Lei Zhang, Shuling Han, Jeanna Enriquez, Olivia M Martinez, Sheri Krams
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Graft-derived extracellular vesicles transport miRNAs to modulate macrophage polarization after heart transplantation.
Heart transplantation, a crucial intervention for saving lives of those with end stage cardiac failure, often faces complications from acute allograft rejection. This study focuses on the intricate dynamics of immune cell interactions and specific communication pathways between organs, which are not yet well understood. Our study investigates this interplay using a murine heterotopic transplant model, employing single-cell RNA sequencing to examine CD45+ immune cells from both the heart grafts and spleens. We conduct a comprehensive analysis focused on functional enrichment, cell trajectory, and inter-organ communication in heart transplants, highlighting dynamic interactions between monocyte/macrophage subtypes that is mediated by extracellular vesicles. We utilize unsupervised clustering and elucidate the complex cellular interactions that influence allograft outcomes. Notably, we discovered that microRNA-363 and microRNA-709, carried by EVs from CD63+ graft macrophages, can induce M1 polarization within the recipient's spleen via the Fcho2/Notch1 signaling pathway. These insights illuminate the nuanced immune responses during acute cardiac rejection and suggest that targeting extracellular vesicles from graft-resident macrophages may offer a new strategy to mitigate transplant rejection.
期刊介绍:
The American Journal of Transplantation is a leading journal in the field of transplantation. It serves as a forum for debate and reassessment, an agent of change, and a major platform for promoting understanding, improving results, and advancing science. Published monthly, it provides an essential resource for researchers and clinicians worldwide.
The journal publishes original articles, case reports, invited reviews, letters to the editor, critical reviews, news features, consensus documents, and guidelines over 12 issues a year. It covers all major subject areas in transplantation, including thoracic (heart, lung), abdominal (kidney, liver, pancreas, islets), tissue and stem cell transplantation, organ and tissue donation and preservation, tissue injury, repair, inflammation, and aging, histocompatibility, drugs and pharmacology, graft survival, and prevention of graft dysfunction and failure. It also explores ethical and social issues in the field.