| Literature DB >> 30948792 |
Zhulang Chu1,2, Chenming Sun1, Lina Sun1, Chang Feng1,2, Fan Yang1,2, Yanan Xu1,2, Yong Zhao3,4,5.
Abstract
Monocytes and macrophages have long been associated with acute and chronic allograft rejection; this is mediated by their abilities to promote inflammation, kill target cells via antibody-dependent cytotoxicity and modulate adaptive immunity. Our present study showed that allogeneic antigen-primed macrophages acutely rejected skin grafts with specificity after adoptive transfer into MHC-matched immunodeficient mice. The ability of primed macrophages to reject allografts essentially requires the help of CD4+ T cells and does not require the help of CD8+ T cells. Moreover, the primed, perforin-deficient macrophages rejected the skin grafts in a significantly delayed pattern compared with WT macrophages, indicating that the perforin pathway of the primed macrophages is likely involved in the rejection process. Thus, primed macrophages are endowed with adaptive immunity-like features, such as specificity, with the help of CD4+ T cells during the immune response to allografts. The present study challenges our traditional views of macrophage functions and highlights the biological functions of macrophages beyond innate immunity in mammals.Entities:
Keywords: Graft rejection; Innate immunity; Macrophages; Specificity; Transplantation
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30948792 PMCID: PMC7052205 DOI: 10.1038/s41423-019-0226-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Mol Immunol ISSN: 1672-7681 Impact factor: 11.530