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Host-versus-commensal immune responses participate in the rejection of colonized solid organ transplants
Isabella Pirozzolo, Martin Sepulveda, Luqiu Chen, Ying Wang, Yuk Man Lei, Zhipeng Li, Rena Li, Husain Sattar, Betty Theriault, Yasmine Belkaid, Anita S. Chong, Maria-Luisa Alegre
Isabella Pirozzolo, Martin Sepulveda, Luqiu Chen, Ying Wang, Yuk Man Lei, Zhipeng Li, Rena Li, Husain Sattar, Betty Theriault, Yasmine Belkaid, Anita S. Chong, Maria-Luisa Alegre
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Research Article Immunology

Host-versus-commensal immune responses participate in the rejection of colonized solid organ transplants

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Abstract

Solid organ transplantation is the preferred treatment for end-stage organ failure. Although transplant recipients take life-long immunosuppressive drugs, a substantial percentage of them still reject their allografts. Strikingly, barrier organs colonized with microbiota have significantly shorter half-lives than non-barrier transplanted organs, even in immunosuppressed hosts. We previously demonstrated that skin allografts monocolonized with the common human commensal Staphylococcus epidermidis (S.epi) are rejected faster than germ-free (GF) allografts in mice because the presence of S.epi augments the effector alloimmune response locally in the graft. Here, we tested whether host immune responses against graft-resident commensal microbes, including S.epi, can damage colonized grafts independently from the alloresponse. Naive hosts mounted an anticommensal T cell response to colonized, but not GF, syngeneic skin grafts. Whereas naive antigraft commensal T cells modestly damaged colonized syngeneic skin grafts, hosts with prior anticommensal T cell memory mounted a post-transplant immune response against graft-resident commensals that significantly damaged colonized, syngeneic skin grafts. Importantly, allograft recipients harboring this host-versus-commensal immune response resisted immunosuppression. The dual effects of host-versus-commensal and host-versus-allograft responses may partially explain why colonized organs have poorer outcomes than sterile organs in the clinic.

Authors

Isabella Pirozzolo, Martin Sepulveda, Luqiu Chen, Ying Wang, Yuk Man Lei, Zhipeng Li, Rena Li, Husain Sattar, Betty Theriault, Yasmine Belkaid, Anita S. Chong, Maria-Luisa Alegre

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Figure 5

Hosts with memory against graft-resident commensals resist immunosuppression and reject colonized allografts more quickly.

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Hosts with memory against graft-resident commensals resist immunosuppres...
(A) Female C57BL/6 recipient mice were immunized s.c. or not with S.epi to establish anticommensal memory 30 days before transplantation. Hosts received a S.epi-monocolonized or GF C57BL/6 male (minor-mismatched) or BALB/c (B/C; major-mismatched) skin graft. A subset of hosts received rapamycin for 14 consecutive days (B) or tacrolimus for 6 consecutive days (C and D) starting the day of transplantation. (B–D) Allograft survival curves for minor-mismatched (B and C) or major-mismatched (D) skin transplant recipients that received rapamycin (B), tacrolimus (C and D), or no immunosuppression (B–D, purple and gray lines). All survival curves were analyzed using a log-rank (Mantel-Cox) test. *P < 0.05, **P < 0.005, ***P < 0.0005, ****P < 0.0001; mem., memory; col., colonized.

Copyright © 2026 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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