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Prolyl endopeptidase contributes to early neutrophilic inflammation in acute myocardial transplant rejection
Gregory A. Payne, Nirmal S. Sharma, Charitharth V. Lal, Chunyan Song, Lingling Guo, Camilla Margaroli, Liliana Viera, Siva Kumar, Jindong Li, Dongqi Xing, Melanie Bosley, Xin Xu, J. Michael Wells, James F. George, Jose Tallaj, Massoud Leesar, J. Edwin Blalock, Amit Gaggar
Gregory A. Payne, Nirmal S. Sharma, Charitharth V. Lal, Chunyan Song, Lingling Guo, Camilla Margaroli, Liliana Viera, Siva Kumar, Jindong Li, Dongqi Xing, Melanie Bosley, Xin Xu, J. Michael Wells, James F. George, Jose Tallaj, Massoud Leesar, J. Edwin Blalock, Amit Gaggar
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Research Article Cardiology Transplantation

Prolyl endopeptidase contributes to early neutrophilic inflammation in acute myocardial transplant rejection

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Abstract

Altered inflammation and tissue remodeling are cardinal features of cardiovascular disease and cardiac transplant rejection. Neutrophils have increasingly been understood to play a critical role in acute rejection and early allograft failure; however, discrete mechanisms that drive this damage remain poorly understood. Herein, we demonstrate that early acute cardiac rejection increases allograft prolyl endopeptidase (PE) in association with de novo production of the neutrophil proinflammatory matrikine proline-glycine-proline (PGP). In a heterotopic murine heart transplant model, PGP production and PE activity were associated with early neutrophil allograft invasion and allograft failure. Pharmacologic inhibition of PE with Z-Pro-prolinal reduced PGP, attenuated early neutrophil graft invasion, and reduced proinflammatory cytokine expression. Importantly, these changes helped preserve allograft rejection-free survival and function. Notably, within 2 independent patient cohorts, both PGP and PE activity were increased among patients with biopsy-proven rejection. The observed induction of PE and matrikine generation provide a link between neutrophilic inflammation and cardiovascular injury, represent a potential target to reduce allogenic immune responses, and uncover a mechanism of cardiovascular disease that has been previously unrecognized to our knowledge.

Authors

Gregory A. Payne, Nirmal S. Sharma, Charitharth V. Lal, Chunyan Song, Lingling Guo, Camilla Margaroli, Liliana Viera, Siva Kumar, Jindong Li, Dongqi Xing, Melanie Bosley, Xin Xu, J. Michael Wells, James F. George, Jose Tallaj, Massoud Leesar, J. Edwin Blalock, Amit Gaggar

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Figure 4

Increased PGP and PE activity are associated with biopsy-proven ACR among 2 independent cohorts of patients with cardiac transplants.

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Increased PGP and PE activity are associated with biopsy-proven ACR amon...
(A) PGP, measured from the left main coronary artery, was increased among patients with cardiac transplants with ACR (n = 4) compared with those without ACR (n = 11). (B) Within the same patient cohort, coronary serum PE activity was increased in association with rejection. Myocardial biopsies from an independent patient cohort showed greater myocardial biopsy PGP (C) and PE activity (D) among patients with ACR (n = 5) compared with those without ACR (n = 5). Results presented as mean ± SE. Student’s unpaired t test was used for comparisons in A and B. Mann-Whitney U test was used for comparisons in C and D. PGP, proline-glycine-proline; PE, prolyl endopeptidase; ACR, acute cellular rejection.

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