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. 2017 Feb;36(2):227-236.
doi: 10.1016/j.healun.2016.07.016. Epub 2016 Jul 27.

Tanshinol suppresses cardiac allograft rejection in a murine model

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Tanshinol suppresses cardiac allograft rejection in a murine model

Chuanjian Lu et al. J Heart Lung Transplant. 2017 Feb.

Erratum in

  • Explanation of article irregularity.
    Dai Z. Dai Z. J Heart Lung Transplant. 2020 Sep;39(9):995-996. doi: 10.1016/j.healun.2020.07.002. Epub 2020 Jul 10. J Heart Lung Transplant. 2020. PMID: 32891267 No abstract available.

Abstract

Background: Achieving long-term cardiac allograft survival without continuous immunosuppression is highly desired in organ transplantation. Studies have shown that Salvia miltiorrhiza, an herb also known as danshen, improves microcirculation and is highly effective in treating coronary heart disease. Our objective is to determine whether tanshinol, an ingredient of danshen, improves cardiac allograft survival.

Methods: Fully vascularized heterotopic heart transplantation was performed using BALB/c mice as donors and C57BL/6 mice as recipients, which were then treated with tanshinol and rapamycin. CD4+FoxP3+ regulatory T cells (Tregs) were quantified by flow analyses, whereas CCL22 was measured by real-time polymerase chain reaction and Western blotting.

Results: We found that tanshinol significantly delayed cardiac allograft rejection. It promoted long-term allograft survival induced by rapamycin, a mammalian target-of-rapamycin (mTOR) inhibitor. Tanshinol increased CD4+FoxP3+ Treg numbers in cardiac allografts, but not spleens and lymph nodes, of recipient mice by enhancing chemokine CCL22 expression in cardiac allografts, especially cardiac dendritic cells. In contrast, rapamycin increased Treg numbers in both lymphoid organs and allografts, suggesting that it generally expands Tregs. Moreover, Tregs induced by rapamycin plus tanshinol were more potent in suppressing T-cell proliferation in vitro than those from untreated recipients. Neutralizing CCL22 hindered CD4+FoxP3+ Treg migration to cardiac allografts and reversed long-term allograft survival induced by tanshinol plus rapamycin.

Conclusions: Tanshinol suppresses cardiac allograft rejection by recruiting CD4+FoxP3+ Tregs to the graft, whereas rapamycin does so via expanding the Tregs. Thus, tanshinol cooperates with rapamycin to further extend cardiac allograft survival.

Keywords: Chinese medicine; allograft survival; chemokine; heart; regulatory T cells; transplantation.

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