Literature DB >> 22035649

The coin toss of B cells in rejection and tolerance: danger versus defense.

Valeriya Zarkhin1, Minnie M Sarwal.   

Abstract

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.
Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 22035649     DOI: 10.1016/j.smim.2011.09.003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Semin Immunol        ISSN: 1044-5323            Impact factor:   11.130


  3 in total

Review 1.  Epigenetics in Kidney Transplantation: Current Evidence, Predictions, and Future Research Directions.

Authors:  Valeria R Mas; Thu H Le; Daniel G Maluf
Journal:  Transplantation       Date:  2016-01       Impact factor: 4.939

Review 2.  Epigenetic modulation of the immune function: a potential target for tolerance.

Authors:  Beatriz Suárez-Álvarez; Aroa Baragaño Raneros; Francisco Ortega; Carlos López-Larrea
Journal:  Epigenetics       Date:  2013-06-17       Impact factor: 4.528

3.  Pre-transplant donor-reactive IL-21 producing T cells as a tool to identify an increased risk for acute rejection.

Authors:  Aleixandra Mendoza Rojas; Teun van Gelder; Ronella de Kuiper; Derek Reijerkerk; Marian C Clahsen-van Groningen; Dennis A Hesselink; Carla C Baan; Nicole M van Besouw
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-06-14       Impact factor: 4.379

  3 in total

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