A novel approach to detect donor/recipent immune responses between HLA-identical pairs.
Publication/Presentation Date
5-1-2007
Abstract
Renal transplant rejection and graft versus host reactions between HLA genetically-identical sibling (HLAgi) donor/recipient (D/R) pairs are thought to result from minor histocompatibility antigen (mHAg) disparities. We have compared two methods of measuring HLAgi D/R T lymphocyte responses to "matured" dendritic cells: 1.) a modified Cylex assay of CD4(+) ATP levels (MLDC-ATP) versus 2.) (3)H-thymidine uptake (MLDC-(3)H). The MLDC-ATP kinetics peaked at 48 hours versus the MLDC-(3)H at 7 days, and appeared more sensitive. We tested HLAgi (normal) volunteer siblings (NLs), and D/R sibling pairs before and after renal transplantation (pre-Tx and post-Tx). The overall frequencies of positive responses in the MLDC-ATP for HLAgi NLs, pre-Tx, and post-Tx D/R pairs were 63%, 50%, and 42%, respectively. The percentage with reciprocal responses was 37.5%, 20%, and 22.22%, respectively. In one set of three HLAgi (NLs) siblings (two males and one female), there was a nongender-associated differential response. There was no MLDC correlation with class I MHC-associated mHAg (SSP) incompatibility, nor could some MLDC positive reactive pairs theoretically process the necessary HLA-class I restriction molecules for presentation of known (nanomeric) mHAg peptides. Speculatively, the MLDC reflects class II MHC-restricted mHAg reactions (not yet definable), with possible effects of other polymorphic (nonhistocompatibility) immune response genes, and thereby may be a useful measurement of CD4(+) T-cell HLAgi transplantation immunity.
Volume
68
Issue
5
First Page
350
Last Page
361
ISSN
0198-8859
Published In/Presented At
Jin, Y., Hernandez, A., Fuller, L., Rosen, A., Cirocco, R., Esquenazi, V., Ciancio, G., Burke, G. W., & Miller, J. (2007). A novel approach to detect donor/recipent immune responses between HLA-identical pairs. Human immunology, 68(5), 350–361. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.humimm.2006.11.005
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
17462502
Department(s)
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine
Document Type
Article