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343 Clinical Science ( 1 990) 78,343-350 Editorial Review Mechanisms of liver allograft rejection in man DAVID ADAMS Liver Unit, Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Birmingham, U.K. INTRODUCTION With increased experience of liver transplantation it has become apparent that, contrary to earlier views, graft rejection is a major problem. Approximately 70% of patients experience at least one episode of acute, reversible rejection and between 10 and 15% develop chronic rejection, which is usually irreversible and requires retransplantation [ 1-51. Rejection can be defined as graft damage arising from the response to the transplanted liver by the recipient immune system and may take several forms resulting in different clinical patterns [6]. The mechanisms underlying rejection remain poorly understood. Mechanisms shown to be important in animal transplant models are not always relevant to man [7] and until recently there have been few studies addressed to analysing the mechanisms of human liver rejection. This article will review the current understanding of the mechanisms of liver allograft rejection in man and discuss theories as to how the inflammatory response of rejection may be generated. CLINICAL PATTERNS OF LIVER ALLOGRAFT REJECTION There are two broad clinical presentations of rejection after liver transplantation, conventionally termed acute and chronic. Acute rejection may occur at any time after grafting, and chronic rejection can present as early as the first 2 weeks. This has led some authors to favour a division into reversible and irreversible rejection, or to refer to chronic rejection according to its morphological features, i.e. vanishing bile duct syndrome (VBDS)[8]. Within these two categories there may be several clinical patterns of rejection and it is unclear whether these clinical forms reflect different presentations of the same underlying process or if there are several distinct mechanisms that can lead to graft rejection. Acute, reversible rejection Acute rejection usually becomes clinically apparent between 4 and 14 days after transplantation. Clinical features are fever, malaise and jaundice. Liver biopsy reveals the histological changes of acute rejection which consist of (a)a mixed inflammatory cell infiltrate in portal tracts, (b) infiltration and damage to biliary epithelium by inflammatory cells and (c) inflammation of the venous endothelium. T h e infiltrate is largely confined to portal tracts and central venous endothelium with very little inflammation of the liver parenchyma [9-141. Acute rejection usually responds to treatment with high-dose corticosteroids (e.g. 1 g of methylprednisolone/ day intravenously for 3 consecutive days) [ 151. Chronic/irreversiblerejection (VBDS) VBDS may present as early as 2 weeks after transplantation with clinical features similar to those of acute rejection, although in other cases the presentation may be more insidious. VBDS, unlike acute rejection, does not respond to high-dose corticosteroids and there is then a relentless rise in serum bilirubin culminating in graft failure [5,6,8]. The characteristic morphological features are a loss of small bile ducts and arterial lesions. In the initial stages there is active inflammation’ of both portal tracts and medium-sized arteries. Although the inflammation subsides as the condition progresses, the bile duct loss may approach 100% and arteries become occluded by foamy macrophages [5, 8-10, 131. These changes appear to be irreversible and re-transplantation is required [5]. Other patterns of rejection Correspondence: Dr David Adams, Liver Unit, Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Edgbaston, Birmingham B 15 2TH, U.K. Hyperacute rejection, which occurs with renal and cardiac transplants within hours of transplantation, is due 344 D. A d a m to humoral damage associated with preformed cytotoxic antibodies [ 161. It has only recently been recorded after human liver transplantation, despite many transplants being carried out in the presence of positive lymphocytotoxic cross-matches, and must be considered an extremely rare occurrence [ 17, 181. Massive haemorrhagic necrosis is a rare syndrome of fulminant graft failure occurring after several days of normal function. The findings of increased human leucocyte antigen (HLA) expression and immunoglobulin deposition in the graft favour an immunological mechanism, although whether this is due to rejection is unknown since the pathogenesis remains obscure [ 191. These syndromes are both rare and it is not known whether they are genuinely forms of rejection or whether other mechanisms may be involved in their pathogenesis. For this reason they will not be‘discussed further. MECHANISMS OF REJECTION Graft antigens Major histocompatibility antigens. The host immune system must recognize an allograft as being ‘foreign’ before it can mount an immunological reaction against it. Recognition depends on the presence of allogeneic histocompatibility determinants and the most important of these are coded for by the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) [20-221. The function of MHC antigens is to act as recognition signals in lymphocyte reactions, rather than to prevent tissue transplantation. They are essential for the development of both humoral and cell-mediated responses and are involved in recognition of ‘self‘ [23-251. These antigens, termed HLA in man, are encoded for by closely linked genes situated on the short arm of chromosome 6. Class I genes (HLA-A, -B and -C) encode cell-surface antigens that are expressed on the majority of nucleated cells, whereas class I1 genes (HLAD, -DR) encode proteins that are expressed principally on lymphocytes and macrophages but also on some other tissues such as endothelium [26]. The loci within the class I and I1 regions are highly polymorphic giving rise within the population to a large number of different antigenic variants which are unique to the individual. Expression of the gene products is dynamic and can be regulated by many different factors [27]. Rejection of an allograft by an unmodified recipient is determined primarily by incompatibility for these major and, to a lesser extent, minor histocompatibility antigens [28]. Class I antigens consist of a 4 3 kDa glycosylated, transmembrane polypeptide that is non-covalently bound to µglobulin (&M), a 12 kDa polypeptide encoded for by a gene on chromosome 15 [20, 261. The class II antigens are made up of two non-covalently bound, glycosylated transmembrane polypeptides of 33 kDa and 28 kDa, both encoded for by genes in the class I1 region and are subdivided into families HLA-DP, HLA-DR, HLADQ. They are associated with an invariant, transmembrane polypeptide of 30 kDa encoded for on chromosome 5 [29]. Class 1 and class I1 antigens act as restriction elements for the interaction and recognition of T-lymphocytes with their target cells. As a general rule class I antigens serve as the primary targets for cytotoxic T-lymphocytes and class I1 antigens as the primary targets for helper T-lymphocytes [30-321. The expression of MHC antigens varies between different tissues. In human liver HLA class I (ABC)and class I1 (DR, DP, DQ) are found on sinusoidal lining cells, usually only class I on vascular endothelium, and class I and occasionally class I1 antigens on biliary epithelium. Hepatocytes are usually negative for both class I and class I1 expression [33-361. The presence of HLA antigens on biliary epithelium and vascular endothelium may be responsible for the histological distribution of the inflammatory damage during rejection. Antigen presentation. Transplant antigens must be efficiently presented to the recipient immune system to evoke a rejection response [32,37]. This may occur in one of two ways: (i) donor antigen may be processed by host antigen-presenting cells (APCs) and presented in conjunction with host class I1 HLA; (ii) donor antigen can be presented directly to alloantigen-specific host cells by donor APCs without the need for processing by the host or for host class I1 restriction. The second mode of antigen presentation is probably most important in vascularized organ grafts, since direct stimulation by donor cells has been shown to present antigen more strongly than host processing in experimental models [38]. Cells of the macrophage lineage are usually associated with antigen presentation and dendritic cells have been implicated in the pathogenesis of the obliterative arteriopathy of chronic human liver allograft rejection [39]. The cells lining liver sinusoids include macrophages (Kupffer cells) which can present antigens efficiently [40]. It has recently been demonstrated that after human transplantation donor Kupffer cells are replaced by host cells and that this may be increased during episodes of rejection [41, 421. This immigration of host Kupffer cells may be important in determining the eventual acceptance of the graft. Animal studies have shown that both vascular endothelial cells and biliary epithelial cells (although not hepatocytes) are also capable of presenting antigen, which may be another reason for the involvement of these structures in liver rejection [43,44]. Targeted structures in liver allograft rejection. The importance of the biliary epithelium and vascular endothelium as targets for rejection in man is suggested by several studies. Immunohistochemical localization of laminin has demonstrated severe disruption and damage to the basement membrane of both biliary epithelium and vascular endothelium during rejection [45]. Other studies have demonstrated the presence of markers of biliary epithelial damage in bile and of increased levels of hyaluronic acid, a marker of hepatic endothelial cell damage, in serum during rejection episodes [46,47]. Evidence is also available which suggests that HLA are the likely targets on these structures. Lymphocytes isolated from human liver grafts demonstrate alloreactivity towards cells bearing donor HLA. Lymphocytes from Mechanisms of liver allograft rejection patients with intense but reversible infiltrates on liver biopsy more commonly react to class I-bearing cells, whereas class I1 reactivity is more common in patients with severe biliary epithelial damage and VBDS [48,49]. The King’s College Hospital/Cambridge group have shown that VBDS occurs more frequently in patients who are matched for class I1 antigens but mismatched for class I. Their hypothesis is that a class I1 match allows donor cells to act as efficient APCs, thereby generating a response to the foreign class I antigen which results in bile duct damage [SO, 511. Further evidence implicating class I antigens on the biliary epithelium comes from the finding that &M, which is intimately linked to these antigens on the cell surface, is shed into bile during episodes of acute rejection [52]. Moreover, VBDS is associated with the development of circulating antibodies to class I antigens ~ 1 . The expression of HLA antigens on liver components is increased during episodes of rejection. Hepatacytes display a membranous pattern of focal staining for both class I and class I1 antigens and biliary epithelium and vascular endothelium show intense staining for class I and I1 [53-571. This presumably occurs in response to locally produced cytokines (particularly y-interferon) which are known to be capable of increasing tissue expression of MHC products [SS, 591. This will render the tissue more susceptible to T-cell-mediated cytolytic damage [27]. Surprisingly, however, this increase in MHC expression is not specific for rejection and identical patterns can be seen in non-rejection complications after transplantation and in patients in whom rejection has resolved. Other factors must, therefore, be involved before a response to these antigens can be generated. Cellular response to graft antigens The cellular events leading to the development of acute rejection in liver transplantation are possibly as follows (see Fig. 1). (1) APCs (which may include biliary epithelial cells and vascular endothelial cells) present transplant antigens to C D 4 + T-helper cells in the presence of interleukin-1. (2) These T-cells become activated and release lymphokines (including interleukin-2) which lead to the recruitment and proliferation of lymphocytes, some of which have cytotoxic potential. (3) The escalating immunological reaction results in the production of cytokines which attract other cell types such as eosinophils, macrophages and neutrophils. (4) The combination of T-cell cytotoxicity and a more generalized inflammatory response results in damage to the graft and finally clinical rejection. The role of lymphocytes. Results of studies using animal models of transplantation suggest that T-lymphocytes play a central role in instigating the acute inflammatory response to the graft [60-621. Rejection does not occur in animals depleted of helper T-cells but does occur, though delayed and less vigorous, if only cytotoxic T-cells are depleted [63,64]. 345 1DonorMHC I L j A h.\T-cel!-c IL-2R I I I (ii) T-cell activation production I activation 1 1 1 I (v) Effector mechanism Proteolytic enzymes Cytotoxici,,, +free, /Yntibody 0 Graft (vi) Graft damage Fig. 1. The inflammatory ‘cascade’ of rejection. (i) Donor MHC antigens are presented by APCs of either host or donor origin to recipient helper T-cells (TH)which are stimulated to produce interleukin-2 (IL-2). (ii)IL-2 results in the activation and proliferation of other T-cells which express activation markers, such as IL-2 receptors (IL2R). (iii) Activated lymphocytes secrete lymphokines (IFN, interferon; NAF, neutrophil-activating factors; IL-4, interleukin-4). (iv) These lymphokines are capable of recruiting and activating other inflammatory cells (MO, macrophages; PMN, neutrophils, T,, cytotoxic T-cells). (v) The generalized inflammatory response results in several effector mechanism capable of causing graft damage. Information about the cell types involved in rejection of human liver allografts has come from studies using monoclonal antibodies which recognize surface determinants on leucocytes. Immunohistochemical analysis of liver biopsies from patients with rejection shows that T-cells are the most common infiltrating cell type but that substantial numbers of B-cells, monocytes, macrophages and neutrophils are also present [53]. Both helper (CD4 + ) and suppressor (CD8 + ) T-lymphocytes accumulate in portal tracts and around small bile ducts (the presumed site of antigen exposure), during rejection [65]. Perkins et al. [66] suggested that the presence of a predominantly C D 4 + T-cell infiltrate indicates that the rejection episode will respond to corticosteroids, whereas a predominantly CD8 + infiltrate is associated with irreversible rejection. Since CD8 + lymphocytes respond primarily to class I HLA antigens, this is compatible with the King’s College Hospital/ 346 D. Adams Cambridge theory that class 1 mismatches may be important in the irreversible rejection of the VBDS [SO, 5 11. So et al. [67] have demonstrated, using a murine mixed lymphocyte/hepatocyte culture system, that cytolytic lymphocytes can inhibit hepatocyte functions, such as protein synthesis, without causing cell lysis. Accessory cells were necessary to instigate the response, reflecting the inability of hepatocytes to act as APCs. Although hepatocyte damage tends to be a late event in vivo, this work suggests that cytotoxic T-cells may be important in causing liver damage during episodes of rejection. Not all infiltrating lymphocytes respond to HLA antigens [48, 491 and the function of these remaining T-cells and of the other cell types is uncertain, as are the mechanisms causing their recruitment to the graft. Cellular recruitment to the graft. There are two ways by which T-cells may accumulate at the site of rejection: they may be either continually attracted to the site by ctemotactic factors; or, after initial migration, they may proliferate in sifcc in the presence of T-cell growth factors. Circulating T-cell counts increase bcfore rejection of liver allografts in man and there are increased numbers of CD8 + and C D 4 + cells within the liver during rejection [65, 68, 691. This is consistent with the hypothesis that T-cells move preferentially from the periphery to accumulate within the graft. Proliferation of T-cells in sim has been demonstrated in experimental models [60, 701, although whether this occurs during graft rejection in man is unknown. Since the inflammatory infiltrate of liver rejection is centred on small bile ducts, bile provides direct access to the microenvironment of the rejection process and an opportunity to investigate factors which are locally active within portal tracts. The routine use of an externally draining T-tube for the first 3 months after human liver transplantation allows frequent bile sampling to be carried out. The study of sequential bile samples from patients after liver transplantation has revealed a dynamic pattern of leucocyte chemotactic activity for different cell types. Bile contains chemotactic factors for lymphocytes before the onset of clinical rejection. The activity of these factors subsequently decreases and is replaced, when rejection becomes apparent clinically, by chemotactic activity for monocytes and neutrophils [7 11. This suggests that lymphocytes may be attracted to the graft early in the rejection process and that the subsequent attraction of other inflammatory cells could be responsible for the onset of symptoms and the tissue destruction which is characteristic of rejection. The nature of thcse chemotactic factors is unknown. Chemotaetic factors for T-lymphocytes include interleukin-1 and interleukin-2 and several T-lymphocytespecific lymphokines [72-741. There are many potential chemotactic factors for monocytes and neutrophils, including prostaglandins, leukotrienes and products of mononuclear cells, such as neutrophil-activating factor [75, 761. The neutrophil and monocyte chemotactic activity in bile may be due to factors secreted by activated lymphocytes within portal tracts, since thesc factors appear in bile after the increase in lymphocyte chemo- tactic activity. Lymphocyte activation markers have been detected in bile during episodes of rejection in man and activated lymphocytes have been isolated from the liver by fine-needle aspiration cytology [77, 781. Activated lymphocytes are capable of producing neutrophil chemotactic factors iw vifro [79] and, fwthermore, lymphocytes cultured from patients with acute liver rejection have recently been shown to produce a neutrophil chemotactic factor [SO]. Effector mechanisms. The role of cytotoxic T-cells in mediating graft damage is discussed above. Animal studies have suggested that other leucocytes may be involved, resulting in an inflammatory cascade and a number of different effector mechanisms. This concept is supported by morphological studies in human liver rejection. It has been recognized for several years that the infiltrate of acute rejection contains, not only lymphocytes, but also large numbers of monocytes, neutrophils and eosinophils. The presence of the latter two cell types was recently shown to be a reliable predictor of rejection P , 8 11. Neutrophils. Recent work has demonstrated that neutrophils isolated from patients after liver transplantation become activated shortly before the onset of clinical rejection. This activation is suppressed in those patients who respond to treatment with high-dose corticosteroids [SO].The activated cells are capable of releasing increased amounts of superoxide radicals and proteolytic enzymes, both of which may cause tissue damage [S2,83]. Neutrophils may, therefore, play an important role in the pathogenesis of acute rejection. Monocytes/macrophages. Delayed-type hypersensitivity, involving activation of macrophages or other cells with surface receptors for the Fc portion of immunoglobulin G, has been implicated in animal studies, although there is no direct evidence that such processes play a role in human liver rejection [84,85]. Natural killer cells. Natural killer cells have been detected in renal allografts in large numbers during rejection and are capable of causing tissue damage in a nonMHC restricted manner [86]. Their importance in liver rejection in man is unknown. Eosinophils. In man rejection of the liver is associated with both graft and peripheral eosinophilia [87]. Eosinophils can inhibit some immunological reactions and can release a toxic substance (eosinophil major basic protein) which has cytotoxic properties [88].However, the role of these cells during rejection is unknown. Humoral mechanisms. Humoral mechanisms are important in rejection of renal transplants and there is increasing evidence that they may be important in human liver rejection [S9]. TWOstudies have reported increased levels of anti-class I cytotoxic antibodies in patients with rejection [50, 901 and immunohistochemical studies have reported the deposition of significant amounts of immunoglobulin, particularly immunoglobulin M, in arterial walls of rejected livers [91]. Recent studies suggest that humoral mechanisms may be of particular importance in the rejection of ABO incompatible grafts [92]. Other factors. Soluble factors such as cytokines and Mechanisms of liver allograft rejection arachidonic acid metabolites may exacerbate graft damage. Tumour necrosis factor, which is produced by activated macrophages, has cytotoxic properties [93] and prostaglandins and leukotrienes, the end-products of the cyclo-oxygenase and lipoxygenase pathways of arachidonic metabolism, respectively, are powerful mediators of inflammation [94]. Prostaglandins cause an increase in vascular permeability, the recruitment of inflammatory cells and alterations in leucocyte adherence to endothelium. Leukotrienes are chemotactic and also affect vascular permeability. Other leucocyte products, such as platelet-activating factor and neutrophil-activating factor, may be important in activating and recruiting inflammatory cells [95]. It has been suggested that coexistent viral infection may lead to the induction or amplification of rejection [96,97, 5 11. An association has been reported between cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection and graft rejection in human renal transplantation [96] and the King’s College Hospital/Cambridge group have reported that CMV infection is a risk factor for the development of the VBDS variant of liver allograft rejection [5I]. These associations may be related to some of the immunomodulating properties of CMV. In murine experiments CMV infection was shown to augment the host’s ability to mount a cytotoxic response against allogeneic histocompatibility antigens [98]. In human renal transplantation CMV infection leads to an increase in expression of class 11 antigens on renal tubular cells [96]. These effects may be mediated by CMV-induced cytokines since y-interferon is capable of inducing HLA expression in vifro [58, 591. Although the concept of infections amplifying or initiating the rejection process is theoretically attractive, the mechanisms of such interactions, and their clinical importance, remain poorly understood. IMMUNOSUPPRESSION If several different effector mechanisms are involved in rejection, immunosuppressive therapy may need to be aimed at suppressing other immune processes as well as lymphocyte function. Most liver transplant centres use cyclosporin for maintenance immunosuppression, either alone or in conjunction with corticosteroids and azathioprine [ 151. Cyclosporin produces suppression of T-lymphocyte function with little effect on other immune mechanisms [15], whereas corticosteroids and azathioprine both have wider effects on the immune system. Corticosteroids have been shown to suppress neutrophil activation [99] and recent work from our laboratory has demonstrated that azathioprine can inhibit neutrophil chemotaxis and block the production of neutrophil-activating factors by cultured lymphocytes (D. Adams & L. Wang, unpublished work). Maintenance immunosuppression with all three drugs may, therefore, offer advantages over cyclosporin monotherapy. Experience from renal transplantation suggests that combination therapy is at least as effective as monotherapy in preventing rejection and that it is not asso- 347 ciated with an increase in opportunistic infections [ 1001. However, the efficacy and safety of such treatment in human liver transplantation is unknown. Episodes of acute rejection do not usually respond to cyclosporin but require treatment with high-dose corticosteroids [6, 151. This may reflect the involvement of effector mechanisms, such as neutrophil activation, which are suppressed by corticosteroids but not by the more specific cyclosporin. If neutrophils are important in causing the tissue damage of acute rejection, other treatments capable of protecting tissues from neutrophilmediated damage may be useful adjuvants to conventional immunosuppressive therapy. N-Acetylcysteine and dimethylthiourea are two such agents which have the advantage of not suppressing the immune response to infections [loll. WHICH PATIENTS REJECTION? DEVELOP IRREVERSIBLE It is not known whether acute/reversible rejection and irreversible/chronic rejection (VBDS) are part of the same process or whether the pathogenesis of each is different. In most patients VBDS follows an earlier episode of ‘acute rejection’ and attempts have been made to find factors which may differentiate between reversible acute rejection and the onset of VBDS. Since the lesions of endstage VBDS include arterial thickening and a loss of bile ducts, studies have focused on damage to these structures. There is evidence for increased endothelial damage during the early inflammatory episodes in VBDS both histologically [2] and from elevated levels of hyaluronic acid, a marker of hepatic endothelial damage [46]. In addition, it is claimed that increased levels of glutamyl transpeptidase ( y-glutamyltransferase, E C 2.3.2.2) reflect more severe bile duct damage [ 1021. However, endothelial and bile duct damage are also features of acute reversible rejection. A different pathogenesis for VBDS is suggested by the association with infection reported by the Cambridge/ King’s College Hospital Group [Sl]. This study also showed VBDS to be independently associated with a class I HLA mismatch and it is possible that CMV infection promotes a continuing immune response to HLA antigens on bile ducts. This may be related to an increase in the expression of HLA antigens on biliary epithelium secondary to y-interferon production as discussed above [58, 591. Further studies examining the interaction of CMV and liver cell components are awaited. Although the early lesions of VBDS are characterized by intense inflammation in portal tracts, serum markers of lymphocyte activation decrease as the condition proceeds and the end-stage liver often contains a minimal inflammatory infiltrate [77]. This may reflect diminishing antigen challenge, since by this time there are few remaining bile ducts and arteries demonstrate intimal thickening and sclerosis. Future studies should therefore be concerned with attempts to reduce or control the early intense inflammatory reactions which precede this irreversible damage. 348 D. Adams CONCLUSIONS Although lymphocytes probably instigate liver allograft rejection, the tissue damage and clinical features may result from the activation of several effector mechanisms. Rather than viewing rejection as a mainly T-cell-mediated process, it is perhaps more accurate to consider it a n inflammatory cascade resulting in the activation of neutrophils, macrophages and B-cells as well as cytotoxic T-cells. This concept of rejection has implications for treatment, since most treatment is aimed at suppressing lymphocyte activity. Therapies which suppress other inflammatory mechanisms may also have an important role in reducing damage t o the graft during rejection. However, any broadening of immunosuppression must take into account the potential increased risks of opportunistic infection. 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