| Literature DB >> 27818661 |
Petya Apostolova1, Robert Zeiser1.
Abstract
Acute graft-versus-host disease (GvHD) causes high mortality in patients undergoing allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation. An early event in the classical pathogenesis of acute GvHD is tissue damage caused by the conditioning treatment or infection that consecutively leads to translocation of bacterial products [pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs)] into blood or lymphoid tissue, as well as danger-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs), mostly intracellular components that act as pro-inflammatory agents, once they are released into the extracellular space. A subtype of DAMPs is nucleotides, such as adenosine triphosphate released from dying cells that can activate the innate and adaptive immune system by binding to purinergic receptors. Binding to certain purinergic receptors leads to a pro-inflammatory microenvironment and promotes allogeneic T cell priming. After priming, T cells migrate to the acute GvHD target organs, mainly skin, liver, and the gastrointestinal tract and induce cell damage that further amplifies the release of intracellular components. This review summarizes the role of different purinergic receptors in particular P2X7 and P2Y2 as well as nucleotides in the pathogenesis of GvHD.Entities:
Keywords: ATP; P2X7; P2Y2; ectonucleotidase; graft-versus-host disease; inflammasome; neutrophils; uric acid
Year: 2016 PMID: 27818661 PMCID: PMC5073102 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2016.00439
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Purinergic signaling and ectonucleotidases in inflammatory diseases.
| Disease context | Mechanism | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Airway inflammation | ATP triggers airway inflammation via P2X7 expression on dendritic cells | ( |
| Airway inflammation | P2Y6 receptor expressed on lung epithelial cells mediates IL-6 and IL-8 secretion upon allergen challenge | ( |
| Airway inflammation | ATP activation of the P2Y2 receptor contributes to eosinophilic lung inflammation | ( |
| Cardiovascular disease | P2Y12 receptor deficiency reduces monocyte infiltration and plaque lesion area | ( |
| Cardiovascular disease | Lack of the P2Y1 receptor decreases leukocyte infiltration into atherosclerotic plaques | ( |
| Cardiovascular disease | Neointima injury results in upregulation of the P2Y2 receptor in rats, which in turn promotes leukocyte adhesion | ( |
| GvHD | ATP released from damaged cells aggravates GvHD by activation of antigen-presenting cells | ( |
| GvHD | P2Y2 deficiency in monocytes reduces GvHD severity by abrogating ERK activation and ROS production | ( |
| GvHD | CD73 deficiency increases T cell allo-reactivity and aggravates murine GvHD | ( |
| Inflammatory bowel disease | CD39 deletion aggravates chemically induced colitis in mice | ( |
| CD39 expression on Tregs is associated with better therapy response in inflammatory bowel disease patients | ||
| Inflammatory bowel disease | Lack of CD73 aggravates experimental inflammatory bowel disease in mice | ( |
| Ischemia–reperfusion injury | CD39 plays a protective role by reducing vascular leakage | ( |
| Lupus-associated nephritis | Inhibition of the P2X7 receptor reduces nephritis severity | ( |
| Multiple sclerosis | ATP increases oligodendrocyte excitotoxicity and plaque formation via binding the P2X7 receptor | ( |
| Gain of function polymorphisms of the P2X7 receptor are associated with increased MS risk | ||
| Platelet aggregation | Inhibition of P2Y12 signaling blocks platelet aggregation | ( |
Figure 1DAMPs, PAMPs and immune cell interactions during GvHD development.