Literature DB >> 15022334

Quantification of maternal microchimerism by HLA-specific real-time polymerase chain reaction: studies of healthy women and women with scleroderma.

Nathalie C Lambert1, Timothy D Erickson, Zhen Yan, Jennifer M Pang, Katherine A Guthrie, Daniel E Furst, J Lee Nelson.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Microchimerism (Mc), originating from bidirectional fetal-maternal cell traffic during pregnancy, has recently been identified in healthy adults and in patients with scleroderma (systemic sclerosis [SSc]). This study was undertaken to investigate the frequency and quantitative levels of maternal Mc (MMc) in healthy women and women with SSc.
METHODS: HLA-specific primers and fluorogenic probes were used in real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction assays to detect and quantify MMc by targeting noninherited, nonshared HLA sequences. DNA-based HLA typing was conducted in 67 proband-mother pairs and in all children if the proband was parous. Statistical analysis was limited to 50 proband-mother pairs (including 32 healthy women and 18 women with SSc) in whom MMc could be distinguished from potential fetal Mc.
RESULTS: MMc in peripheral blood mononuclear cells was more frequent among women with SSc (72%) than healthy women (22%) (odds ratio 9.3, P = 0.001). However, levels of MMc, expressed as the genome equivalent of maternal cells per million (gEq/mil), were not significantly different (0-68.6 gEq/mil in SSc patients, 0-54.5 in healthy women). In additional studies, positivity for MMc was demonstrated in a bone marrow aspirate from an SSc patient in whom peripheral blood had been found to be negative for MMc on 4 occasions, and tissue from a subsequent autopsy of this patient had MMc levels of 757 and 1,489 gEq/mil in the lung and heart, respectively.
CONCLUSION: MMc is not uncommon in the peripheral blood of healthy adults, is increased in frequency in patients with SSc, and may be present in bone marrow and disease-affected tissues although absent in the peripheral blood.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15022334     DOI: 10.1002/art.20200

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arthritis Rheum        ISSN: 0004-3591


  69 in total

1.  Can maternal microchimeric cells influence the fetal response toward self antigens?

Authors:  Lucie Leveque; Kiarash Khosrotehrani
Journal:  Chimerism       Date:  2011-07-01

2.  Effect of parity on fetal and maternal microchimerism: interaction of grafts within a host?

Authors:  Hilary S Gammill; Katherine A Guthrie; Tessa M Aydelotte; Kristina M Adams Waldorf; J Lee Nelson
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2010-07-13       Impact factor: 22.113

3.  Microchimerism in the rheumatoid nodules of patients with rheumatoid arthritis.

Authors:  William F N Chan; Christopher J Atkins; David Naysmith; Nicholas van der Westhuizen; Janet Woo; J Lee Nelson
Journal:  Arthritis Rheum       Date:  2012-02

4.  Maternal microchimerism is prevalent in cord blood in memory T cells and other cell subsets, and persists post-transplant.

Authors:  Sami B Kanaan; Hilary S Gammill; Whitney E Harrington; Stephen C De Rosa; Philip A Stevenson; Alexandra M Forsyth; Judy Allen; Emma Cousin; Koen van Besien; Colleen S Delaney; J Lee Nelson
Journal:  Oncoimmunology       Date:  2017-03-31       Impact factor: 8.110

5.  Cell-free DNA in the plasma of patients with systemic sclerosis.

Authors:  Marta Mosca; Tiziana Giuliano; Giovanna Cuomo; Marica Doveri; Chiara Tani; Michele Curcio; Giuseppina Abignano; Francesca De Feo; Laura Bazzichi; Alessandra Della Rossa; Gabriele Valentini; Stefano Bombardieri
Journal:  Clin Rheumatol       Date:  2009-08-11       Impact factor: 2.980

6.  Microtransplantation in older patients with AML: A pilot study of safety, efficacy and immunologic effects.

Authors:  Anthony D Sung; Shekeab Jauhari; Sharareh Siamakpour-Reihani; Arati V Rao; Janet Staats; Cliburn Chan; Everett Meyer; Vijayakrishna K Gadi; Andrew B Nixon; Jing Lyu; Jichun Xie; Lauren Bohannon; Zhiguo Li; Christopher S Hourigan; Laura W Dillon; Hong Yuen Wong; Rebecca Shelby; Louis Diehl; Carlos de Castro; Thomas LeBlanc; Danielle Brander; Harry Erba; Ahmed Galal; Alexandra Stefanovic; Nelson Chao; David A Rizzieri
Journal:  Am J Hematol       Date:  2020-03-30       Impact factor: 10.047

7.  Analysis of maternal microchimerism in rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) using real-time quantitative PCR amplification of MHC polymorphisms.

Authors:  Sonia Bakkour; Chris A R Baker; Alice F Tarantal; Li Wen; Michael P Busch; Tzong-Hae Lee; Joseph M McCune
Journal:  Chimerism       Date:  2014-01-17

8.  Analysis of maternal-offspring HLA compatibility, parent-of-origin and non-inherited maternal effects for the classical HLA loci in type 1 diabetes.

Authors:  P G Bronson; P P Ramsay; G Thomson; L F Barcellos
Journal:  Diabetes Obes Metab       Date:  2009-02       Impact factor: 6.577

Review 9.  Tolerance to noninherited maternal antigens in mice and humans.

Authors:  Partha Dutta; William J Burlingham
Journal:  Curr Opin Organ Transplant       Date:  2009-08       Impact factor: 2.640

10.  Skewed X-chromosome inactivation in scleroderma.

Authors:  Elif Uz; Laurence S Loubiere; Vijayakrishna K Gadi; Zeynep Ozbalkan; Jeffrey Stewart; J Lee Nelson; Tayfun Ozcelik
Journal:  Clin Rev Allergy Immunol       Date:  2008-06       Impact factor: 8.667

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