| Literature DB >> 30849195 |
John R Greenland1,2, Ping Wang2, Joshua J Brotman2, Rahul Ahuja1, Tiffany A Chong2, Mary Ellen Kleinhenz2, Lorriana E Leard2, Jeffrey A Golden2, Steven R Hays2, Jasleen Kukreja3, Jonathan P Singer2, Raja Rajalingam3, Kirk Jones4, Zoltan G Laszik4, Neil N Trivedi1,2, Nancy Y Greenland4, Paul D Blanc1,2.
Abstract
Lymphocytic bronchitis (LB) precedes chronic lung allograft dysfunction. The relationships of LB (classified here as Endobronchial or E-grade rejection) to small airway (A- and B-grade) pathologies are unclear. We hypothesized that gene signatures common to allograft rejection would be present in LB. We studied LB in two partially overlapping lung transplant recipient cohorts: Cohort 1 included large airway brushes (6 LB cases and 18 post-transplant referents). Differential expression using DESeq2 was used for pathway analysis and to define an LB-associated metagene. In Cohort 2, eight biopsies for each pathology subtype were matched with pathology-free biopsies from the same subject (totaling 48 samples from 24 subjects). These biopsies were analyzed by multiplexed digital counting of immune transcripts. Metagene score differences were compared by paired t tests. Compared to referents in Cohort 1, LB demonstrated upregulation of allograft rejection pathways, and upregulated genes in these cases characterized an LB-associated metagene. We observed statistically increased expression in Cohort 2 for this LB-associated metagene and four other established allograft rejection metagenes in rejection vs paired non-rejection biopsies for both E-grade and A-grade subtypes, but not B-grade pathology. Gene expression-based categorization of allograft rejection may prove useful in monitoring lung allograft health.Entities:
Keywords: molecular biology; monitoring: immune; rejection: acute
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30849195 PMCID: PMC6545574 DOI: 10.1111/ctr.13515
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transplant ISSN: 0902-0063 Impact factor: 2.863