8 research outputs found
Detection of SHV ÎČ-lactamases in Gram-negative bacilli using fluorescein-labeled antibodies
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>ÎČ-lactam resistance in Gram-negative bacteria is a significant clinical problem in the community, long-term care facilities, and hospitals. In these organisms, ÎČ-lactam resistance most commonly results from the production of ÎČ-lactamases. In Gram-negative bacilli, TEM-, SHV-, and CTX-M-type ÎČ-lactamases predominate. Therefore, new and accurate detection methods for these ÎČ-lactamase producing isolates are needed.</p> <p>Results</p> <p><it>E. coli </it>DH10B cells producing SHV-1 ÎČ-lactamase and a clinical isolate of <it>K. pneumoniae </it>producing SHV-5 ÎČ-lactamase were rendered membrane permeable, fixed and adhered to poly-L-lysine coated slides, and stained with purified polyclonal anti-SHV antibodies that were fluorescein labeled. <it>E. coli </it>DH10B cells without a <it>bla</it><sub>SHV </sub>gene were used as a negative control. The procedure generated a fluorescence signal from those slides containing cells expressing SHV ÎČ-lactamase that was sufficient for direct imaging.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>We developed a rapid and accurate method of visualizing the SHV family of enzymes in clinical samples containing Gram-negative bacilli using a fluorescein-labeled polyclonal antibody.</p
Urinary-Cell mRNA Profile and Acute Cellular Rejection in Kidney Allografts
BackgroundâThe standard test for the diagnosis of acute rejection in kidney transplants is the renal biopsy. Noninvasive tests would be preferable.
MethodsâWe prospectively collected 4300 urine specimens from 485 kidney-graft recipients from day 3 through month 12 after transplantation. Messenger RNA (mRNA) levels were measured in urinary cells and correlated with allograft-rejection status with the use of logistic regression.
ResultsâA three-gene signature of 18S ribosomal (rRNA)ânormalized measures of CD3Δ mRNA and interferon-inducible protein 10 (IP-10) mRNA, and 18S rRNA discriminated between biopsy specimens showing acute cellular rejection and those not showing rejection (area under the curve [AUC], 0.85; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.78 to 0.91; P<0.001 by receiver-operatingcharacteristic curve analysis). The cross-validation estimate of the AUC was 0.83 by bootstrap resampling, and the HosmerâLemeshow test indicated good fit (P = 0.77). In an externalvalidation data set, the AUC was 0.74 (95% CI, 0.61 to 0.86; P<0.001) and did not differ significantly from the AUC in our primary data set (P = 0.13). The signature distinguished acute cellular rejection from acute antibody-mediated rejection and borderline rejection (AUC, 0.78; 95% CI, 0.68 to 0.89; P<0.001). It also distinguished patients who received antiâinterleukin-2 receptor antibodies from those who received T-cellâdepleting antibodies (P<0.001) and was diagnostic of acute cellular rejection in both groups. Urinary tract infection did not affect the signature (P = 0.69). The average trajectory of the signature in repeated urine samples remained below the diagnostic threshold for acute cellular rejection in the group of patients with no rejection, but in the group with rejection, there was a sharp rise during the weeks before the biopsy showing rejection (P<0.001).
ConclusionsâA molecular signature of CD3Δ mRNA, IP-10 mRNA, and 18S rRNA levels in urinary cells appears to be diagnostic and prognostic of acute cellular rejection in kidney allografts
Complement Gene Expression in Human Cardiac Allograft Biopsies as a Correlate of Histologic Grade of Injury
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Molecular Signature of Antibody-Mediated Chronic Vasculopathy in Heart Allografts in a Novel Mouse Model
Cardiac allograft vasculopathy (CAV) limits the long-term success of heart transplants. Generation of donor-specific antibodies (DSAs) is associated with increased incidence of CAV clinically, but mechanisms underlying development of this pathology remain poorly understood. Major histocompatibility complex-mismatched A/J cardiac allografts in B6.CCR5-/- recipients have been reported to undergo acute rejection with little T-cell infiltration, but intense deposition of C4d in large vessels and capillaries of the graft accompanied by high titers of DSA. This model was modified to investigate mechanisms of antibody-mediated CAV by transplanting A/J hearts to B6.CCR5-/- CD8-/- mice that were treated with low doses of anti-CD4 monoclonal antibody to decrease T-cell-mediated graft injury and promote antibody-mediated injury. Although the mild inhibition of CD4 T cells extended allograft survival, the grafts developed CAV with intense C4d deposition and macrophage infiltration by 14 days after transplantation. Development of CAV correlated with recipient DSA titers. Transcriptomic analysis of microdissected allograft arteries identified the Notch ligand Dll4 as the most elevated transcript in CAV, associated with high versus low titers of DSA. More importantly, these analyses revealed a differential expression of transcripts in the CAV lesions compared with the matched apical tissue that lacks large arteries. In conclusion, these findings report a novel model of antibody-mediated CAV with the potential to facilitate further understanding of the molecular mechanisms promoting development of CAV
Linking erythropoietin to Treg-dependent allograft survival through myeloid cells
Erythropoietin (EPO) has multiple nonerythropoietic functions, including immune modulation, but EPO's effects in transplantation remain incompletely understood. We tested the mechanisms linking EPO administration to prolongation of murine heterotopic heart transplantation using WT and conditional EPO receptor-knockout (EPOR-knockout) mice as recipients. In WT controls, peritransplant administration of EPO synergized with CTLA4-Ig to prolong allograft survival (P <0.001), reduce frequencies of donor-reactive effector CD8(+). T cells in the spleen (P <0.001) and in the graft (P <0.05), and increase frequencies and total numbers of donor-reactive Tregs (P < 0.01 for each) versus CTLA4-Ig alone. Studies performed in conditional EPOR-knockout recipients showed that each of these differences required EPOR expression in myeloid cells but not in T cells. Analysis of mRNA isolated from spleen monocytes showed that EPO/EPOR ligation upregulated macrophage-expressed, antiinflammatory, regulatory, and pro-efferocytosis genes and downregulated selected proinflammatory genes. Taken together, the data support the conclusion that EPO promotes Treg-dependent murine cardiac allograft survival by crucially altering the phenotype and function of macrophages. Coupled with our previous documentation that EPO promotes Treg expansion in humans, the data support the need for testing the addition of EPO to costimulatory blockade-containing immunosuppression regimens in an effort to prolong human transplant survival
Antibodyâinduced vascular inflammation skews infiltrating macrophages to a novel remodeling phenotype in a model of transplant rejection
HLA donor-specific antibodies (DSAs) binding to vascular endothelial cells of the allograft trigger inflammation, vessel injury, and antibody-mediated rejection (AMR). Accumulation of intragraft-recipient macrophages is a histological characteristic of AMR, which portends worse outcome. HLA class I (HLA I) DSAs enhance monocyte recruitment by activating endothelial cells and engaging FcÎłRs, but the DSA-activated donor endothelial influence on macrophage differentiation is unknown. In this study, we explored the consequence of DSA-activated endothelium on infiltrating monocyte differentiation. Here we show that cardiac allografts from murine recipients treated with MHC I DSA upregulated genes related to monocyte transmigration and Fc receptor stimulation. Human monocytes co-cultured with HLA I IgG-stimulated primary human endothelium promoted monocyte differentiation into CD68+ CD206+ CD163+ macrophages (M(HLA I IgG)), whereas HLA I F(ab')2 stimulated endothelium solely induced higher CD206 (M(HLA I F(ab')2 )). Both macrophage subtypes exhibited significant changes in discrete cytokines/chemokines and unique gene expression profiles. Cross-comparison of gene transcripts between murine DSA-treated cardiac allografts and human co-cultured macrophages identified overlapping genes. These findings uncover the role of HLA I DSA-activated endothelium in monocyte differentiation, and point to a novel, remodeling phenotype of infiltrating macrophages that may contribute to vascular injury
The European Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation (EBMT) Consensus Guidelines for the Detection and Treatment of Donor-specific Anti-HLA Antibodies (DSA) in Haploidentical Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation
Haploidentical donors are now increasingly considered for transplantation in the absence of HLA-matched donors or when an urgent transplant is needed. Donor-specific anti-HLA antibodies (DSA) have been recently recognized as an important barrier against successful engraftment of donor cells, which can affect transplant survival. DSA appear more prevalent in this type of transplant due to higher likelihood of alloimmunization of multiparous females against offspring's HLA antigens, and the degree of mismatch. Here we summarize the evidence for the role of DSA in the development of primary graft failure in haploidentical transplantation and provide consensus recommendations from the European Society for Blood and Marrow Transplant Group on testing, monitoring, and treatment of patients with DSA receiving haploidentical hematopoietic progenitor cell transplantation