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Inhibiting retinoic acid signaling ameliorates graft-versus-host disease by modifying T-cell differentiation and intestinal migration.

Kazutoshi Aoyama, Asim Saha, Jakub Tolar, Megan J Riddle, Rachelle G Veenstra et al.
Other Blood 2013 54 citas
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

Tipo de estudio
In Vitro
Población
Mouse model of graft-versus-host disease
Intervención
Inhibiting retinoic acid signaling ameliorates graft-versus-host disease by modifying T-cell differentiation and intestinal migration. None
Comparador
Control GVHD mice
Resultado primario
Graft-versus-host disease severity
Dirección del efecto
Positive
Riesgo de sesgo
Unclear

Abstract

Graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) is a critical complication after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. During GVHD, donor T cells are activated by host antigen-presenting cells and differentiate into T-effector cells (Teffs) that migrate to GVHD target organs. However, local environmental factors influencing Teff differentiation and migration are largely unknown. Vitamin A metabolism within the intestine produces retinoic acid, which contributes to intestinal homeostasis and tolerance induction. Here, we show that the expression and function of vitamin A-metabolizing enzymes were increased in the intestine and mesenteric lymph nodes in mice with active GVHD. Moreover, transgenic donor T cells expressing a retinoic acid receptor (RAR) response element luciferase reporter responded to increased vitamin A metabolites in GVHD-affected organs. Increasing RAR signaling accelerated GVHD lethality, whereas donor T cells expressing a dominant-negative RARα (dnRARα) showed markedly diminished lethality. The dnRARα transgenic T cells showed reduced Th1 differentiation and α4β7 and CCR9 expression associated with poor intestinal migration, low GVHD pathology, and reduced intestinal permeability, primarily via CD4(+) T cells. The inhibition of RAR signaling augmented donor-induced Treg generation and expansion in vivo, while preserving graft-versus-leukemia effects. Together, these results suggested that reagents blunting donor T-cell RAR signaling may possess therapeutic anti-GVHD properties.

TL;DR

It is suggested that reagents blunting donor T-cell RAR signaling may possess therapeutic anti-GVHD properties, while preserving graft-versus-leukemia effects.

Used In Evidence Reviews

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