hooman Ranjbaran, Alexander Iakimov, Jinah Kim, Madison Cuffy, Yalai Bai, Jordan S Pober, and George Tellides.
    • Interdepartmental Program in Vascular Biology and Transplantation, Boyer Center for Molecular Medicine, Department of Surgery, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA.
    • Am. J. Transplant. 2005 Jun 1;5(6):1226-36.

    AbstractChemokine receptors preferentially expressed by Th1 cells and their IFN-gamma-inducible ligands predominate in experimental and clinical allograft rejection. Previous chemokine-related transplantation studies have focused on parenchymal and microvascular inflammation which are of importance in acute rejection, but are not necessarily relevant in immune-mediated injury of conduit arteries. We have recently described a model of progressive human T cell-mediated infiltration and injury of allogeneic coronary artery segments using immunodeficient mouse hosts. In the present study, we investigated if recruitment of allogeneic T cells to different vascular compartments correlated with the expression of chemokines and their receptors. Transcripts were quantified by laser capture microdissection/real-time RT-PCR and their distribution was correlated to the corresponding protein expression detected by immunohistochemistry. Infiltrating T cells, confined to the adventitia and intima, expressed CXCR3 and CCR5, but were not recruited into the media despite production by vascular smooth muscle cells of IP-10, Mig, I-TAC, RANTES and MIP-1beta. Chemokine mRNA was detected primarily in vascular cells, although chemokine protein largely localized to infiltrating leukocytes which uniquely expressed their cognate receptors. These data explain the recruitment of IFN-gamma-secreting T cells to the vessel wall, and reinforce the suggestion that the arterial media may be a site of immunological privilege.

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