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Publication — IRIC

SMAD3 prevents graft-versus-host disease by restraining Th1 differentiation and granulocyte-mediated tissue damage.

Gene expression profiling of human donor T cells before allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation revealed that expression of selected genes correlated with the occurrence of graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) in recipients. The gene with the best GVHD predictive accuracy was SMAD3, a core component of the transforming growth factor-β signaling pathway, whose expression levels vary more than a 6-fold range in humans. The putative role of SMAD3 in the establishment of graft-host tolerance remained elusive. We report that SMAD3-KO mice present ostensibly normal lymphoid and myeloid cell subsets. However, the lack of SMAD3 dramatically increased the frequency and severity of GVHD after allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation into major histocompatibility complex-identical recipients. Lethal GVHD induced by SMAD3-KO donors affected mainly the intestine and resulted from massive tissue infiltration by T-bet(+) CD4 T cells and granulocytes that caused tissue damage by in situ release of Th1 cytokines and oxidative-nitrosative mediators, respectively. Our report reveals the nonredundant roles of SMAD3 in the development of tolerance to the host. Furthermore, our data support the concept that SMAD3 levels in donor cells dictate the risk of GVHD and that SMAD3 agonists would be attractive for prevention of GVHD.

Publication date
February 3, 2011
Principal Investigators
Giroux M, Delisle JS, Gauthier SD, Heinonen KM, Hinsinger J, Houde B, Gaboury L, Brochu S, Wu J, Hébert MJ, Perreault C
PubMed reference
Blood 2011;117(5):1734-44
PubMed ID
21119112
Affiliation
Institute for Research in Immunology and Cancer, Station Centre-Ville,Montreal, QC, Canada.