Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, California; Medical Service, Veterans Affairs Health Care System, San Francisco, California.
Department of Pathology, University of California, San Francisco, California.
J Heart Lung Transplant. 2024 Jul;43(7):1074-1086. doi: 10.1016/j.healun.2024.02.007. Epub 2024 Feb 15.
Acute lung allograft dysfunction (ALAD) is an imprecise syndrome denoting concern for the onset of chronic lung allograft dysfunction (CLAD). Mechanistic biomarkers are needed that stratify risk of ALAD progression to CLAD. We hypothesized that single cell investigation of bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) cells at the time of ALAD would identify immune cells linked to progressive graft dysfunction.
We prospectively collected BAL from consenting lung transplant recipients for single cell RNA sequencing. ALAD was defined by a ≥10% decrease in FEV not caused by infection or acute rejection and samples were matched to BAL from recipients with stable lung function. We examined cell compositional and transcriptional differences across control, ALAD with decline, and ALAD with recovery groups. We also assessed cell-cell communication.
BAL was assessed for 17 ALAD cases with subsequent decline (ALAD declined), 13 ALAD cases that resolved (ALAD recovered), and 15 cases with stable lung function. We observed broad differences in frequencies of the 26 unique cell populations across groups (p = 0.02). A CD8 T cell (p = 0.04) and a macrophage cluster (p = 0.01) best identified ALAD declined from the ALAD recovered and stable groups. This macrophage cluster was distinguished by an anti-inflammatory signature and the CD8 T cell cluster resembled a Tissue Resident Memory subset. Anti-inflammatory macrophages signaled to activated CD8 T cells via class I HLA, fibronectin, and galectin pathways (p < 0.05 for each). Recipients with discordance between these cells had a nearly 5-fold increased risk of severe graft dysfunction or death (HR 4.6, 95% CI 1.1-19.2, adjusted p = 0.03). We validated these key findings in 2 public lung transplant genomic datasets.
BAL anti-inflammatory macrophages may protect against CLAD by suppressing CD8 T cells. These populations merit functional and longitudinal assessment in additional cohorts.
急性肺移植物功能障碍(ALAD)是一种不精确的综合征,表明对慢性肺移植物功能障碍(CLAD)的发生存在担忧。需要有机制生物标志物来对 ALAD 进展为 CLAD 的风险进行分层。我们假设,在 ALAD 发生时对支气管肺泡灌洗液(BAL)中的单细胞进行研究,将确定与进行性移植物功能障碍相关的免疫细胞。
我们前瞻性地收集了同意进行肺移植的受者的 BAL 样本,进行单细胞 RNA 测序。ALAD 的定义为 FEV 下降≥10%,且不是由感染或急性排斥引起,并且样本与肺功能稳定的受者的 BAL 相匹配。我们检查了对照组、ALAD 下降组和 ALAD 恢复组之间的细胞组成和转录差异。我们还评估了细胞间的通讯。
对 17 例 ALAD 病例进行了评估,这些病例随后出现了下降(ALAD 下降),13 例 ALAD 病例得到了恢复(ALAD 恢复),15 例病例的肺功能稳定。我们观察到 26 个独特的细胞群在各组之间的频率存在广泛差异(p=0.02)。CD8 T 细胞(p=0.04)和巨噬细胞群(p=0.01)最能区分 ALAD 下降组与 ALAD 恢复组和稳定组。这个巨噬细胞群具有抗炎特征,而 CD8 T 细胞群类似于组织驻留记忆亚群。抗炎性巨噬细胞通过 I 类 HLA、纤维连接蛋白和半乳糖凝集素途径向激活的 CD8 T 细胞发出信号(每种途径的 p<0.05)。这些细胞之间存在差异的受者发生严重移植物功能障碍或死亡的风险几乎增加了 5 倍(HR 4.6,95%CI 1.1-19.2,调整后的 p=0.03)。我们在 2 个公共的肺移植基因组数据集中验证了这些关键发现。
BAL 抗炎性巨噬细胞可能通过抑制 CD8 T 细胞来防止 CLAD。这些群体值得在其他队列中进行功能和纵向评估。