학술논문

T-cell receptor sequencing reveals selected donor-reactive CD8+T cell clones resist antithymocyte globulin depletion after kidney transplantation
Document Type
Article
Source
American journal of transplantation; May 2024, Vol. 24 Issue: 5 p755-764, 10p
Subject
Language
ISSN
16006135; 16006143
Abstract
High frequencies of donor-reactive memory T cells in the periphery of transplant candidates prior to transplantation are linked to the development of posttransplant acute rejection episodes and reduced allograft function. Rabbit antithymocyte globulin (rATG) effectively depletes naïve CD4+and CD8+T cells for >6 months posttransplant, but rATG’s effects on human donor-reactive T cells have not been carefully determined. To address this, we performed T cell receptor β-chain sequencing on peripheral blood mononuclear cells aliquots collected pretransplant and serially posttransplant in 7 kidney transplant recipients who received rATG as induction therapy. We tracked the evolution of the donor-reactive CD4+and CD8+T cell repertoires and identified stimulated pretransplant, CTV-(surface dye)-labeled, peripheral blood mononuclear cells from each patient with donor cells or third-party cells. Our analyses showed that while rATG depleted CD4+T cells in all tested subjects, a subset of donor-reactive CD8+T cells that were present at high frequencies pretransplant, consistent with expanded memory cells, resisted rATG depletion, underwent posttransplant expansion and were functional. Together, our data support the conclusion that a subset of human memory CD8+T cells specifically reactive to donor antigens expand in vivo despite induction therapy with rATG and thus have the potential to mediate allograft damage.