Long-Term Heart Transplant Survival by Targeting the Ionotropic Purinergic Receptor P2X7

Andrea Vergani(University of Parma), Sara Tezza(University of Parma), Francesca D’Addio(University of Parma), Carmen Fotino(University of Parma), Kaifeng Liu(University of Parma), Monika A. Niewczas(University of Parma), Roberto Bassi(University of Parma), R. Damaris Molano(University of Parma), Sonja Kleffel(University of Parma), Alessandra Petrelli(University of Parma), Antonio Soleti(University of Parma), Enrico Ammirati(University of Parma), Maria Frigerio(University of Parma), Gary Visner(University of Parma), Fabio Grassi(University of Parma), Maria Elena Ferrero(University of Parma), Domenico Corradi(University of Parma), Reza Abdi(University of Parma), Camillo Ricordi(University of Parma), Mohamed H. Sayegh(University of Parma), Antonello Pileggi(University of Parma), Paolo Fiorina(University of Parma)
Circulation
December 19, 2012
Cited by 108Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Heart transplantation is a lifesaving procedure for patients with end-stage heart failure. Despite much effort and advances in the field, current immunosuppressive regimens are still associated with poor long-term cardiac allograft outcomes, and with the development of complications, including infections and malignancies, as well. The development of a novel, short-term, and effective immunomodulatory protocol will thus be an important achievement. The purine ATP, released during cell damage/activation, is sensed by the ionotropic purinergic receptor P2X7 (P2X7R) on lymphocytes and regulates T-cell activation. Novel clinical-grade P2X7R inhibitors are available, rendering the targeting of P2X7R a potential therapy in cardiac transplantation. METHODS AND RESULTS: We analyzed P2X7R expression in patients and mice and P2X7R targeting in murine recipients in the context of cardiac transplantation. Our data demonstrate that P2X7R is specifically upregulated in graft-infiltrating lymphocytes in cardiac-transplanted humans and mice. Short-term P2X7R targeting with periodate-oxidized ATP promotes long-term cardiac transplant survival in 80% of murine recipients of a fully mismatched allograft. Long-term survival of cardiac transplants was associated with reduced T-cell activation, T-helper cell 1/T-helper cell 17 differentiation, and inhibition of STAT3 phosphorylation in T cells, thus leading to a reduced transplant infiltrate and coronaropathy. In vitro genetic upregulation of the P2X7R pathway was also shown to stimulate T-helper cell 1/T-helper cell 17 cell generation. Finally, P2X7R targeting halted the progression of coronaropathy in a murine model of chronic rejection as well. CONCLUSIONS: P2X7R targeting is a novel clinically relevant strategy to prolong cardiac transplant survival.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis