ABSTRACT
Several studies have shown that the pre-vaccination immune state is associated with the antibody response to vaccination. However, the generalizability and mechanisms that underlie this association remain poorly defined. Here, we sought to identify a common pre-vaccination signature and mechanisms that could predict the immune response across 13 different vaccines. Analysis of blood transcriptional profiles across studies revealed three distinct pre-vaccination endotypes, characterized by the differential expression of genes associated with a pro-inflammatory response, cell proliferation, and metabolism alterations. Importantly, individuals whose pre-vaccination endotype was enriched in pro-inflammatory response genes known to be downstream of nuclear factor-kappa B showed significantly higher serum antibody responses 1 month after vaccination. This pro-inflammatory pre-vaccination endotype showed gene expression characteristic of the innate activation state triggered by Toll-like receptor ligands or adjuvants. These results demonstrate that wide variations in the transcriptional state of the immune system in humans can be a key determinant of responsiveness to vaccination.
Subject(s)
Antibody Formation , Vaccines , Humans , Vaccination , Adjuvants, Immunologic , Immunity, InnateABSTRACT
Cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection is associated with graft rejection in renal transplantation. Memory-like natural killer (NK) cells expressing NKG2C and lacking FcεRIγ are established during CMV infection. Additionally, CD8+ T cells expressing NKG2C have been observed in some CMV-seropositive patients. However, in vivo kinetics detailing the development and differentiation of these lymphocyte subsets during CMV infection remain limited. Here, we interrogated the in vivo kinetics of lymphocytes in CMV-infected renal transplant patients using longitudinal samples compared with those of nonviremic (NV) patients. Recipient CMV-seropositive (R+) patients had preexisting memory-like NK cells (NKG2C+CD57+FcεRIγ-) at baseline, which decreased in the periphery immediately after transplantation in both viremic and NV patients. We identified a subset of prememory-like NK cells (NKG2C+CD57+FcεRIγlow-dim) that increased during viremia in R+ viremic patients. These cells showed a higher cytotoxic profile than preexisting memory-like NK cells with transient up-regulation of FcεRIγ and Ki67 expression at the acute phase, with the subsequent accumulation of new memory-like NK cells at later phases of viremia. Furthermore, cytotoxic NKG2C+CD8+ T cells and γδ T cells significantly increased in viremic patients but not in NV patients. These three different cytotoxic cells combinatorially responded to viremia, showing a relatively early response in R+ viremic patients compared with recipient CMV-seronegative viremic patients. All viremic patients, except one, overcame viremia and did not experience graft rejection. These data provide insights into the in vivo dynamics and interplay of cytotoxic lymphocytes responding to CMV viremia, which are potentially linked with control of CMV viremia to prevent graft rejection.
Subject(s)
Cytomegalovirus Infections/immunology , Flow Cytometry/methods , Killer Cells, Natural/metabolism , Adult , CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes/metabolism , Cell Separation/methods , Cytomegalovirus/metabolism , Cytomegalovirus/pathogenicity , Cytomegalovirus Infections/virology , Female , Graft Rejection/immunology , Humans , Kidney Transplantation/adverse effects , Kidney Transplantation/methods , Killer Cells, Natural/immunology , Kinetics , Lymphocyte Activation/immunology , Male , Middle Aged , NK Cell Lectin-Like Receptor Subfamily C/metabolism , Single-Cell Analysis/methods , Viremia/immunology , Viremia/virologyABSTRACT
Pancreas transplantation improves glycemic control and mortality in patients with diabetes but requires aggressive immunosuppression to control the alloimmune and autoimmune response. Recent developments in "omics" methods have provided gene transcript-based biomarkers for organ transplant rejection. The tissue Common Response Module (tCRM) score is developed to identify the severity of rejection in kidney, heart, liver, and lung transplants. Still, it has not yet been validated in pancreas transplants (PT). We evaluated the tCRM score's relevance in PT and additional markers of acute cellular rejection (ACR) for PT. An analysis of 51 pancreas biopsies with ACR identified 37 genes and 56 genes significantly upregulated in the case of grade 3 and grade 2 ACR, respectively (P < .05). Significant differences were seen with higher grades of rejection among several transcripts. Of the 22 genes differentially expressed in grade 3 ACR, 18 were also differentially expressed in grade 2 ACR. The rejection signal was attributable to activated leukocytes' infiltration. Significantly higher tCRM scores were found in grade 3 ACR (P = .007) and grade 2 ACR (P = .004), compared to normal samples. The tCRM score was able to distinguish treatment-resistant cases from those successfully treated for rejection.
ABSTRACT
Ever since the discovery of the major histocompatibility complex, scientific and clinical understanding in the field of transplantation has been advanced through genetic and genomic studies. Candidate-gene approaches and recent genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have enabled a deeper understanding of the complex interplay of the donor-recipient interactions that lead to transplant tolerance or rejection. Genetic analysis in transplantation, when linked to demographic and clinical outcomes, has the potential to drive personalized medicine by enabling individualized risk stratification and immunosuppression through the identification of variants associated with immune-mediated complications, post-transplant disease or alterations in drug-metabolizing genes.
Subject(s)
Genetic Testing/methods , Genetic Variation/genetics , Genomics/methods , Graft Rejection/genetics , Organ Transplantation , Precision Medicine , Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Genome-Wide Association Study , HumansABSTRACT
Maintenance of systemic homeostasis by kidney requires the coordinated response of diverse cell types. The use of single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNAseq) for patient tissue samples remains fraught with difficulties with cell isolation, purity, and experimental bias. The ability to characterize immune and parenchymal cells during transplant rejection will be invaluable in defining transplant pathology where tissue availability is restricted to needle biopsy fragments. Herein, we present feasibility data for multiplexing approach for droplet scRNAseq (Mux-Seq). Mux-Seq has the potential to minimize experimental batch bias and variation even with very small sample input. In this first proof-of-concept study for this approach, explant tissues from six normal and two transplant recipients after multiple early post-transplant rejection episodes leading to nephrectomy due to aggressive antibody mediated rejection, were pooled for Mux-Seq. A computational tool, Demuxlet was applied for demultiplexing the individual cells from the pooled experiment. Each sample was also applied individually in a single microfluidic run (singleplex) to correlate results with the pooled data from the same sample. Our applied protocol demonstrated that data from Mux-Seq correlated highly with singleplex (Pearson coefficient 0.982) sequencing results, with the ability to identify many known and novel kidney cell types including different infiltrating immune cells. Trajectory analysis of proximal tubule and endothelial cells demonstrated separation between healthy and injured kidney from transplant explant suggesting evolving stages of cell- specific differentiation in alloimmune injury. This study provides the technical groundwork for understanding the pathogenesis of alloimmune injury and host tissue response in transplant rejection and normal human kidney and provides a protocol for optimized processing precious and low input human kidney biopsy tissue for larger scale studies.
Subject(s)
Endothelial Cells , Kidney Transplantation , Allografts , Graft Rejection/etiology , Graft Rejection/genetics , Humans , Kidney/pathology , Kidney Transplantation/adverse effectsABSTRACT
Blocking the complement system as a therapeutic strategy has been proposed for numerous glomerular diseases but presents myriad questions and challenges, not the least of which is demonstrating efficacy and safety. In light of these potential issues and because there are an increasing number of anticomplement therapy trials either planned or under way, the National Kidney Foundation facilitated an all-virtual scientific workshop entitled "Improving Clinical Trials for Anti-Complement Therapies in Complement-Mediated Glomerulopathies." Attended by patient representatives and experts in glomerular diseases, complement physiology, and clinical trial design, the aim of this workshop was to develop standards applicable for designing and conducting clinical trials for anticomplement therapies across a wide spectrum of complement-mediated glomerulopathies. Discussions focused on study design, participant risk assessment and mitigation, laboratory measurements and biomarkers to support these studies, and identification of optimal outcome measures to detect benefit, specifically for trials in complement-mediated diseases. This report summarizes the discussions from this workshop and outlines consensus recommendations.
Subject(s)
Complement Inactivator Proteins , Kidney Diseases , Complement Inactivator Proteins/therapeutic use , Complement System Proteins , Humans , KidneyABSTRACT
Comprehensive and spatially mapped molecular atlases of organs at a cellular level are a critical resource to gain insights into pathogenic mechanisms and personalized therapies for diseases. The Kidney Precision Medicine Project (KPMP) is an endeavor to generate three-dimensional (3-D) molecular atlases of healthy and diseased kidney biopsies by using multiple state-of-the-art omics and imaging technologies across several institutions. Obtaining rigorous and reproducible results from disparate methods and at different sites to interrogate biomolecules at a single-cell level or in 3-D space is a significant challenge that can be a futile exercise if not well controlled. We describe a "follow the tissue" pipeline for generating a reliable and authentic single-cell/region 3-D molecular atlas of human adult kidney. Our approach emphasizes quality assurance, quality control, validation, and harmonization across different omics and imaging technologies from sample procurement, processing, storage, shipping to data generation, analysis, and sharing. We established benchmarks for quality control, rigor, reproducibility, and feasibility across multiple technologies through a pilot experiment using common source tissue that was processed and analyzed at different institutions and different technologies. A peer review system was established to critically review quality control measures and the reproducibility of data generated by each technology before their being approved to interrogate clinical biopsy specimens. The process established economizes the use of valuable biopsy tissue for multiomics and imaging analysis with stringent quality control to ensure rigor and reproducibility of results and serves as a model for precision medicine projects across laboratories, institutions and consortia.
Subject(s)
Guidelines as Topic , Kidney/pathology , Precision Medicine , Biopsy , Humans , Reproducibility of ResultsABSTRACT
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) and acute kidney injury (AKI) are common, heterogeneous, and morbid diseases. Mechanistic characterization of CKD and AKI in patients may facilitate a precision-medicine approach to prevention, diagnosis, and treatment. The Kidney Precision Medicine Project aims to ethically and safely obtain kidney biopsies from participants with CKD or AKI, create a reference kidney atlas, and characterize disease subgroups to stratify patients based on molecular features of disease, clinical characteristics, and associated outcomes. An additional aim is to identify critical cells, pathways, and targets for novel therapies and preventive strategies. This project is a multicenter prospective cohort study of adults with CKD or AKI who undergo a protocol kidney biopsy for research purposes. This investigation focuses on kidney diseases that are most prevalent and therefore substantially burden the public health, including CKD attributed to diabetes or hypertension and AKI attributed to ischemic and toxic injuries. Reference kidney tissues (for example, living-donor kidney biopsies) will also be evaluated. Traditional and digital pathology will be combined with transcriptomic, proteomic, and metabolomic analysis of the kidney tissue as well as deep clinical phenotyping for supervised and unsupervised subgroup analysis and systems biology analysis. Participants will be followed prospectively for 10 years to ascertain clinical outcomes. Cell types, locations, and functions will be characterized in health and disease in an open, searchable, online kidney tissue atlas. All data from the Kidney Precision Medicine Project will be made readily available for broad use by scientists, clinicians, and patients.
Subject(s)
Acute Kidney Injury , Renal Insufficiency, Chronic , Acute Kidney Injury/diagnosis , Acute Kidney Injury/epidemiology , Acute Kidney Injury/therapy , Adult , Humans , Kidney , Precision Medicine , Prospective Studies , Proteomics , Renal Insufficiency, Chronic/diagnosis , Renal Insufficiency, Chronic/epidemiology , Renal Insufficiency, Chronic/therapyABSTRACT
OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the utility of kidney injury test (KIT) assay urinary biomarkers to detect kidney stones and quantify stone burden. PATIENTS AND METHODS: A total of 136 spot urine samples from 98 individuals, with and without kidney stone disease, were processed in a predefined assay to measure six DNA and protein markers in order to generate a risk score for the non-invasive detection of nephrolithiasis. From this cohort, 56 individuals had spot, non-timed urine samples collected at the time of radiographically confirmed kidney stones, and 54 demographically matched, healthy controls without kidney stone disease also provided spot, non-timed urine samples. Sixteen individuals with persistent stone disease had more than one urine sample. Using a proprietary microwell-based KIT assay, we measured cell-free DNA (cfDNA), methylated cfDNA, clusterin, creatinine, protein and CXCL10. A KIT stone score was computed across all markers using the prior locked KIT algorithm. The KIT stone score, with a scale of 0 to 100, was then correlated with demographic variables, kidney stone burden, obstructive kidney stone disease, and urine solutes in 24-h urine collections. RESULTS: The scaled KIT stone score, a composite of all six biomarkers, readily discriminated individuals with current or prior radiographically confirmed kidney stones from healthy controls without kidney stone disease (P < 0.001). In individuals with nephrolithiasis, KIT stone score also correlated with radiologically measured stone size (P = 0.017) and differentiated patients with a clinical radiological diagnosis of obstructive nephrolithiasis associated with upper renal tract dilatation (P = 0.001). Stone burden as assessed by KIT stone score, however, did not correlate with the any of the traditional measures of 24-h urine solutes or the 24-h urine supersaturation levels. In patients with persistent stone disease, where multiple urine samples were collected over time and after different interventions, the use of KIT stone score could non-invasively track stone burden over time through a spot urine, non-timed urine sample. CONCLUSIONS: A random, spot urine-based assay, KIT stone score, can non-invasively detect, quantify and monitor current stone burden, and may thus minimize radiographic exposure for kidney stone detection. The KIT stone score assay may also help monitor stone recurrence risk for patients with nephrolithiasis, without the requirement for 24-h urine collections.
Subject(s)
Biological Assay/methods , Creatinine/urine , Kidney Calculi/diagnosis , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Biomarkers/urine , Female , Humans , Kidney Calculi/urine , Male , Middle Aged , Young AdultABSTRACT
Mass cytometry is a powerful tool for high-dimensional single cell characterization. Since the introduction of the first commercial CyTOF mass cytometer by DVS Sciences in 2009, mass cytometry technology has matured and become more widely utilized, with sequential platform upgrades designed to address specific limitations and to expand the capabilities of the platform. Fluidigm's third-generation Helios mass cytometer introduced a number of upgrades over the previous CyTOF2. One of these new features is a modified narrow bore sample injector that generates smaller ion clouds, which is expected to improve sensitivity and throughput. However, following rigorous testing, we find that the narrow-bore sample injector may have unintended negative consequences on data quality and result in lower median and higher coefficients of variation in many antibody-associated signal intensities. We describe an alternative Helios acquisition protocol using a wider bore injector, which largely mitigates these data quality issues. We directly compare these two protocols in a multisite study of 10 Helios instruments across 7 institutions and show that the modified protocol improves data quality and reduces interinstrument variability. These findings highlight and address an important source of technical variability in mass cytometry experiments that is of particular relevance in the setting of multicenter studies. © 2019 International Society for Advancement of Cytometry.
Subject(s)
Flow Cytometry/methods , Single-Cell Analysis/instrumentation , Antibodies , Flow Cytometry/instrumentation , Humans , Immunophenotyping/standards , Leukocytes, Mononuclear/cytology , Leukocytes, Mononuclear/metabolism , Lymphocytes/cytology , Lymphocytes/metabolism , Reproducibility of Results , Single-Cell Analysis/methodsABSTRACT
Standard methods for detecting and monitoring of IgA nephropathy (IgAN) have conventionally required kidney biopsies or suffer from poor sensitivity and specificity. The Kidney Injury Test (KIT) Assay of urinary biomarkers has previously been shown to distinguish between various kidney pathologies, including chronic kidney disease, nephrolithiasis, and transplant rejection. This validation study uses the KIT Assay to investigate the clinical utility of the non-invasive detection of IgAN and predicting the progression of renal damage over time. The study design benefits from longitudinally collected urine samples from an investigator-initiated, multicenter, prospective study, evaluating the efficacy of corticosteroids versus Rituximab for preventing progressive IgAN. A total of 131 urine samples were processed for this study; 64 urine samples were collected from 34 IgAN patients, and urine samples from 64 demographically matched healthy controls were also collected; multiple urinary biomarkers consisting of cell-free DNA, methylated cell-free DNA, DMAIMO, MAMIMO, total protein, clusterin, creatinine, and CXCL10 were measured by the microwell-based KIT Assay. An IgA risk score (KIT-IgA) was significantly higher in IgAN patients as compared to healthy control (87.76 vs. 14.03, p < 0.0001) and performed better than proteinuria in discriminating between the two groups. The KIT Assay biomarkers, measured on a spot random urine sample at study entry could distinguish patients likely to have progressive renal dysfunction a year later. These data support the pursuit of larger prospective studies to evaluate the predictive performance of the KIT-IgA score in both screening for non-invasive diagnosis of IgAN, and for predicting risk of progressive renal disease from IgA and utilizing the KIT score for potentially evaluating the efficacy of IgAN-targeted therapies.
Subject(s)
Biomarkers/urine , Glomerulonephritis, IGA/urine , Monitoring, Physiologic/methods , Adrenal Cortex Hormones/therapeutic use , Adult , Creatinine/urine , Disease Progression , Female , Glomerulonephritis, IGA/diagnosis , Glomerulonephritis, IGA/drug therapy , Humans , Immunoglobulin A/urine , Immunologic Factors/therapeutic use , Kidney/pathology , Kidney/physiopathology , Kidney Function Tests/methods , Male , Middle Aged , Prospective Studies , Proteinuria/urine , Rituximab/therapeutic use , Sensitivity and Specificity , Young AdultSubject(s)
Graft Rejection , Kidney Transplantation , Biopsy , Urine , Graft Rejection/diagnosis , HumansABSTRACT
Belatacept use has been constrained by higher rates of acute rejection. We hypothesized that belatacept with low-dose rATG and initial mycophenolate maintenance with conversion to everolimus at 1 month post-transplant ± corticosteroids would improve efficacy and maintain safety. Retrospective single-center analysis of the first 44 low immunologic risk kidney transplant recipients treated with this regimen. The cohort was 59% male, mean age at transplant of 57 years. Diabetes was the most common cause of ESRD (39%). The mean 1-year eGFR was 61.4 (SD 18.4) mL/min/1.73 m2 . There were five acute cellular rejections (11.4%) that occurred in patients who had changed from everolimus to mycophenolate mofetil due to side effects. Thirty-two percent developed BK viremia and 12% developed CMV viremia. There were no cases of PTLD. A novel belatacept regimen with rATG induction and maintenance everolimus demonstrated a low acute rejection rate and maintained an excellent 1-year eGFR.
Subject(s)
Abatacept/therapeutic use , Antilymphocyte Serum/therapeutic use , Everolimus/therapeutic use , Graft Rejection/prevention & control , Immunosuppressive Agents/therapeutic use , Induction Chemotherapy/methods , Maintenance Chemotherapy/methods , Adrenal Cortex Hormones/therapeutic use , Adult , Aged , Drug Therapy, Combination , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Kidney Failure, Chronic/surgery , Kidney Transplantation , Male , Middle Aged , Mycophenolic Acid/therapeutic use , Retrospective Studies , Treatment OutcomeABSTRACT
The human urinary proteome provides an assessment of kidney injury with specific biomarkers for different kidney injury phenotypes. In an effort to fully map and decipher changes in the urine proteome and peptidome after kidney transplantation, renal allograft biopsy matched urine samples were collected from 396 kidney transplant recipients. Centralized and blinded histology data from paired graft biopsies was used to classify urine samples into diagnostic categories of acute rejection, chronic allograft nephropathy, BK virus nephritis, and stable graft. A total of 245 urine samples were analyzed by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry using isobaric Tags for Relative and Absolute Quantitation (iTRAQ) reagents. From a group of over 900 proteins identified in transplant injury, a set of 131 peptides were assessed by selected reaction monitoring for their significance in accurately segregating organ injury causation and pathology in an independent cohort of 151 urine samples. Ultimately, a minimal set of 35 proteins were identified for their ability to segregate the 3 major transplant injury clinical groups, comprising the final panel of 11 urinary peptides for acute rejection (93% area under the curve [AUC]), 12 urinary peptides for chronic allograft nephropathy (99% AUC), and 12 urinary peptides for BK virus nephritis (83% AUC). Thus, urinary proteome discovery and targeted validation can identify urine protein panels for rapid and noninvasive differentiation of different causes of kidney transplant injury, without the requirement of an invasive biopsy.
Subject(s)
Allografts/pathology , Graft Rejection/urine , Kidney Transplantation , Kidney/pathology , Nephritis/urine , Adolescent , Adult , BK Virus/isolation & purification , Biomarkers/urine , Biopsy , Child , Chromatography, Liquid , Female , Graft Rejection/diagnosis , Graft Rejection/pathology , Humans , Male , Mass Spectrometry , Nephritis/diagnosis , Nephritis/pathology , Nephritis/virology , Proteomics , Urinalysis/methods , Young AdultABSTRACT
Early transplant dysfunction and failure because of immunological and nonimmunological factors still presents a significant clinical problem for transplant recipients. A critical unmet need is the noninvasive detection and prediction of immune injury such that acute injury can be reversed by proactive immunosuppression titration. In this study, we used iTRAQ -based proteomic discovery and targeted ELISA validation to discover and validate candidate urine protein biomarkers from 262 renal allograft recipients with biopsy-confirmed allograft injury. Urine samples were randomly split into a training set of 108 patients and an independent validation set of 154 patients, which comprised the clinical biopsy-confirmed phenotypes of acute rejection (AR) (n = 74), stable graft (STA) (n = 74), chronic allograft injury (CAI) (n = 58), BK virus nephritis (BKVN) (n = 38), nephrotic syndrome (NS) (n = 8), and healthy, normal control (HC) (n = 10). A total of 389 proteins were measured that displayed differential abundances across urine specimens of the injury types (p < 0.05) with a significant finding that SUMO2 (small ubiquitin-related modifier 2) was identified as a "hub" protein for graft injury irrespective of causation. Sixty-nine urine proteins had differences in abundance (p < 0.01) in AR compared with stable graft, of which 12 proteins were up-regulated in AR with a mean fold increase of 2.8. Nine urine proteins were highly specific for AR because of their significant differences (p < 0.01; fold increase >1.5) from all other transplant categories (HLA class II protein HLA-DRB1, KRT14, HIST1H4B, FGG, ACTB, FGB, FGA, KRT7, DPP4). Increased levels of three of these proteins, fibrinogen beta (FGB; p = 0.04), fibrinogen gamma (FGG; p = 0.03), and HLA DRB1 (p = 0.003) were validated by ELISA in AR using an independent sample set. The fibrinogen proteins further segregated AR from BK virus nephritis (FGB p = 0.03, FGG p = 0.02), a finding that supports the utility of monitoring these urinary proteins for the specific and sensitive noninvasive diagnosis of acute renal allograft rejection.
Subject(s)
Acute Kidney Injury/urine , Biomarkers/urine , Graft Rejection/urine , Graft vs Host Reaction , Kidney Transplantation/adverse effects , Proteomics/methods , Acute Kidney Injury/metabolism , Adolescent , Adult , Biomarkers/metabolism , Child , Female , Graft Rejection/metabolism , Humans , Male , Protein Interaction Maps , Signal Transduction , Transplantation, Homologous , Urinalysis/methods , Validation Studies as Topic , Young AdultABSTRACT
Transplantation is the preferred therapy for the end stage organ disease. Since the introduction of organ transplantation into medical practice in 1953 [1], significant progress has been achieved in patient and graft survival rates due to improvements in surgical techniques and more targeted immunosuppressive medications [2]. Nevertheless, current gaps in the management of the transplant patient stem from an incomplete understanding about the heterogeneity of the injury response in organ transplantation, at different rates and different time points after transplantation, as well as our inability to monitor the immunologic threshold of risk versus safety in each individual patient. Recent advances in immunology/transplantation biology with the advent of high throughput "omic" assays such as gene microarrays, proteomics, metabolomics, antibiomics, chemical genomics and functional imaging with nanoparticles, offers us unique methods to interrogate and decipher the variability and unpredictability of the immune response in organ transplantation (Fig. 1) [3]. Recent studies using these applications [3-8] have uncovered a critical and pivotal role for specific B cell lineages in organ injury [9] and organ acceptance [10,11] (Fig. 2). The availability of specific therapies against some of these defined B cell populations provides for an exciting new field of B cell targeted manipulation that can both abrogate the allospecific injury response, as well as promote allospecific graft accommodation and health.
Subject(s)
B-Lymphocytes/immunology , Graft Rejection/immunology , Transplantation Tolerance/immunology , Animals , Humans , Mice , Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis , Transplantation Immunology/immunology , Transplantation Tolerance/geneticsABSTRACT
Nephropathic cystinosis, characterized by accumulation of cystine in the lysosomes, is caused by mutations in CTNS. The molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying proximal tubular dysfunction and progressive renal failure in nephropathic cystinosis are largely unclear, and increasing evidence supports the notion that cystine accumulation alone is not responsible for the end organ injury in cystinosis. We previously identified clusterin as potentially involved in nephropathic cystinosis. Here, we studied the expression of clusterin in renal proximal tubular epithelial cells obtained from patients with nephropathic cystinosis. The cytoprotective secretory form of clusterin, as evaluated by Western blot analysis, was low or absent in cystinosis cells compared with normal primary cells. Confocal microscopy revealed elevated levels of intracellular clusterin in cystinosis cells. Clusterin in cystinosis cells localized to the nucleus and cytoplasm and showed a filamentous and punctate aggresome-like pattern compared with diffuse cytoplasmic staining in normal cells. In kidney biopsy samples from patients with nephropathic cystinosis, clusterin protein expression was mainly limited to the proximal tubular cells. Furthermore, expression of clusterin overlapped with the expression of apoptotic proteins (apoptosis-inducing factor and cleaved caspase-3) and autophagy proteins (LC3 II and p62). Silencing of the clusterin gene resulted in a significant increase in cell viability and attenuation of apoptosis in cystinosis cells. Results of this study identify clusterin as a pivotal factor in the cell injury mechanism of nephropathic cystinosis and provide evidence linking cellular stress and injury to Fanconi syndrome and progressive renal injury in nephropathic cystinosis.
Subject(s)
Clusterin/metabolism , Cystinosis/metabolism , Kidney Tubules, Proximal/metabolism , Adolescent , Apoptosis Inducing Factor/metabolism , Autophagy , Blotting, Western , Caspase 3/metabolism , Cell Death , Cells, Cultured , Child , Child, Preschool , Epithelial Cells/metabolism , Gene Silencing , Humans , Immunohistochemistry , Microscopy, Confocal , Microtubule-Associated Proteins/metabolism , RNA-Binding Proteins/metabolismABSTRACT
The initial contact point between a recipient's immune system and a transplanted graft is the vascular endothelium. Clinical studies suggest a pathogenic role for non-HLA antiendothelial cell antibodies (AECAs) in allograft rejection; however, evidence linking AECAs of known specificity to in vivo vascular injury is lacking. Here, we used high-density protein arrays to identify target antigens for AECAs isolated from the sera of recipients of kidney transplants experiencing antibody-mediated rejection in the absence of donor-specific HLA antibodies. Four antigenic targets expressed on endothelial cells were identified: endoglin, Fms-like tyrosine kinase-3 ligand, EGF-like repeats and discoidin I-like domains 3, and intercellular adhesion molecule 4; the first three have been implicated in endothelial cell activation and leukocyte extravasation. To validate these findings, ELISAs were constructed, and sera from an additional 150 renal recipients were tested. All four AECAs were detected in 24% of pretransplant sera, and they were associated with post-transplant donor-specific HLA antibodies, antibody-mediated rejection, and early transplant glomerulopathy. AECA stimulation of endothelial cell cultures increased adhesion molecule expression and production of inflammatory cytokines: regulated on activation, normal T cell expressed and secreted PDGF and RESISTIN. These correlations between in vitro experiments and in vivo histopathology suggest that AECAs activate the vascular endothelium, amplifying the alloimmune response and increasing microvascular damage. Given the growing number of transplant candidates, a better understanding of the antigenic targets, beyond HLA, and mechanisms of immune injury will be essential for improving long-term allograft survival.
Subject(s)
Endothelial Cells/immunology , Endothelium, Vascular/immunology , Graft Rejection/immunology , Kidney Transplantation , Adult , Aged , Antibodies/blood , Antigens/metabolism , Cells, Cultured , Endothelial Cells/metabolism , Endothelium, Vascular/metabolism , Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay , Female , Graft Rejection/blood , HLA Antigens/immunology , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Protein Array Analysis , Proteomics/methods , Retrospective StudiesABSTRACT
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.
Subject(s)
Biomarkers/blood , Immunosuppression Therapy , Kidney Transplantation , Transplantation Immunology/genetics , Adolescent , Adult , Blood Cell Count , CD11c Antigen/metabolism , Case-Control Studies , Child , Cytochrome P-450 CYP1B1/genetics , Cytochrome P-450 CYP1B1/metabolism , DNA-Binding Proteins/genetics , DNA-Binding Proteins/metabolism , Dendritic Cells/metabolism , Female , Gene Expression Profiling , Humans , Kruppel-Like Factor 6 , Kruppel-Like Transcription Factors/genetics , Kruppel-Like Transcription Factors/metabolism , Male , Middle Aged , Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis , Proto-Oncogene Proteins/genetics , Proto-Oncogene Proteins/metabolism , Young AdultABSTRACT
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Allo- and autoantibodies have been found to play important roles in both acute and chronic allograft rejection in organ transplantation, although only recently have non-human leukocyte antigen (non-HLA), nondonor-specific antibodies been given a more in-depth treatment. This review summarizes recent reports about investigations and proteomic approaches to identify self-antigens and corresponding autoantibodies that are associated with acute and chronic allograft rejection. Finally, we discuss the insights gained from these, challenges, and future prospects. RECENT FINDINGS: Significant discoveries have been made regarding the presence and role of autoantibodies and alloantibodies, both those formed pretransplant and posttransplant, in acute and chronic rejection. These discoveries are made possible because of the publication of the human genome and subsequent development in the ability of expression and analysis of human proteome. SUMMARY: Antibodies play a critical role in survival and dysfunction of a transplanted kidney. Even though HLA antibodies have been given the majority of the scientific community's attention for the past few decades, antibodies against autoantigens and that of non-HLA origin are gaining attention. Recent publications have identified novel self-antigens that are associated with acute and chronic rejection that have added to our understanding of new players in immune-related transplant rejection.