American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine Vol 176. pp. 1161-1168, (2007)
Obliterative bronchiolitis (OB) after lung transplantation is triggered by alloimmunity, but is ultimately mediated by transforming growth factor (TGF)-1–dependent airway fibrosis.
Chronic alcohol use increases TGF-1 expression and renders the lung susceptible to injury. Therefore, we hypothesized that donor alcohol abuse could prime the lung allograft for OB, as many organ donors have a history of alcohol abuse.
Although donor alcohol ingestion did not increase the number of antigen-presenting cells or infiltrating lymphocytes, it nevertheless increased allograft lumenal collagen content fourfold compared with allografts from control donors. In parallel, alcohol increased TGF-1 and -smooth muscle actin expression in allografts. Alcohol amplified airway disease even in isografts with minor alloimmune mismatches. In contrast, it did not cause any airway disease in isografts in a pure isogenic background, suggesting that a minimal alloimmune response is necessary to trigger alcohol-induced airway fibrosis.
Although alloimmune inflammation is required to initiate airway disease, alcohol primes the allograft for greater TGF-1 expression, myofibroblast transdifferentiation, and fibrosis than by alloimmune inflammation alone. TThis has serious clinical implications, as many lung donors have underlying alcohol abuse that may prime the allograft recipient for subsequent OB.
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