Signaling through the type 2 cannabinoid receptor regulates the severity of acute and chronic graft-versus-host disease.
Author: Yuan, Cheng-Yin; Zhou, Vivian; Sauber, Garrett; Stollenwerk, Todd; Komorowski, Richard; López, Alicia; Tolón, Rosa María; Romero, Julián
; Hillard, Cecilia J.; Drobyski, William R.
Abstract: Graft versus host disease (GVHD) pathophysiology is a complex interplay between cells that comprise
the adaptive and innate arms of the immune system. Effective prophylactic strategies are therefore
contingent upon approaches that address contributions from both immune cell compartments. In the
current study, we examined the role of the type 2 cannabinoid receptor (CB2R) which is expressed on
nearly all immune cells and demonstrated that absence of the CB2R on donor CD4+ or CD8+ T cells, or
administration of a selective CB2R pharmacological antagonist, exacerbated acute GVHD lethality. This
was accompanied primarily by the expansion of proinflammatory CD8+ T cells indicating that constitutive
CB2R expression on T cells preferentially regulated CD8+ T cell alloreactivity. Using a novel CB2REGFP
reporter mouse, we observed significant loss of CB2R expression on T cells, but not macrophages,
during acute GVHD, indicative of differential alterations in receptor expression under inflammatory
conditions. Therapeutic targeting of the CB2R with the agonists, tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and JWH-
133, revealed that only THC mitigated lethal T cell-mediated acute GVHD. Conversely, only JWH-133
was effective in a sclerodermatous chronic GVHD model where macrophages contribute to disease
biology. In vitro, both THC and JWH-133 induced arrestin recruitment and ERK phosphorylation via
CB2R, but THC had no effect on CB2R-mediated inhibition of adenylyl cyclase. These studies
demonstrate that the CB2R plays a critical role in the regulation of GVHD and suggest that effective
therapeutic targeting is dependent upon agonist signaling characteristics and receptor selectivity in
conjunction with the composition of pathogenic immune effector cells.
Files in this item
Files | Size | Format | View |
---|---|---|---|
1.- Signaling through the type ... | 2.021Mb | View/ |
Collections
- CIENCIAS EXPERIMENTALES [175]