| Literature DB >> 26663361 |
M Ningappa1, C Ashokkumar1, B W Higgs1, Q Sun1, R Jaffe2, G Mazariegos1, D Li3, D E Weeks4, S Subramaniam5, R Ferrell4, H Hakonarson3, R Sindhi1.
Abstract
T cell suppression prevents acute cellular rejection but causes life-threatening infections and malignancies. Previously, liver transplant (LTx) rejection in children was associated with the single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) rs9296068 upstream of the HLA-DOA gene. HLA-DOA inhibits B cell presentation of antigen, a potentially novel antirejection drug target. Using archived samples from 122 white pediatric LTx patients (including 77 described previously), we confirmed the association between rs9296068 and LTx rejection (p = 0.001, odds ratio [OR] 2.55). Next-generation sequencing revealed that the putative transcription factor (CCCTC binding factor [CTCF]) binding SNP locus rs2395304, in linkage disequilibrium with rs9296068 (D' 0.578, r(2) = 0.4), is also associated with LTx rejection (p = 0.008, OR 2.34). Furthermore, LTx rejection is associated with enhanced B cell presentation of donor antigen relative to HLA-nonidentical antigen in a novel cell-based assay and with a downregulated HLA-DOA gene in a subset of these children. In lymphoblastoid B (Raji) cells, rs2395304 coimmunoprecipitates with CTCF, and CTCF knockdown with morpholino antisense oligonucleotides enhances alloantigen presentation and downregulates the HLA-DOA gene, reproducing observations made with HLA-DOA knockdown and clinical rejection. Alloantigen presentation is suppressed by inhibitors of methylation and histone deacetylation, reproducing observations made during resolution of rejection. Enhanced donor antigen presentation by B cells and its epigenetic dysregulation via the HLA-DOA gene represent novel opportunities for surveillance and treatment of transplant rejection. © Copyright 2015 The American Society of Transplantation and the American Society of Transplant Surgeons.Entities:
Keywords: B cell biology; flow cytometry; genomics; immune; immunobiology; immunosuppression/immune modulation; liver transplantation/hepatology; monitoring; rejection:acute; translational research/science
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26663361 PMCID: PMC5082419 DOI: 10.1111/ajt.13509
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Transplant ISSN: 1600-6135 Impact factor: 8.086