4.8 Article

Recipient APOL1 risk alleles associate with death-censored renal allograft survival and rejection episodes

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION
Volume 131, Issue 22, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC CLINICAL INVESTIGATION INC
DOI: 10.1172/JCI146643

Keywords

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Funding

  1. American Heart Association (AHA) [15SDG25870018]
  2. NIH [R01DK122164, U01AI063594, U01AI070107-03, U01AI63594-06]
  3. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS), NIH [1R01ES029212-01]
  4. National Institute on Aging (NIA), NIH [AG058635]
  5. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK), NIH [U24DK062429, DK106593]
  6. NIAID [R24-AI108564]
  7. Department of Medicine

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The presence of recipient APOL1 risk alleles is independently associated with transplant outcomes, especially in African American and Hispanic recipients, potentially impacting immune response. This finding suggests broader implications for immune-mediated injury to native kidneys.
Apolipoprotein L1 (APOL1) risk alleles in donor kidneys associate with graft loss, but whether recipient risk allele expression affects transplant outcomes is unclear. To test whether recipient APOL1 risk alleles independently correlate with transplant outcomes, we analyzed genome-wide SNP genotyping data on donors and recipients from 2 kidney transplant cohorts: Genomics of Chronic Allograft Rejection (GOCAR) and Clinical Trials in Organ Transplantation 01/17 (CTOT-01/17). We estimated genetic ancestry (quantified as the proportion of African ancestry, or pAFR) by ADMIXTURE and correlated APOL1 genotypes and pAFR with outcomes. In the GOCAR discovery set, we noted that the number of recipient APOL1 G1/G2 alleles (R-nAPOL1) associated with an increased risk of death-censored allograft loss (DCAL), independent of ancestry (HR = 2.14; P = 0.006), as well as within the subgroup of African American and Hispanic (AA/H) recipients (HR = 2.36; P = 0.003). R-nAPOL1 also associated with an increased risk of any T cell-mediated rejection (TCMR) event. These associations were validated in CTOT-01/17. Ex vivo studies of PMBCs revealed, unexpectedly, high expression levels of APOL1 in activated CD4(+)/CD8(+) T cells and NK cells. We detected enriched immune response gene pathways in risk allele carriers compared with noncarriers on the kidney transplant waitlist and among healthy controls. Our findings demonstrate an immunomodulatory role for recipient APOL1 risk alleles associated with TCMR and DCAL. We believe this finding has broader implications for immune-mediated injury to native kidneys.

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