| Literature DB >> 29367465 |
Tej D Azad1,2, Michele Donato1,2, Line Heylen3, Andrew B Liu1,2, Shai S Shen-Orr4, Timothy E Sweeney1,2, Jonathan Scott Maltzman5, Maarten Naesens3, Purvesh Khatri1,2.
Abstract
Late allograft failure is characterized by cumulative subclinical insults manifesting over many years. Although immunomodulatory therapies targeting host T cells have improved short-term survival rates, rates of chronic allograft loss remain high. We hypothesized that other immune cell types may drive subclinical injury, ultimately leading to graft failure. We collected whole-genome transcriptome profiles from 15 independent cohorts composed of 1,697 biopsy samples to assess the association of an inflammatory macrophage polarization-specific gene signature with subclinical injury. We applied penalized regression to a subset of the data sets and identified a 3-gene inflammatory macrophage-derived signature. We validated discriminatory power of the 3-gene signature in 3 independent renal transplant data sets with mean AUC of 0.91. In a longitudinal cohort, the 3-gene signature strongly correlated with extent of injury and accurately predicted progression of subclinical injury 18 months before clinical manifestation. The 3-gene signature also stratified patients at high risk of graft failure as soon as 15 days after biopsy. We found that the 3-gene signature also distinguished acute rejection (AR) accurately in 3 heart transplant data sets but not in lung transplant. Overall, we identified a parsimonious signature capable of diagnosing AR, recognizing subclinical injury, and risk-stratifying renal transplant patients. Our results strongly suggest that inflammatory macrophages may be a viable therapeutic target to improve long-term outcomes for organ transplantation patients.Entities:
Keywords: Immunology; Macrophages; Organ transplantation; Transplantation
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29367465 PMCID: PMC5821209 DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.95659
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JCI Insight ISSN: 2379-3708