Abstract

Interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma), a cytokine produced primarily by T cells and by activated macrophages, plays a central role in the pathogenesis of graft arterial disease (GAD). This study investigated whether T cells can induce GAD in the absence of humoral alloresponses and whether activated macrophages or other host cell types can substitute as sources of IFN-gamma in GAD. Wild-type (WT), IFN-gamma-/-, or recombination-activating-gene-1-/- (RAG-1-/-; lacking mature T and B cells) mice received MHC II-disparate hearts. The grafts were harvested 8 weeks post-transplant and histological and immunohistochemical analyses, RNase protection assay (RPA), and flow cytometry were used to evaluate GAD lesions, infiltrating cell populations, and IFN-gamma expression by infiltrating cells. Moderate-to-severe GAD developed in WT recipient allografts, associated with abundant IFN-gamma expression by both infiltrating T cells and macrophages. No GAD developed in IFN-gamma-/- or in RAG-1-/- hosts, nor was any IFN-gamma expression evident. RAG-1-/- hosts receiving naïve WT or IFN-gamma-/- T cells (10(7)) after heart transplantation demonstrated no mature B cells but showed persistence of transferred T cells up to 8 weeks post-transplant. In the complete absence of B cells and alloantibody, transfer of WT T cells into RAG-1-/- recipients yielded GAD, with associated IFN-gamma expression by the transferred T cells and the host macrophages. Transfer of IFN-gamma-/- T cells induced neither GAD nor host macrophage IFN-gamma expression. T cells, even in the absence of B cells, suffice to induce GAD, and T cell-derived IFN-gamma plays a critical role in GAD pathogenesis.

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