The Macrophage Landscape Across the Lifespan of a Human Cardiac Allograft

Circulation. 2024 Feb 12. doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.123.065294. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Background: Much of our knowledge of organ rejection after transplantation is derived from rodent models.

Methods: We used single-nucleus RNA sequencing to investigate the inflammatory myocardial microenvironment in human pediatric cardiac allografts at different stages after transplantation. We distinguished donor- from recipient-derived cells using naturally occurring genetic variants embedded in single-nucleus RNA sequencing data.

Results: Donor-derived tissue resident macrophages, which accompany the allograft into the recipient, are lost over time after transplantation. In contrast, monocyte-derived macrophages from the recipient populate the heart within days after transplantation and form 2 macrophage populations: recipient MP1 and recipient MP2. Recipient MP2s have cell signatures similar to donor-derived resident macrophages; however, they lack signatures of pro-reparative phagocytic activity typical of donor-derived resident macrophages and instead express profibrotic genes. In contrast, recipient MP1s express genes consistent with hallmarks of cellular rejection. Our data suggest that recipient MP1s activate a subset of natural killer cells, turning them into a cytotoxic cell population through feed-forward signaling between recipient MP1s and natural killer.

Conclusions: Our findings reveal an imbalance of donor-derived and recipient-derived macrophages in the pediatric cardiac allograft that contributes to allograft failure.

Keywords: allografts; heart; killer cells, natural; macrophages; tissue donor; transplant recipients.