| Literature DB >> 34447390 |
Morgan Ashley Hill1, Jennie H Kwon2, Brielle Gerry2, William A Hardy1, Olivia Agata Walkowiak1, Minoo N Kavarana2, Satish N Nadig3, T Konrad Rajab2.
Abstract
Immune privilege is an evolutionary adaptation that protects vital tissues with limited regenerative capacity from collateral damage by the immune response. Classical examples include the anterior chamber of the eye and the brain. More recently, the placenta, testes and articular cartilage were found to have similar immune privilege. What all of these tissues have in common is their vital function for evolutionary fitness and a limited regenerative capacity. Immune privilege is clinically relevant, because corneal transplantation and meniscal transplantation do not require immunosuppression. The heart valves also serve a vital function and have limited regenerative capacity after damage. Moreover, experimental and clinical evidence from heart valve transplantation suggests that the heart valves are spared from alloimmune injury. Here we review this evidence and propose the concept of heart valves as immune privileged sites. This concept has important clinical implications for heart valve transplantation.Entities:
Keywords: heart valve; heart valve allograft; immune privilege; transplantation; transplantation (heart)
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34447390 PMCID: PMC8383064 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.731361
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1The classical immune privileged sites are the eye, central nervous system, placenta, testes and articular cartilage.
Figure 2The aortic valve is in continuity with the aorta and the myocardium. It is composed of an endothelial lining and an interstitial core.
Figure 3A possible mechanism for the immune privilege of heart valves could be inhibition of immune cell extravasation in the context of rapid blood flow in the aorta, combined with the vigorous movement of the opening and closing valve leaflets.