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Article
Nature Medicine  7, 738 - 741 (2001)
doi:10.1038/89121

Host bone-marrow cells are a source of donor intimal smooth- muscle−like cells in murine aortic transplant arteriopathy

Koichi Shimizu1, Seigo Sugiyama1, Masanori Aikawa1, Yoshihiro Fukumoto1, Elena Rabkin2, Peter Libby1 & Richard N. Mitchell2

1  Leducq Center for Cardiovascular Research, Cardiovascular Division, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA

2  Department of Pathology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA

Correspondence should be addressed to Richard N. Mitchell rmitchell@rics.bwh.harvard.edu
Long-term solid-organ allografts typically develop diffuse arterial intimal lesions (graft arterial disease; GAD), consisting of smooth-muscle cells (SMC), extracellular matrix and admixed mononuclear leukocytes. GAD eventually culminates in vascular stenosis and ischemic graft failure. Although the exact mechanisms are unknown, chronic low-level alloresponses likely induce inflammatory cells and/or dysfunctional vascular wall cells to secrete growth factors that promote SMC intimal recruitment, proliferation and matrix synthesis1, 2, 3. Although prior work demonstrated that the endothelium and medial SMCs lining GAD lesions in cardiac allografts are donor-derived, the intimal SMC origin could not be determined4. They are generally presumed to originate from the donor media5, leading to interventions that target donor medial SMC proliferation, with limited efficacy6, 7. However, other reports indicate that allograft vessels may contain host-derived endothelium and SMCs (refs. 8,9). Moreover, subpopulations of bone-marrow and circulating cells can differentiate into endothelium10, 11, and implanted synthetic vascular grafts are seeded by host SMCs and endothelium12, 13. Here we used murine aortic transplants to formally identify the source of SMCs in GAD lesions. Allografts in beta-galactosidase transgenic recipients showed that intimal SMCs derived almost exclusively from host cells. Bone-marrow transplantation of beta-galactosidase−expressing cells into aortic allograft recipients demonstrated that intimal cells included those of marrow origin. Thus, smooth-muscle−like cells in GAD lesions can originate from circulating bone-marrow−derived precursors.

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Nature Medicine
ISSN: 1078-8956
EISSN: 1546-170X
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