| Literature DB >> 34413856 |
Jin-Yu Sun1, Rui Wu1,2,3, Jiang Xu4, Hui-Ying Xue5, Xiao-Jie Lu6, Jiansong Ji7.
Abstract
The immune system recognizes and attacks non-self antigens, making up the cornerstone of immunity activity against infection. However, during organ transplantation, the immune system also attacks transplanted organs and leads to immune rejection and transplantation failure. Interestingly, although the embryo and placenta are semi-allografts, like transplanted organs, they can induce maternal tolerance and be free of a vigorous immune response. Also, embryo or placenta-related antibodies might adversely affect subsequent organ transplantation despite the immune tolerance during pregnancy. Therefore, the balance between the immune tolerance in maternal-fetal interface and normal infection defense provides a possible desensitization and tolerance strategy to improve transplantation outcomes. A few studies on mechanisms and clinical applications have been performed to explore the relationship between maternal-fetal immune tolerance and organ transplantation. However, up to now, the mechanisms underlying maternal-fetal immune tolerance remain vague. In this review, we provide an overview on the current understanding of immune tolerance mechanisms underlying the maternal-fetal interface, summarize the interconnection between immune tolerance and organ transplantation, and describe the adverse effect of pregnancy alloimmunization on organ transplantation.Entities:
Keywords: clinical implication; immune rejection; maternal-fetal interface; organ transplantation; placental immune tolerance
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34413856 PMCID: PMC8370472 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.705950
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Inhibitory effect of macrophages on dNK cells in the maternal-fetal interface. Macrophages induce the immune tolerance of dNK cells and decrease the chemokines (such as IL-8, and IL-10) in the maternal-fetal interface, thus stabilizing the embryo.
Figure 2The classification of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules and main molecules in maternal-fetal immunity. MHC includes MHC class I and II molecules. Classic MHC class I molecules include human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-A, HLA-B, and HLA-C. The non-classic MHC class I molecules include HLA-E, HLA-F, and HLA-G. MHC class II molecules include HLA-DR, HLA -DP, HLA -DQ. HLA-C, HLA-E, and HLA-G play a significant role in immune tolerance in the maternal-fetal interface.
Co-signaling molecules and their mechanism to induce the maternal-fetal immune tolerance.
| Cells | Co-signaling Molecules |
|---|---|
|
| Syncytiotrophoblasts: PD-L1, CD200, CD200R1, PD-L2 |
| Cytotrophoblasts: PD-L1, CD200, CD200R1 | |
| EVTs: ICOS-L, PD-L1, CD276, CEACAM1, Gal-9, CD200, CD200R1, CD155, CD112 | |
|
| TIM-3, Gal-9, PD-L1, PD-L2 |
|
| dNK cells: CEACAM1, TIM-3, LAIR-1, CD226 |
| Decidual T cells: PD-1, CEACAM-1, TIM-3, LAIR-1 | |
| Decidual macrophages: LAIR-1 | |
|
|
|
|
| Elevated PD-1 expression in decidual CD8+ T, CD4+ T, and NKT-like cells and PD-L1 expression in decidual CD4+ T, Treg, NKT-like and CD56+ NK cell compared to peripheral blood ( |
| The soluble PD-L1 increased in pregnant women and suppress maternal immunity ( | |
| Blockade of PD-1 resulted in decreased proliferation and Th2-type cytokine production while increased trophoblast killing and IFN-γ producing capacities of CD8+ T cells ( | |
| PD-1/PD-L1 signaling is critical for macrophage differentiation and function, which is the success of a pregnancy ( | |
| PD-1 promote Th2 bias and pregnancy maintenance by regulating CD4+ T cell function at the maternal-fetal interface ( | |
|
| Decidual NKT cells exhibit a reduced TIM-3 expression with increased relative receptor expression and a slightly increased cytotoxicity when compared to the periphery ( |
| TIM-3+CTLA-4+dCD8+ T cells produced more anti-inflammatory cytokines. Blocking TIM-3 pathways inhibited the anti-inflammatory cytokines and induced fetal loss ( | |
| TIM-3 pathways maintain tolerance by regulating dCD4+T cells. Blockade of TIM-3 pathways induces fetal loss with altered cytokine profiles by dCD4+ T cells ( | |
| TIM-3 is upregulated in NK cells and inhibits NK cytotoxicity toward trophoblast in Gal-9 dependent pathway ( | |
| Activation of TLR signaling induced upregulated TIM-3 expression. TIM-3 inhibited TLR signaling-induced inflammatory cytokine production ( | |
| TIM-3 are expressed on over 60% of dNK cells. TIM-3+ dNK cells display higher IL-4 and lower TNF-α and perforin production. | |
| Peripheral NK cells can be transformed into a dNK-like phenotype | |
| Trophoblasts inhibit LPS-induced pro-inflammatory cytokine and perforin production by dNK cells, which can be attenuated by TIM-3 neutralizing antibodies. | |
| Th2-type cytokines decreased and Th1-type cytokines increased in TIM-3+ dNK cells from human and mouse miscarriages ( | |
|
| Blocking CTLA-4 pathways inhibited the anti-inflammatory cytokines and induced fetal loss ( |
| CTLA-4 pathways maintain tolerance by regulating dCD4+T cells. Blockade of CTLA-4 pathways induces fetal loss with altered cytokine profiles by dCD4+ T cells ( | |
| Antigen-stimulated T cells become activated ligated with CD28 and anergic ligated with CTLA-4 ( | |
|
| ICOS-L blockade abrogates placental immune tolerance by enhancing CD8+ effector response and reducing local immunomodulation |
|
| CEACAM1 interactions inhibit the lysis, proliferation, and cytokine secretion of activated dNK, T, and NKT cells, respectively ( |
|
| Co-culture of dNK with primary TROs/DSCs downregulated Th1 cytokine production, which were abrogated by LAIR-1 inhibitor ( |
PD-L1, programmed death-ligand 1; CD200, cluster of differentiation-200; CD200R1, CD200 receptor 1; PD-L2, programmed death-ligand 2; ICOS-L, inducible co-stimulator ligand; CD276, cluster of differentiation-276; CEACAM1, carcinoembryonic Ag cell adhesion molecule 1; Gal-9, galectin-9; CD155, cluster of differentiation-155; CD112, cluster of differentiation-112; TIM-3, T cell immunoglobulin and mucin domain 3; LAIR-1, leukocyte-associated immunoglobulin-like receptor-1; CD226, cluster of differentiation-226.
Adverse effect of pregnancy on subsequent organ transplantation.
| Author | Type | Study time | Sample size | Type of organ | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cohen et al. ( | Retrospective | 2001‐2013 | 5012 | Kidney | No difference in graft failure between recipients of fathers and mothers. |
| Bromberger et al. ( | Retrospective | 2007‐2013 | 502 | Kidney | Pregnancy is the major reason for loss of living donor access for women. |
| Redfield et al. ( | Dataset analysis | 1997‐2014 | 107292 | Kidney | Pregnancy alone is made up 20% of sensitization; Waiting time for organ transplantation is longer for women. |
| Higgins et al. ( | Retrospective | 2003‐2012 | 64 | No mention | Pregnancy leads to the greatest increase in HLA antibody levels from pre-treatment to peak |
| Choi et al. ( | Retrospective | 1979‐2011 | 374 | Kidney | The antibody originated from the sensitization in pregnancy results in the transplantation failure. |
| Ghafari et al. ( | Retrospective | 1989‐2006 | 171 | Kidney | Graft survival time was significantly worse because of pregnancy |
HLA, human leukocyte antigen.
Figure 3Trends of the research in placental immunity and organ transplantation. The search strategy is ((((((fetal) OR (placenta*)) OR (maternal-fetal interface)) AND (immune)) AND (organ)) AND (transplantation)) AND ((“1980”[Date - Publication]: “2021”[Date - Publication])). (A) The annual scientific production shows an increasing trend from 1980 to 2021. (B) The most relevant sources of these published studies. The top three relevant sources are Journal of immunology, Blood, and Transplantation. (C) Country scientific production. The color indicates the number of the related studies in each country. (D) Word cloud is based on the keywords from the published studies.