Literature DB >> 18800027

Urinary fractalkine is a marker of acute rejection.

Wenhan Peng1, Jianghua Chen, Yuguang Jiang, Jianyong Wu, Zhangfei Shou, Qiang He, Yiming Wang, Ying Chen, Huiping Wang.   

Abstract

Chemokines and their receptors play an important role in the development of allograft rejection through directing mononuclear cell invasion of the graft. To study whether chemokine assays in the urine could prove to be predictive of acute rejection, we measured the urinary excretion of several chemokines, including fractalkine, chemokine monokine induced by interferon-gamma, interferon-gamma-inducible protein 10, macrophage inflammatory protein-3 alpha, granzyme B, and perforin in 215 allograft recipients and in 80 healthy control subjects. The 67 patients with acute rejection had significantly higher levels of all urinary chemokines compared to the healthy controls or patients having chronic allograft nephropathy but with stable renal function. Only changes in urinary fractalkine differentiated patients with acute rejection from those with acute tubular necrosis. The 7 patients who lost their grafts had greater urinary fractalkine, interferon-gamma, and macrophage inflammatory protein-3 alpha concentrations than those patients with reversible acute rejection. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve for fractalkine was the best indicator among all of the markers differentiating 39 patients diagnosed with steroid-resistant from the 28 patients with steroid-sensitive acute rejection and in predicting graft loss. Our study shows that measuring urinary fractalkine levels is a noninvasive approach for detecting acute rejection where high levels were associated with steroid-resistance and poor outcome.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18800027     DOI: 10.1038/ki.2008.459

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Kidney Int        ISSN: 0085-2538            Impact factor:   10.612


  20 in total

1.  Immune biomarker panel monitoring utilizing IDO enzyme activity and CD4 ATP levels: prediction of acute rejection vs. viral replication events.

Authors:  Vikas R Dharnidharka; Sushil Gupta; Eihab Al Khasawneh; Allah Haafiz; Jonathan J Shuster; Douglas W Theriaque; Amir H Shahlaee; Timothy J Garrett
Journal:  Pediatr Transplant       Date:  2011-02-24

Review 2.  Biomarkers to detect rejection after kidney transplantation.

Authors:  Vikas R Dharnidharka; Andrew Malone
Journal:  Pediatr Nephrol       Date:  2017-06-19       Impact factor: 3.714

3.  CXCL10 and CXCL13 Expression were highly up-regulated in peripheral blood mononuclear cells in acute rejection and poor response to anti-rejection therapy.

Authors:  Youying Mao; Minmin Wang; Qin Zhou; Juan Jin; Yucheng Wang; Wenhan Peng; Jianyong Wu; Zhangfei Shou; Jianghua Chen
Journal:  J Clin Immunol       Date:  2010-12-30       Impact factor: 8.317

4.  Stable pediatric kidney transplant recipients run higher urine indoleamine 2, 3 dioxygenase (IDO) levels than healthy children.

Authors:  Eihab Al Khasawneh; Sushil Gupta; Sanjeev Y Tuli; Amir H Shahlaee; Timothy J Garrett; Kenneth B Schechtman; Vikas R Dharnidharka
Journal:  Pediatr Transplant       Date:  2014-02-01

5.  Verification of association of elevated serum IDO enzyme activity with acute rejection and low CD4-ATP levels with infection.

Authors:  Vikas R Dharnidharka; Eihab Al Khasawneh; Sushil Gupta; Jonathan J Shuster; Douglas W Theriaque; Amir H Shahlaee; Timothy J Garrett
Journal:  Transplantation       Date:  2013-09       Impact factor: 4.939

Review 6.  The life (and death) of CD4+ CD28(null) T cells in inflammatory diseases.

Authors:  Ingrid E Dumitriu
Journal:  Immunology       Date:  2015-09-07       Impact factor: 7.397

Review 7.  A 'biomarker signature' for tolerance in transplantation.

Authors:  Maria P Hernandez-Fuentes; Robert I Lechler
Journal:  Nat Rev Nephrol       Date:  2010-08-17       Impact factor: 28.314

8.  Circulating lymphocyte subsets in different clinical situations after renal transplantation.

Authors:  Pablo J E J van de Berg; Eveline C Hoevenaars; Si-La Yong; Karlijn A M I van Donselaar-van der Pant; Anne van Tellingen; Sandrine Florquin; René A W van Lier; Fréderike J Bemelman; Ineke J M ten Berge
Journal:  Immunology       Date:  2012-06       Impact factor: 7.397

Review 9.  Deconvoluting the 'omics' for organ transplantation.

Authors:  Minnie M Sarwal
Journal:  Curr Opin Organ Transplant       Date:  2009-10       Impact factor: 2.640

10.  Silencing circ-USP1 protects the renal tubular from kidney injury induced by hypoxia via modulating miR-194-5p/DNMT3A axis in acute renal allografts.

Authors:  Tao Yao; Dongqing Zha; Ping Gao; Xiaoyan Wu
Journal:  J Cell Mol Med       Date:  2021-01-23       Impact factor: 5.310

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