4.6 Article

Microvasculature partial endothelial mesenchymal transition in early posttransplant biopsy with acute tubular necrosis identifies poor recovery renal allografts

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPLANTATION
Volume 20, Issue 9, Pages 2400-2412

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ajt.15847

Keywords

biomarker; clinical research; practice; delayed graft function (DGF); ischemia; reperfusion injury (IRI); kidney transplantation; nephrology; pathology; histopathology; rejection; antibody-mediated (ABMR); translational research; science; vascular biology

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Acute tubular necrosis (ATN), a frequent histopathological feature in the early post-renal transplant biopsy, affects long-term graft function. Appropriate markers to identify patients at risk of no or incomplete recovery after delayed graft function are lacking. In this study, we first included 41 renal transplant patients whose biopsy for cause during the first month after transplantation showed ATN lesions. Using partial microvasculature endothelial (fascin, vimentin) and tubular epithelial (vimentin) to mesenchymal transition markers, detected by immunohistochemistry, we found a significant association between partial endothelial to mesenchymal transition and poor graft function recovery (Spearman's rho = -0.55, P = .0005). Transforming growth factor-beta 1 was strongly expressed in these phenotypic changed endothelial cells. Extent of ATN was also correlated with short- and long-term graft dysfunction. However, the association of extensive ATN with long-term graft dysfunction (24 months posttransplant) was observed only in patients with partial endothelial to mesenchymal transition marker expression in their grafts (Spearman's rho = -0.64, P = .003), but not in those without. The association of partial endothelial to mesenchymal transition with worse renal graft outcome was confirmed on 34 other early biopsies with ATN from a second transplant center. Our results suggest that endothelial cell activation at the early phase of renal transplantation plays a detrimental role.

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