microchimerism and renal transplantation: doubt still persists

Authors

behrouz nikbin

immunology nader tajik

immunology, faculty of medicine, iran university of medical sciences, tehran, iran ali saraji

urology , faculty of medicine, tehran university of medical sciences gholam reza pourmand

urology , faculty of medicine, tehran university of medical sciences fatemeh talebian

abstract

background: the presence of donor leukocytes in recipients of organ allograft has been shown even several years after transplantation. however, it remains unclear whether this donor cell microchimerism plays an effective role in allograft acceptance or is simply a consequence of immunosuppressive conditions in recipients. objective: to study microchimerism in a group of kidney transplant recipients. methods: in this study, the peripheral blood microchimerism (pbm) after renal transplantation was retrospectively evaluated in 32 male-to-female recipients of living (unrelated) and cadaveric donor renal transplants. using a nested polymerase chain reaction (nested-pcr) amplification specific for sry region of the y chromosome, microchimerism was detected with a sensitivity of 1:1000000. recipients were classified and compared according to the presence of pbm, acute and chronic rejection episodes, type of allotransplant, recipient and donor age at transplantation, previous male labor or blood transfusion, allograft function (serum creatinine level), and body mass index. results: among 32 recipients, 7 (21.9) were positive for pbm in multiple testing at different post-transplantation times. all microchimeric recipients had received kidney from living-unrelated donors. no significant difference was observed with regard to other parameters mentioned above. in addition, acute rejection rate in the microchimeric group was 3 (42%) versus 4 (16%) in the nonmicrochimeric recipients (not significant). conclusion: our results demonstrate better establishment of microchimerism after living donor kidney transplantation. however, concerning the true effect of microchimerism after renal transplantation doubt still persists; and it seems that microchimerism alone has no major protective role in renal allograft survival.

Upgrade to premium to download articles

Sign up to access the full text

Already have an account?login

similar resources

Microchimerism and Renal Transplantation: Doubt Still Persists

Background: The Presence of donor leukocytes in recipients of organ allograft has been shown even several years after transplantation. However, it remains unclear whether this donor cell microchimerism plays an effective role in allograft acceptance or is simply a consequence of immunosuppressive conditions in recipients. Objective: To study microchimerism in a group of kidney transplant recipi...

full text

Microchimerism and renal transplantation: doubt still persists.

OBJECTIVE We sought to study microchimerism in a group of kidney transplant recipients. MATERIALS AND METHODS In this study, the peripheral blood microchimerism (PBM) after renal transplantation was retrospectively evaluated in 32 male-to-female recipients of living unrelated or cadaveric donor renal transplants. Using a nested polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification specific for SRY re...

full text

Microchimerism in renal transplantation – single centre experience

A. Moise, R. D. Sinescu, I. Constantinescu, I. Sinescu 1 Centrul de Imunogeneticæ øi Virusologie, Institutul Clinic „Fundeni”, Bucureøti 2 Universitatea de Medicinæ øi Farmacie „Carol Davila”, Bucureøti 3 Compartimentul de Chirurgie Plasticæ Microchirurgie Reconstructivæ, Spitalul Universitar de Urgenflæ „Elias”, Bucureøti 4 Centrul de Uronefrologie øi Transplant Renal, Institutul Clinic „Funde...

full text

Microchimerism of maternal origin persists into adult life.

Recent studies indicate that fetal cells persist in maternal blood for decades after pregnancy. Maternal cells are known to engraft and persist in infants with immunodeficiency, but whether maternal cells persist long-term in immunocompetent offspring has not specifically been investigated. We developed sensitive human leukocyte antigen-specific (HLA-specific) PCR assays and targeted nonshared ...

full text

Microchimerism, dendritic cell progenitors and transplantation tolerance.

The recent discovery of multilineage donor leukocyte microchimerism in allograft recipients up to three decades after organ transplantation implies the migration and survival of donor stem cells within the host. It has been postulated that in chimeric graft recipients, reciprocal modulation of immune responsiveness between donor and recipient leukocytes may lead, eventually, to the induction of...

full text

Pulmonary hydatid cyst and successful renal transplantation

  Abstract   Hydatid cysts are endemic hooknoses in Iran. It may involve various organs of   body. Liver is involved in 80% and lung in 10- 15%of cases. 25% of pulmonary hydatid   cyst is bilateral. Before any transplantations eradication of infection is necessary.   In a 26-year old man with renal failure referred for kidney transplantation. On   initial preoperative evaluation of this patient...

full text

My Resources

Save resource for easier access later


Journal title:
iranian journal of immunology

جلد ۱، شماره ۳، صفحات ۱۶۲-۱۶۸

Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com

copyright © 2015-2023