Low proportion of follicular regulatory T cell in renal transplant patients with chronic antibody-mediated rejection

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Abstract

Follicular regulatory T (Tfr) cell can effectively regulate humoral immunity, but its function and mechanism in antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) after organ transplantation remains unclear. Here we detected follicular helper T (Tfh) cell subsets in 88 renal transplant patients with chronic renal allograft dysfunction (40 with AMR and 48 without AMR). The ratio of Tfr cells in renal graft tissues and peripheral blood of AMR patients significantly decreased, while the ratio of IL-21-producing Tfh cells (Tfh2 and Tfh17) significantly increased, compared to non-AMR patients. When tested in functional assays, Tfr cells from both AMR and non-AMR patients exerted equivalent inhibitory function. Tfr cell transplantation or CTLA-4 virus transfection could significantly inhibit IL-21 secretion from Tfh cells of these patients, further suppress the proliferation and differentiation of B cells. CTLA-4 blocking, IL-10 and TGF-β neutralization could partially weaken such inhibitory effect of Tfr cells. Besides, our study found that sirolimus reduced the ratio of Tfr cells, while cyclosporine and tacrolimus had no significant effect on Tfr cells. In a word, renal transplant patients with AMR have low proportion of Tfr cells but these cell exerted normal function.

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Chen, W., Bai, J., Huang, H., Bi, L., Kong, X., Gao, Y., … Shi, B. (2017). Low proportion of follicular regulatory T cell in renal transplant patients with chronic antibody-mediated rejection. Scientific Reports, 7(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-01625-3

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