Regulatory CD25+ T Cells in Human Kidney Transplant Recipients
- 1 June 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Journal of the American Society of Nephrology
- Vol. 14 (6) , 1643-1651
- https://doi.org/10.1097/01.asn.0000057540.98231.c1
Abstract
Recent evidence suggests that a population of professional regulatory cells, which limit immune responsiveness, exist in rodents and healthy human subjects. However, their role in disease states remains unclear. A proportion of renal transplant recipients do not demonstrate in vitro reactivity toward their mismatched donor-derived HLA-DR antigens; it was therefore hypothesized that this may be due to such regulatory cells. A cohort of 23 renal transplant recipients was studied at a single institution. In patients with no history of acute rejection, 6 (40%) of 15 demonstrated regulation toward the mismatched HLA-DR allopeptides by CD25+ cells. By contrast, only one (12.5%) in eight of those with a history of acute rejection demonstrated regulation. Interestingly, if the patient assays were stratified according to initial in vitro immune responsiveness toward the mismatched allopeptides, 8 (47.1%) of 17 of patient assays with low allopeptide responsiveness (alloreactive T cell frequencies less than 60/million) demonstrated regulation of indirect pathway alloresponses by CD25+ cells, whereas 0 of 8 with higher responses (frequencies greater than 60/million) demonstrated no such regulation (P < 0.05 by χ2 test). The regulatory cells are present in the circulation as early as 3 mo after transplantation and persist for a number of years, despite conventional immunosuppression. Furthermore, induction treatment with anti-IL-2R mAb did not prevent the development of these regulatory CD25+ cells. Data from two patients suggest that these cells may also play a role in preventing epitope shifting, implicated in the ongoing immune activation contributing to chronic rejection, and that loss of regulation in a given patient may precede an episode of rejection. E-mail: msayegh@rics. bwh.harvard.eduKeywords
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