The early course of kidney allograft rejection: Defining the time when rejection begins

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Abstract

We studied the early events in mouse kidney allografts and isografts to define when allorecognition begins and when alloimmune tissue injury begins. Allografts but not isografts showed T-cell infiltration in perivascular areas from day 1, but tubulitis and arteritis did not develop until day 7. Flow cytometry confirmed the early allospecific CD3+CD8+ T-cell infiltrate. At day 1, both allografts and isografts showed extensive transcriptome changes, reflecting the response to surgery, but only allografts showed expression of interferon-gamma (IFN-γ)-inducible transcripts and T-cell-associated transcripts. Although the number of CD68+ myeloid cell numbers did not increase in day 1 isografts or allografts, mRNA expression for myeloid markers was increased in isografts and allografts, suggesting activation of resident cells of the macrophage-dendritic cell series (MMDCs) in response to injury, followed by increased CD68+ cell numbers from day 2. By day 3, an interstitial T-cell and MMDC infiltrate was established in allografts, corresponding with the emergence of allospecific tissue injury, as reflected by decreased parenchymal transcripts. Thus, in renal allografts, allorecognition by T cells occurs in perivascular sites by day 1, but alloimmune parenchymal damage begins at day 3, coinciding with the emergence of the interstitial T-cell-MMDC infiltrate. © 2009 The American Society of Transplantation and the American Society of Transplant Surgeons.

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Einecke, G., Mengel, M., Hidalgo, L., Allanach, K., Famulski, K. S., & Halloran, P. F. (2009). The early course of kidney allograft rejection: Defining the time when rejection begins. American Journal of Transplantation, 9(3), 483–493. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-6143.2008.02546.x

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