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A Three-Gene Assay for Monitoring Immune Quiescence in Kidney Transplantation

Authors :
Minnie M. Sarwal
Silke Roedder
Szu-Chuan Hsieh
Ron Shapiro
Oscar Salvatierra
Tara K. Sigdel
Camila Macedo
Diana Metes
Hong Dai
Edgar G. Engleman
John D. Scandling
Minh Thien Vu
A. Zeevi
Josefina AlberĂș
Li Li
Michael N. Alonso
Ian C. Bostock
Source :
Journal of the American Society of Nephrology : JASN. 26(8)
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Organ transplant recipients face life-long immunosuppression and consequently are at high risk of comorbidities. Occasionally, kidney transplant recipients develop a state of targeted immune quiescence (operational tolerance) against an HLA-mismatched graft, allowing them to withdraw all immunosuppression and retain stable graft function while resuming immune responses to third-party antigens. Methods to better understand and monitor this state of alloimmune quiescence by transcriptional profiling may reveal a gene signature that identifies patients for whom immunosuppression could be titrated to reduce patient and graft morbidities. Therefore, we investigated 571 unique peripheral blood samples from 348 HLA-mismatched renal transplant recipients and 101 nontransplant controls in a four-stage study including microarray, quantitative PCR, and flow cytometry analyses. We report a refined and highly validated (area under the curve, 0.95; 95% confidence interval, 0.92 to 0.97) peripheral blood three-gene assay (KLF6, BNC2, CYP1B1) to detect the state of operational tolerance by quantitative PCR. The frequency of predicted alloimmune quiescence in stable renal transplant patients receiving long-term immunosuppression (n=150) was 7.3% by the three-gene assay. Targeted cell sorting of peripheral blood from operationally tolerant patients showed a significant shift in the ratio of circulating monocyte-derived dendritic cells with significantly different expression of the genes constituting the three-gene assay. Our results suggest that incorporation of patient screening by specific cellular and gene expression assays may support the safety of drug minimization trials and protocols.

Details

ISSN :
15333450
Volume :
26
Issue :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the American Society of Nephrology : JASN
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7964c692ce7ab157e7b2d259b40ae56b