Abstract

Purpose In previous studies, we identified donor lymphocytes in peripheral blood of recipients directly after transplantation and persisting at least three weeks that were characterized by the tissue retention marker CD69. In order to determine their origin, we hypothesized that donor T and NK cells have a peculiar tissue-resident memory phenotype that is shared between cells derived from lung perfusates, trachea parenchyma and lymph nodes. Methods Donor lymphocytes in recipient blood were determined in 27 lung transplant patients at T0, T24, 3 weeks by staining of donor HLA class I molecules in combination with lineage- and tissue-specific markers using flow cytometry. The phenotype of T and NK cells in perfusates (n=30), donor trachea (n=5), and lymph node (n=10), recipient explanted parenchyma (n=15) was compared to circulating cells using the same markers. Results In peripheral blood of all lung transplant recipients, donor derived T and NK cells were detected at T0, T24 and 3 weeks and had higher CD69 expression compared to recipient cells (p=0.001 to 0.03) and were mostly CD25−. This phenotype was similar to T and NK cells in corresponding perfusates, with significantly increased CD69 expression compared to circulating PBMCs (all p Conclusion Our results suggest that donor T and NK cells found in the periphery of lung transplant recipients are derived from lung parenchyma and represent tissue-resident memory cells. This transient chimerism in recipient blood might be clinically relevant for tolerance induction after transplantation due to unique features of TRM T and NK cells.

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