Expression of chemokines in GVHD target organs is influenced by conditioning and genetic factors and amplified by GVHR.
Abstract
Graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) is the most significant clinical problem that arises after allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation. Because chemokines induced by proinflammatory conditioning treatment may promote T-cell migration into GVHD target tissues, we addressed the influence of conditioning on chemokine expression in GVHD target organs. Our results showed that (1) conditioning leads to rapid and transient chemokine upregulation in GVHD target tissues before the time of GVHD-associated T-cell infiltration; (2) conditioning intensity and mouse strain influence chemokine expression in GVHD target organs; and (3) compared with syngeneic bone marrow transplantation, allogeneic bone marrow transplantation led to marked amplification of chemokine expression in GVHD target organs after myeloablative conditioning. This is also reflected by chemokine protein expression that is measured in the serum and colon. Intestines showed the greatest sensitivity to conditioning intensity, and chemokines affecting T-helper type 1 cells (eg, interferon gamma-inducible protein 10 [CXCL10]) were most strongly expressed there after conditioning and during GVHD. However, severity of GVHD was not significantly different between recipients of CXCR3+/+ or CXCR3-/- splenocytes, indicating that this chemokine pathway does not play a critical role. In summary, our data show that conditioning and recipient strain influence chemokine expression in GVHD target organs and that GVH alloreactivity markedly amplifies this expression, thus contributing to the inflammatory cascade associated with tissue GVHD.
Authors
- Bronson R
- Kim YM
- Leng C
- Lokshin A
- Luster A
- Mapara MY
- Sykes M