AUTHOR=Heigl Tobias , Kaes Janne , Aelbrecht Celine , Serré Jef , Yamada Yoshito , Geudens Vincent , Van Herck Anke , Vanstapel Arno , Sacreas Annelore , Ordies Sofie , Frick Anna , Saez Gimenez Berta , Van Slambrouck Jan , Beeckmans Hanne , Acet Oztürk Nilüfer A. , Orlitova Michaela , Vaneylen Annemie , Claes Sandra , Schols Dominique , Vande Velde Greetje , Schupp Jonas , Kaminski Naftali , Boesch Markus , Korf Hannelie , van der Merwe Schalk , Dupont Lieven , Vanoirbeek Jeroen , Godinas Laurent , Van Raemdonck Dirk E. , Janssens Wim , Gayan-Ramirez Ghislaine , Ceulemans Laurens J. , McDonough John E. , Verbeken Erik K. , Vos Robin , Vanaudenaerde Bart M. TITLE=The nature of chronic rejection after lung transplantation: a murine orthotopic lung transplant study JOURNAL=Frontiers in Immunology VOLUME=15 YEAR=2024 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/immunology/articles/10.3389/fimmu.2024.1369536 DOI=10.3389/fimmu.2024.1369536 ISSN=1664-3224 ABSTRACT=Introduction

Chronic rejection is a major complication post-transplantation. Within lung transplantation, chronic rejection was considered as airway centred. Chronic Lung Allograft Dysfunction (CLAD), defined to cover all late chronic complications, makes it more difficult to understand chronic rejection from an immunological perspective. This study investigated the true nature, timing and location of chronic rejection as a whole, within mouse lung transplantation.

Methods

40 mice underwent an orthotopic left lung transplantation, were sacrificed at day 70 and evaluated by histology and in vivo µCT. For timing and location of rejection, extra grafts were sacrificed at day 7, 35, 56 and investigated by ex vivo µCT or single cell RNA (scRNA) profiling.

Results

Chronic rejection originated as innate inflammation around small arteries evolving toward adaptive organization with subsequent end-arterial fibrosis and obliterans. Subsequently, venous and pleural infiltration appeared, followed by airway related bronchiolar folding and rarely bronchiolitis obliterans was observed. Ex vivo µCT and scRNA profiling validated the time, location and sequence of events with endothelial destruction and activation as primary onset.

Conclusion

Against the current belief, chronic rejection in lung transplantation may start as an arterial response, followed by responses in venules, pleura, and, only in the late stage, bronchioles, as may be seen in some but not all patients with CLAD.