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Deletion of donor-reactive T cell clones after human liver transplant.

Citation
Savage, T. M., et al. “Deletion Of Donor-Reactive T Cell Clones After Human Liver Transplant.”. American Journal Of Transplantation : Official Journal Of The American Society Of Transplantation And The American Society Of Transplant Surgeons, pp. 538-545.
Center Columbia University
Author Thomas M Savage, Brittany A Shonts, Saiping Lau, Aleksandar Obradovic, Harlan Robins, Abraham Shaked, Yufeng Shen, Megan Sykes
Keywords T cell biology, basic (laboratory) research/science, immunobiology, liver transplantation/hepatology, monitoring: immune, tolerance
Abstract

We recently developed a high throughput T cell receptor β chain (TCRβ) sequencing-based approach to identifying and tracking donor-reactive T cells. To address the role of clonal deletion in liver allograft tolerance, we applied this method in samples from a recent randomized study, ITN030ST, in which immunosuppression withdrawal was attempted within 2 years of liver transplantation. We identified donor-reactive T cell clones via TCRβ sequencing following a pre-transplant mixed lymphocyte reaction and tracked these clones in the circulation following transplantation in 3 tolerant and 5 non-tolerant subjects. All subjects showed a downward trend and significant reductions in donor-reactive TCRβ sequences were detected post-transplant in 6 of 8 subjects, including 2 tolerant and 4 non-tolerant recipients. Reductions in donor-reactive TCRβ sequences were greater than those of all other TCRβ sequences, including 3rd party-reactive sequences, in all 8 subjects, demonstrating an impact of the liver allograft after accounting for repertoire turnover. Although limited by patient number and heterogeneity, our results suggest that partial deletion of donor-reactive T cell clones may be a consequence of liver transplantation and does not correlate with success or failure of early immunosuppression withdrawal. These observations underscore the organ- and/or protocol-specific nature of tolerance mechanisms in humans.

Year of Publication
2020
Journal
American journal of transplantation : official journal of the American Society of Transplantation and the American Society of Transplant Surgeons
Volume
20
Issue
2
Number of Pages
538-545
Date Published
12/2020
ISSN Number
1600-6143
DOI
10.1111/ajt.15592
Alternate Journal
Am. J. Transplant.
PMID
31509321
PMCID
PMC6984984
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