Systematic assessment of the influence of complement gene polymorphisms on kidney transplant outcome

Abstract The importance of the innate immune system, including complement, in causing transplant injury and augmenting adaptive immune responses is increasingly recognized. Therefore variability in graft outcome may in part be due to genetic polymorphism in genes encoding proteins of the immune syst...

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Veröffentlicht in:Immunobiology (1979) 2016-04, Vol.221 (4), p.528-534
Hauptverfasser: Ermini, Luca, Weale, Michael E, Brown, Katherine M, Mesa, Irene Rebollo, Howell, W. Martin, Vaughan, Robert, Chowdhury, Paramit, Sacks, Steven H, Sheerin, Neil S
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract The importance of the innate immune system, including complement, in causing transplant injury and augmenting adaptive immune responses is increasingly recognized. Therefore variability in graft outcome may in part be due to genetic polymorphism in genes encoding proteins of the immune system. This study assessed the relationship between single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in complement genes and outcome after transplantation. Analysis was performed on two patient cohorts of 650 and 520 transplant recipients. 505 tagged SNPs in 47 genes were typed in both donor and recipient. The relationships between SNPs and graft survival, serum creatinine, delayed graft function and acute rejection were analyzed. One recipient SNP in the gene encoding mannose binding lectin was associated with graft outcome after correction for analysis of multiple SNPs ( p = 6.41 × 10−5 ). When further correction was applied to account for analysis of the effect of SNPs in both donor and recipient this lost significance. Despite association p values of
ISSN:0171-2985
1878-3279
DOI:10.1016/j.imbio.2015.12.006