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- Complement activation on endothelium initiates antibody-mediated acute lung injury.
Complement activation on endothelium initiates antibody-mediated acute lung injury.
Citation | “Complement Activation On Endothelium Initiates Antibody-Mediated Acute Lung Injury.”. The Journal Of Clinical Investigation, pp. 5909-5923. . |
Author | Simon J Cleary, Nicholas Kwaan, Jennifer J Tian, Daniel R Calabrese, Beñat Mallavia, Mélia Magnen, John R Greenland, Anatoly Urisman, Jonathan P Singer, Steven R Hays, Jasleen Kukreja, Ariel M Hay, Heather L Howie, Pearl Toy, Clifford A Lowell, Craig N Morrell, James C Zimring, Mark R Looney |
Keywords | Complement, immunology, Neutrophils, platelets, Pulmonology, Vasculitis |
Abstract |
Antibodies targeting human leukocyte antigen (HLA)/major histocompatibility complex (MHC) proteins limit successful transplantation and transfusion, and their presence in blood products can cause lethal transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI). It is unclear which cell types are bound by these anti-leukocyte antibodies to initiate an immunologic cascade resulting in lung injury. We therefore conditionally removed MHC class I (MHC I) from likely cellular targets in antibody-mediated lung injury. Only the removal of endothelial MHC I reduced lung injury and mortality, related mechanistically to absent endothelial complement fixation and lung platelet retention. Restoration of endothelial MHC I rendered MHC I-deficient mice susceptible to lung injury. Neutrophil responses, including neutrophil extracellular trap (NET) release, were intact in endothelial MHC I-deficient mice, whereas complement depletion reduced both lung injury and NETs. Human pulmonary endothelial cells showed high HLA class I expression, and posttransfusion complement activation was increased in clinical TRALI. These results indicate that the critical source of antigen for anti-leukocyte antibodies is in fact the endothelium, which reframes our understanding of TRALI as a rapid-onset vasculitis. Inhibition of complement activation may have multiple beneficial effects of reducing endothelial injury, platelet retention, and NET release in conditions where antibodies trigger these pathogenic responses. |
Year of Publication |
2020
|
Journal |
The Journal of clinical investigation
|
Volume |
130
|
Issue |
11
|
Number of Pages |
5909-5923
|
Date Published |
11/2020
|
ISSN Number |
1558-8238
|
DOI |
10.1172/JCI138136
|
Alternate Journal |
J Clin Invest
|
PMID |
32730229
|
PMCID |
PMC7598054
|
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