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Absence of Protective Innate Lymphoid Cell Type 3 (ILC3) and Persistence of Proinflammatory Innate Lymphoid Cell Subsets Immediately Post-Transplant Plays a Appreciable Role in Early Intestinal Barrier Dysfunction

J. Kang, L. Belyayev, K. Loh, P. Cha, S. Moturi, K. Khan, J. Hawksworth, C. Matsumoto, M. Zasloff, T. Fishbein, A. Kroemer

Georgetown University, Washington, DC

Meeting: 2019 American Transplant Congress

Abstract number: 482

Keywords: Epithelial cells, FACS analysis, Graft function, Lymphocytes

Session Information

Session Name: Concurrent Session: Innate Immunity; Chemokines, Cytokines, Complement

Session Type: Concurrent Session

Date: Tuesday, June 4, 2019

Session Time: 2:30pm-4:00pm

 Presentation Time: 2:54pm-3:06pm

Location: Room 310

*Purpose: Innate lymphoid cells (ILCs) , the most recently described family of lymphoid cells, play fundamental roles in mucosal barrier immunity, tissue homeostasis, and immune regulation through the activation of host-derived cytokine expression; however their roles in intestinal transplantation (ITx) have yet to be defined.

*Methods: Twenty-six participants who underwent IT x at our Transplant Institute were enrolled in this study. Intestinal biopsies were obtained immediately after ITx at day 0 and followed longitudinally. LP cells were isolated and the following phenotypic definition was used for ILCs: lineage negative, viable lymphocytes expressing CD45 were identified as type 1 and 3 ILCs by expression of CD56, NKp44, CD117 (c-Kit), and CD127 (IL7Rα). Four distinct subsets were further defined as NKp44–ILC1 (CD56–CD127+CD117–), NKp44–ILC3 (CD56–CD127+CD117+), NKp44+ILC1 (CD56+CD127–CD117–) and NKp44+ILC3 (CD56+CD127+CD117+). Graft infiltrating lymphocytes were flow sorted and rtPCR was performed to investigate effector cytokine and transcription factor profiles.

*Results: To test our hypothesis, we explored ILC phenotypes via flow cytometry in stable ITx recipients with healthy functioning allografts >6 months after ITx in comparison to fresh ITx recipients at day 0 after reperfusion. To our surprise we found that protective NKp44+ILC3s (p=0.02) were significantly diminished in fresh allografts compared to NKp44+ILC3s in stable recipients 6 months out. In addition, we found comparable numbers of potentially proinflammatory ILC1s (NKp44–ILC1 (p=0.18), NKp44+ILC1 (p= 0.82)) and NKp44–ILC3 (p=0.88) in fresh and in stable ITx recipients, indicating a dysbalance between protective and proinflammatory ILC subsets in fresh but not stable ITx recipients. By intracellular cytokine staining, we confirmed that NKp44+ILC3s produced protective IL-22, while ILC1s and NKp44–ILC3sproduced pro-inflammatory IFN-γ, TNF-α and IL-17. Importantly, serial, prospective immunomonitoring of fresh ITx recipients revealed that protective NKp44+ILC3s repopulate by 1 month postoperatively, suggesting that protective and proinflammatory ILCs re-balance in ITx patients over time. Critically, the frequencies of repopulating protective NKp44+ILC3s correlated positively with IL-22 dependent antimicrobial peptide (AMP) expression including β-defensins and RegIIIγ which are important for intestinal barrier protection, as determined by rtPCR.

*Conclusions: Our study indicated that the reconstitution of protective ILC3 which are absent immediately post transplant positively correlates with improved epithelial barrier function through increase of IL-22 dependent AMP expression. In contrast, proinflammatory ILC1 and ILC3 subset abundance could be contributing to epithelial barrier breakdown and early clinical complications.

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To cite this abstract in AMA style:

Kang J, Belyayev L, Loh K, Cha P, Moturi S, Khan K, Hawksworth J, Matsumoto C, Zasloff M, Fishbein T, Kroemer A. Absence of Protective Innate Lymphoid Cell Type 3 (ILC3) and Persistence of Proinflammatory Innate Lymphoid Cell Subsets Immediately Post-Transplant Plays a Appreciable Role in Early Intestinal Barrier Dysfunction [abstract]. Am J Transplant. 2019; 19 (suppl 3). https://atcmeetingabstracts.com/abstract/absence-of-protective-innate-lymphoid-cell-type-3-ilc3-and-persistence-of-proinflammatory-innate-lymphoid-cell-subsets-immediately-post-transplant-plays-a-appreciable-role-in-early-intestinal-barrie/. Accessed May 18, 2025.

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