| Literature DB >> 33202744 |
André Renaldo Fernández1,2, Rodrigo Sánchez-Tarjuelo3,4, Paolo Cravedi5, Jordi Ochando3,4, Marcos López-Hoyos1,2,6.
Abstract
Thanks to the development of new, more potent and selective immunosuppressive drugs together with advances in surgical techniques, organ transplantation has emerged from an experimental surgery over fifty years ago to being the treatment of choice for many end-stage organ diseases, with over 139,000 organ transplants performed worldwide in 2019. Inherent to the transplantation procedure is the fact that the donor organ is subjected to blood flow cessation and ischemia during harvesting, which is followed by preservation and reperfusion of the organ once transplanted into the recipient. Consequently, ischemia/reperfusion induces a significant injury to the graft with activation of the immune response in the recipient and deleterious effect on the graft. The purpose of this review is to discuss and shed new light on the pathways involved in ischemia/reperfusion injury (IRI) that act at different stages during the donation process, surgery, and immediate post-transplant period. Here, we present strategies that combine various treatments targeted at different mechanistic pathways during several time points to prevent graft loss secondary to the inflammation caused by IRI.Entities:
Keywords: RNA interference; cell death; cell metabolism; hypoxia; innate immunity; ischemia reperfusion injury
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33202744 PMCID: PMC7696417 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21228549
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Cellular events involved in ischemia/reperfusion injury (IRI). (1) Hypoxia following death of the donor induces metabolic stress, vascular permeability, and cellular apoptosis. (2) In the ischemic graft, danger signaling pathways are potential therapeutic targets for optimization. (3) IRI generates a sterile inflammatory response in the recipient due to the events present in (2). Treatments based on the use of complement and (Tumor Necrosis Factor) TNF inhibitors are used to decrease the immune response, as well as cell therapy with myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) and hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs), which are important in controlling this response.
Figure 2Signaling pathways involved in ischemia/reperfusion injury (IRI). (1) Damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs), released by injured and necrotic cells during IRI, are recognized by pattern recognition receptors (PRRs), such as Toll-like receptors (TLR), and Interleukin-1 receptor (IL1-R). The activation of PRRs results into the induction of nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB), which is a key regulator of DNA transcription, cytokine production, and pro-inflammatory signaling. As a result, DNA acquires epigenetic marks, and an immune response is initiated. (2) During IRI, T cells recognize specific antigens (Ags) through the T cell receptor (TCR), activating NF-κB and initiating an immune response without antigen-presenting cells. (3) The recognition of DAMPs or Ags leads to an increase of Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide Phosphate Hydrogen (NADPH) oxidase activity in mitochondria, generating reactive oxygen species (ROS), which maintain the immune activation. Abbreviation: ECM, extracellular matrix; PKC, protein kinase C; CARMA, CARD motif of a subfamily of membrane-associated guanylate kinase (MAGUK) proteins called CARD-MAGUKs; MALT1, paracaspase MLT.
Abbreviations. ITBL: ischemic type biliary lesions. DGF: delayed graft function. RT-PCR: reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction. AKI: acute kidney injury. IRI: ischemia reperfusion injury. dsRNA: double-stranded RNA.
| Ref. | Author | Year | Model | miRNA | Effect | Detection Technique |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Miller et al. | 1979 | synthetic | antisense oligonucleotides | Base specific hybridization | n/a |
| [ | Nielsen et al. | 1991 | synthetic | antisense oligonucleotides | Base specific hybridization | n/a |
| [ | Altmann et al. | 1996 | synthetic | antisense oligonucleotides | 2nd generation | n/a |
| [ | Fire et al. | 1998 | C. elegans | sequence specific post-transcriptional gene silencing | dsRNA interference | n/a |
| [ | Godwin et al. | 2010 | Mouse | miR-21 | Protective apoptosis kidney | Microarray + PCR |
| [ | Farid et al. | 2012 | Human ( | miR-122, miR-148a, miR-192 | Liver injury | RT-PCR (biased) |
| [ | Hu et al. | 2013 | Rat | miR-192, miR-22 | Liver injury | Microarray |
| [ | Hu et al. | 2013 | Rat | miR-146 | Acute rejection kidney | Microarray |
| [ | Lankisch et al. | 2014 | Human ( | miR-517, miR-892a, miR-106a | ITBL | Microarray + PCR |
| [ | Amrouche et al. | 2017 | Mouse, human | miR-146 | AKI/IRI | RT-PCR (biased) |
| [ | Khalid et al. | 2018 | Human | miR-9, miR-10, miR-21, miR-29a, miR-221, miR-429 | DGF | Microarray |
DCD: Donation after Cardiac Death. TNF: Tumor Necrosis Factor. GVHD: Graft Versus Host Disease. HIF: Hypoxia-Inducible Factor. ECD: Extended Criteria Donor. RIPC: Remote Ischemic Preconditioning. ALA: Alpha Lipoic Acid. UC-MSC: Umbilical-Cord Mesenchymal Stem Cells. ATLG: Anti-T-Lymphocyte Globulin. Cr: Creatinine. ROS: Reactive Oxygen Species. eGFR: estimated Glomerular Filtration Rate. MAPC: Multipotent Adult Progenitor Cells. KTX: Kidney Transplant. LTX: Liver Transplant. CI: Cyclosporine. BPAR: Biopsy-Proven Acute Rejection. DGF: Delayed-Graft Function. DC: Dendritic Cell.
| Reference | Year | Patients | Target | Mechanism in IRI | Intervention | Follow-up | Outcome | Clinical Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | 2005, Vincenti et al. | CTLA4 | Immune activation | Belatacept | 1 year | BPAR 6mo | Non-inferior to CI | |
| [ | 2010, Vincenti et al. | CTLA4 | Immune activation | Belatacept | 1 year | Composite | Posttxp lymphoproliferative more common in Belatacept, higher early acute rejection | |
| [ | 2016, Rekers et al. | Myeloid cells | Secrete S-100 and A6 | Immunomodulation | 10 years | Graft survival | S100 = less DC maturation = less T cell activity = better graft outcomes | |
| [ | 2017, Diuwe et al. | TNF alpha | Immune activation | Etanercept | 3 years | Composite | Ex vivo, no differences between groups | |
| [ | 2017, Krogstrup et al. | All pathways | Global | RIPC (BP cuff) | 21 days | Time to 50% drop in plasma Cr | No sig. differences, RIPC protocol not optimized? | |
| [ | 2017, Aliakbarian et al. | Hepatoprotective | Adding to UW solution | Hospital stay | Postreperfusion hypotension | Hypotension after reperfusion more common in experimental group | ||
| [ | 2018, Jordan et al. | C1 esterase inhibitor | Vascular leakage | Intra-op C1 inhibitor | 1 year | Graft function | DGF is IRI-induced | |
| [ | 2018, Kaabak et al. | C5b-9 | Immune activation | Pre-op Eculizumab | 3 years | Graft function | Better early graft function and biopsy scores but unacceptably high number of early graft losses | |
| [ | 2018, Casciato et al. | Alpha lipoic acid | Antioxidant (HIF-alpha) | ALA before reperfusion | 30 days | Gene changes to hypoxia/ROS | qPCR for panel of postreperfusion genes, alarmins | |
| [ | 2018, Sun et al. | Allogenic MSC | Immunomodulation | UC-MSC before and during Txp | 1 year | Graft function | Novel cell-based approach, delivery not optimized yet (renal artery?) | |
| [ | 2018, Ritschl et al. | Periop organ | ECD, DCD grafts | Perioperative perfusion with ATLG | 1 year | Need for dialysis | No change in long term | |
| [ | 2019, Veighey et al. | Global | Global | RIPC = cuff to limb | 5 years | Early eGFR, 5yr-survival | Living donation is a scheduled surgery, much easier to arrange for RIPC. |