Abstract
Belatacept is a B7-specific fusion protein used to prevent allograft rejection by blocking T cell costimulation. Generally efficacious, it fails to prevent acute rejection in a sizable minority of patients. In experimental models, memory T cells mediate costimulation blockade-resistant rejection (CoBRR), but this remains undefined in humans. To explore relationships between individual patients' immune cell phenotypes and CoBRR, we studied patients receiving belatacept or conventional calcineurin inhibitor-based immunosuppression. We identified a population of CD57+PD1- CD4 T cells present prior to transplantation that correlated with CoBRR. Contrary to data recognizing CD57 as a marker of senescence on CD8 T cells, we discovered a nonsenescent, cytolytic phenotype associated with CD57 on CD4 T cells. Moreover, CD57+ CD4 T cells expressed high levels of adhesion molecules implicated in experimental CoBRR, were CD28-, expressed a transcriptional phenotype broadly defining allograft rejection and were shown to be present in rejecting human kidney allografts. These data implicate CD57+ CD4 T cells in clinical CoBRR. If prospectively validated, this characteristic could identify patients at higher risk for acute rejection on belatacept-based therapy.
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CITATION STYLE
Espinosa, J., Herr, F., Tharp, G., Bosinger, S., Song, M., Farris, A. B., … Kirk, A. D. (2016). CD57+ CD4 T Cells Underlie Belatacept-Resistant Allograft Rejection. American Journal of Transplantation, 16(4), 1102–1112. https://doi.org/10.1111/ajt.13613
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