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Erschienen in: Journal of Translational Medicine 1/2011

Open Access 01.12.2011 | Review

Gene expression profiling in acute allograft rejection: challenging the immunologic constant of rejection hypothesis

verfasst von: Tara L Spivey, Lorenzo Uccellini, Maria Libera Ascierto, Gabriele Zoppoli, Valeria De Giorgi, Lucia Gemma Delogu, Alyson M Engle, Jaime M Thomas, Ena Wang, Francesco M Marincola, Davide Bedognetti

Erschienen in: Journal of Translational Medicine | Ausgabe 1/2011

Abstract

In humans, the role and relationship between molecular pathways that lead to tissue destruction during acute allograft rejection are not fully understood. Based on studies conducted in humans, we recently hypothesized that different immune-mediated tissue destruction processes (i.e. cancer, infection, autoimmunity) share common convergent final mechanisms. We called this phenomenon the "Immunologic Constant of Rejection (ICR)." The elements of the ICR include molecular pathways that are consistently described through different immune-mediated tissue destruction processes and demonstrate the activation of interferon-stimulated genes (ISGs), the recruitment of cytotoxic immune cells (primarily through CXCR3/CCR5 ligand pathways), and the activation of immune effector function genes (IEF genes; granzymes A/B, perforin, etc.).
Here, we challenge the ICR hypothesis by using a meta-analytical approach and systematically reviewing microarray studies evaluating gene expression on tissue biopsies during acute allograft rejection. We found the pillars of the ICR consistently present among the studies reviewed, despite implicit heterogeneity.
Additionally, we provide a descriptive mechanistic overview of acute allograft rejection by describing those molecular pathways most frequently encountered and thereby thought to be most significant. The biological role of the following molecular pathways is described: IFN-γ, CXCR3/CCR5 ligand, IEF genes, TNF-α, IL-10, IRF-1/STAT-1, and complement pathways. The role of NK cell, B cell and T-regulatory cell signatures are also addressed.
Begleitmaterial
Additional file 1: supplemental data extraction information. supplemental information for key gene selection used for Table 1, IPA and Meta Core analysis. Comprehensive lists of relevant upregulated genes, in according with the original publication, are reported for the following studies: Akalin et al, Tannapfel et al, Sreekumar et al, Karason et al (genes most frequently upregulated during the rejection episode and returned to baseline levels with its resolution), Reeve et al (genes most frequently represented in the predictive analysis for microarrays classifier), Saint-Mezard et al. Morgun et al: we reported the upregulated genes selected from the list of 98 genes belonged to the first predictor set that discriminate acute cardiac, renal and lung rejection from non rejection. CCL5 belonged to the second prediction set. Sarwal et al: we selected key immune genes from the list of genes upregulated in three different subtypes of acute allograft rejection (see also Mansfield et al. 2004 and Weintraub et al 2006). Gimino et al and Lande et al: we selected key genes from a list of genes reported as upregulated during acute rejection according to the first (Gimino et al) and second (Lande et al) analyses. Flechner et al: we selected key genes a list of genes upregulated in acute rejection samples compared to samples without diagnosis of rejection. Others upregulated genes included in the original list were: Morgun et al: Homo sapiens cDNA FLJ10266 fis, clone HEMBB1001024; Homo sapiens cDNA FLJ10580 fis, clone NT2RP2003533, mRNA sequence; Homo sapiens cDNA FLJ10981 fis, clone PLACE1001610; Homo sapiens mRNA, cDNA DKFZp434P1019; Homo sapiens mRNA; cDNA DKFZp564P073; Homo sapiens mRNA; cDNA DKFZp586H0718; Homo sapiens mRNA; cDNA DKFZp761G0924; Homo sapiens mRNA; cDNA DKFZp761P221; DKFZP434B033; Unknown (protein for IMAGE:4251653) [Homo sapiens], mRNA sequence; Unnamed protein product [Homo sapiens]. Karason: Homo sapiens Alu repeat (LNXI) mRNA sequence. Reeve et al: affymetrix id 235529_at and 238725_at. The 14 genes selected in the Inkinen et al study were those genes highly upregulated in AR vs NR control. Morgun et al: we reported the upregulated genes selected from the list of 98 genes belonged to the first classifier that discriminate acute cardiac rejection vs non rejection and immune-related genes selected from the second and third classifier (130 and 188 genes respectively): the three classifier also discriminated rejection and non rejection lung and kidney samples. Asaoka et al analyzed biopsies from 21 liver transplant recipients with recurrent HCV (RHC). Analysis compared 9 with AR + RHC versus 13 with RHC only (control). Genes shown in this table selected from the network classified as "Cell death, hematological disease, and immunological disease" via IPA. (DOC 24 KB)
Hinweise

Electronic supplementary material

The online version of this article (doi:10.​1186/​1479-5876-9-174) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Authors' contributions

DB and TLS performed data extraction from the available literature and prepared the manuscript collaboratively with input and review by all co-authors. FMM and EW reviewed data extraction and literature research and revised the manuscript for important intellectual contents. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

Introduction

Defining the interplay between molecular pathways within highly complex biological systems, such as those between immune cell networks and target tissues, is certainly a daunting task. The advent of high-throughput gene expression technology has served as an extremely useful tool to enable investigators to characterize biological events taking place within humans, reducing the inherent bias often generated by testing specific but restricted hypotheses derived from animal models. Previously, we applied this approach to profiling tumor lesions in humans, before and after immunotherapy, to identify molecular pathways activated during immune-mediated tumor rejection. These pathways illustrate a process characterized by the coordinated activation of interferon stimulated genes (ISGs), the recruitment of cytotoxic cells through the massive production of specific chemokine ligands, and the activation of immune effector function (IEF) genes (genes expressed by NK cells and CD8 T cells upon activation) [14]. Similar pathways have been described among other immune-mediated tissue destruction processes such as those occurring during autoimmunity, graft versus host disease (GVHD), infection clearance, acute cardiovascular events, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and placental villitis [510]. These observations suggest that these distinct tissue destruction processes share common final immune-mediated molecular mechanisms. We termed this phenomenon as the "Immunologic Constant of Rejection (ICR) [3]." The molecular constants shared among these different tissue destruction processes include the coordinated activation of the following pathways: I) STAT-1/IRF-1/T-bet/IFN-γ/IL-15 pathway; II) CXCR3 ligand chemokine pathway (CXCL9, -10, -11) III) CCR5 ligand chemokine pathway (CCL3, -4, -5) and IV) TIA-1 pathway/granzyme A/B/granulysin/perforin pathway [3, 4].
Over the past decade gene expression microarrays have been employed to study allograft rejection in humans. The intrinsic heterogeneity among different investigators in terms of patient selection, microarray platforms, gene coverage, statistical analysis, sample collection and study design makes cross-comparison between different studies very challenging. Furthermore, since microarray profiling is a relatively new technology, it has continued to evolve in sophistication and has only recently become standardized [11, 12]. For this reason we believe that despite the non-uniformity among studies, genes that are consistently reported across different studies and in different organs command attention. In this review we challenge the concept of the ICR by examining multiple studies to evaluate the presence of the "constants of rejection." We tested the ICR hypothesis by describing the most frequently reported immune pathways activated during acute allograft rejection in humans as reported by publications using microarray technologies. Biological explanations for relevant pathways are provided based on pertinent literature.

Data Extraction Criteria

In this review we focused on high-throughput gene expression profiling studies which sought to characterize the molecular features of acute allograft rejection. Accordingly, we searched various combinations of the following MeSH terms/keywords in PubMed: "gene expression, " "acute, " "allograft, " "rejection, " and "microarray." Searches were performed independently by two investigators. Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) and reference lists of original articles and review articles also served as additional search methods. Microarray studies providing original data and performed on human tissue biopsies during established acute allograft rejection were selected and evaluated [1346]). Studies analyzing gene expression profiles of peripheral blood mononuclear cells and urine sediments during acute rejection will not be considered here, despite their potential utility as non-invasive diagnostic/predictive tools [4751].
The compiled list of key genes in this review came from those reported as upregulated in the original publications, most of which were predominantly immune-related and are reported in Table 1. In total, 15 unique datasets met the search criteria, and comprise Tables 1 and 2. Of these datasets, four comparative analyses were among those selected for inclusion. Of note, all of the studies contained original data from de novo investigation.
Table 1
Key genes associated with acute allograft rejection according to human microarray studies
Author: Tannapfel et al. 2001[14]
Organ: Liver
IL3
MMP9
TGF-B1-3
TIMP1
TNF
CLUSTERIN (CLU)
IL10
   
Author: Sreekumar et al. 2002[15]
Organ: Liver
C1QB
C3
LIPC
GZMB
HSPA1A
IGF1
IL2
(IRF9*)
STAT1
ACADM
HLA-I
HLA-II
PCK1
SELPLG
TGFB1
TNF
TNFAIP3
TNFSF10
UBB3#
UBA1
UBE2N
ADAM17
GYS2
CTPS
      
Inkinen et al. 2005[16]
Organ: Liver
HLA-D
IL2RB
IL2RG
CASP1
CASP3
GZMA
GZMB
SELL
ICAM3
ITGA4
SELE
VCAM1
IFNG
IL1B
      
Asaoka et al. 2009[28]
Organ: Liver
AKAP11
ALOX15
CASP8
CFLAR
FFAR3
IFNAR1
IGFBP3
IL12RB1
LTA
POU4F1
PPP1R8
PPP1R3A
PVRL1
TNK2
      
Author: Gimino et al. 2003[17]Lande et al. 2006[30](MINNEAPOLIS Dataset)
Organ: Lung
C4B
CCR7
CD28
CD3E
CD84
CTLA4
CXCR3
GZMK
GZMA
IFNG
IGKC
ITK
KIR
PRF1
STAT4
IL2RA
IL2RB
Zap70
LCK
 
Patil et al. 2008 (MINNEAPOLIS2 Dataset)[18]
Organ: Lung
IFITM1
CD8A
MARCKS
CCL3
GZMB
ITM2A
IL32
IL8
CCL4
 
Author: Karason et al. 2006[19]
Organ: Heart
C3
C4A
CXCL9
CXCL10
GBP1
HLA-C
HLA-F
HLA-J
IGFBP4
NPPA
PSME2
RARRES3
STAT1
       
Author: Akalin et al. 2001[21]
Organ: Kidney
Humig
(CXCL9)
C3
CD18
(ITGB2)
ISGF-3
(STAT1)
MCL1
MIP-3β
(CCL19)
NNMT
RING4
(TAP1)
TCRB #
IL2-SP 2#
(LCP1)
Author: Sarwal et al. 2003 (STANFORD Dataset)[22]
Organ: Kidney
HLA-A
HLA-B
HLA-C
HLA-E
HLA-DR
HLA-DQ
HLA-DMA
HLA-DRB4
TGFBR2
TGFR1
TCR
DARC
C4B
CXCL9
SCYA3
(CCL3)
SCYA5
(CCL5)
CCR5
SCYA2
(CCL2)
CD20
PERFORIN
CD53
NFKB1
NK4 (IL32)
CX3CR1
GZMA
STK17B
IL6R
IL2RB
IL15RA
IL16
STAT1
CASP10
IFNGR1
IGHG3
IGKC
IGL
IGHM
LENG4
CD59
VCAM1
CXCL9
CXCL10
CCR5
       
Author: Flechner et al. 2004 (CLEVELAND Dataset)[23]
Organ: Kidney
C1QB
CCL5
CD14
CD163
TRB@
CD16
CD2
CD27
CD3D
CD48
CD53
CD64 (FCGR1A)
CD8
CDW52
CXCR4
GZMA
HLA-F
IFI30
IL10RA
IL10RB
IL4R
ISG20
PKR
(PRKRA)
RAGE4 (RAGE)
TNFRSF1b
     
Reeve et al. 2009 (EDMONTON Dataset)[24]
Organ: Kidney
APOBEC3G
CCL4
CCL5
CD8A
CRTAM
CXCL9
CXCL10
CXCL11
FAM26F
GBP1
GBP2
GBP4
GBP5
GZMA
GZMB
INDO
LCP2
LILRB1
NLRC5
PSMB9
Author: Morgun et al. 2006 (SAN PAULO Dataset)[25]
Organ: Heart + Lung + Kidney
(SAN PAULO+ MINNEAPOLIS+STANFORD+CLEVELAND Datasets)
ABCA7
CD14
DAP10
HLA-A
HSD17B7
ISG20
LEF1
NT5C2
RU2
TRAF2
ADAM15
CD2
F2R
HLA-B
HSPC043
ISGF3G (IRF9)
LIAS
PAK4
SELPLG
TRB@
ADAM8
CD3Z
FCER1G
HLA-DMA
HSPC129
ITGB2
LILRB4
PCDHGA8
SLC14A2
UBD
B2M
CD53
FKBP14
HLA-DMB
IFI30
KCNJ5
LOC90586
PSCD4
SMG1
UBE1L
BAX
CD7
FLJ10244
HLA-DQB1
IGHG3
KCNK6
LOC92033
PSMB9
SORL1
UBE2B
BTN3A3
CD74
FLJ11106
HLA-DRA
IGKC
KIAA0924
LTB
PSME1
STAT1
UBE2L6
C1QA
CG012
FLJ11151
HLA-DRB1
IGLC2
KIAA1030
LTB4R
RAB7L1
SULT1A3
UCP2
C4A
CHD3
FLJ11467
HLA-DRB3
IGLC6
KIAA1170
MAFF
RAC2
TAP1
WSX1 (IL27RA)
CASP4
CORO1A
FY
HLA-DRB5
IGLJ3
KIAA1257
MSH3
RARRES3
TAPBP
ZAP70
CCL18
CTSS
GMFG
HLA-E
IL2RB
KIAA1348
NKG7
RASGRP2
TCBRV (IL23A)
ZNRD1
CCL5
CX3CL1
GZMK
HLA-F
IRF3
LAT
NM23-H6
RBL1
TNFAIP3
TNFSF13B
CXCL9
D21S2056E
HA-1
HLA-G
IRF5
LCK
NPHP1
RIMS1
  
Reference: Saint-Mezard et al. 2008 (PARIS Dataset)[26]
Organ: Kidney
(PARIS+STANFORD+CLEVELAND+NON HUMAN PRIMATES Datasets)
ARHGDIB
ARPC2
CASP1
CASP4
CCL5
CD163
CD44
CD48
CD52
CD53
CD8A
CSPG2
CXCL10
CXCL9
FCER1G
FER1L3
GBP1
GBP2
GMFG
GZMA
HCK
HCLS1
HLA-B
HLA-C
HLA-DMA
HLA-DMB
HLA-DPA1
HLA-DQB1
HLA-DQB2
HLA-DRA
HLA-DRB3
HLA-E
HLA-F
HLA-G
IFI30
IFITM1
IGHM
IL10RA
ISG20
ITGB2
LAPTM5
LCK
LCP1
LCP2
LTF
LYZ
MMP7
NMI
PLEK
PLSCR1
PRG1
PRKCB1
PSMB10
PSMB8
PSMB9
RAC2
RUNX3
SERPING1
SLA
STAT1
TAP1
TCIRG1
TIMP1
TNC
TNFRSF7
UBD
UBE2L6
WARS
WFDC2
T3JAM (TRAF3IP3)
Rodder et al. 2010 (TENON/INSELSPITAL Dataset)[29]
Organ: Kidney
Meta-analysis focused on metzincins and related genes
(TENON/INSELSPITAL+EDMONTON+STANFORD+ CLEVELAND Datasets)
TIMP1
MMP7
ADAMTS18
ADAMTS6
ADAMTS17
ADAMTS8
ADAMTSL4
ADAM18
TLL2
ADAM17
PLG
LAMA4
EMILIN2
       
Chen et al. 2010 (STANFORD2 dataset)[27]
Organs: Kidney, Heart
(STANFORD2+CLEVELAND+SAN PAULO Datasets)
CXCL9
CXCL11
CXCR4
STAT1
CCL4
C6orf32
MARCKS
IGSF6
CD2
TRPM1
IL10RA
RARRES3
NR4A2
PTPRC
LEF1
TAP1
CTSS
ISG20
CCL8
BASP1
SLC2A3
LCP2
HLA-DMA
BIRC5
HLA-DMB
CASP4
SELL
HLA-F
CD44
HLA-DQB1
PIK3CD
PECAM1
MDK
MELK
CDKN3
CPD
SH2D2A
CCNB2
HLA-DRA
B2M
DIAPH1
USP34
SCAND2
RUNX1
S100A4
     
Genes underlining highly redundant themes among studies are in bold.
This table reports upregulated genes associated with acute allograft rejection detected by microarrays technology analyzing human graft samples (bronchoalveolar lavage for lung samples, tissue biopsies for the other samples). Additional detail regarding the data extraction is provided in Additional file 1.
*Synonymous gene symbols, according to NCBI Gene, are provided in brackets.
#The original name reported in the publication was: TCR Active β-chain related gene (M12886: unmapped). 2# The original name reported in the publication was: IL-2-stimulated phosphoprotein. 3#The original name reported in the publication was: ubiquitin.
Table 2
Characteristics of microarray studies evaluating gene expression profile in acute allograft rejection biopsies in humans.
Author (dataset) *
Year
Organ (samples)
Array
Aim/Design
Tannapfel et al. [14]
2001
Liver (biopsies)
Atlas human cDNA
~ 600 genes
Aim. To investigate the expression of multiple inflammatory and apoptosis related genes in acute allograft rejection.
Design. (Adults) 62 patients, 97 biopsies: acute allograft rejection (n = 32), HCV reinfection (n = 18), CMV infection (n = 5), acute rejection and HCV infection (n = 3), stable graft function (n = 30) and after treatment of acute rejection (n = 9).
Statistics. Not available.
Sreekumar et al. [15]
2002
Liver (biopsies)
Affymetrix HU 6800
~ 6, 400 genes
Aim. To study intragraft gene expression patterns in acute cellular rejection and during recurrence of HCV in HCV infected recipients.
Methods. (Adults) 8 patients and biopsies: HCV infection and acute cellular rejection (n = 4), HCV infection without acute cellular rejection (n = 4).
Statistics. T-tests and fold change threshold.
Inkinen et al. [16]
2005
Liver (biopsies)
Turku Centre of Biotechnology human immunochip
~ 4, 600 genes
Aim. To determine and compare gene signature of CMV infection and acute rejection.
Methods. (Adults) 7 patients and biopsies: CMV infection (n = 4), patients with acute rejection (n = 3).
Gene expression of CMV and acute rejection samples were compared to that of liver graft after reperfusion.
Statistics. Not available.
Asaoka et al. [28]
2009
Liver (biopsies)
AceGene Human chip
~ 30, 000 genes
Aim. To identify genes characteristic of acute cellular rejection in patients with recurrent HCV infections.
Methods. (Adults) 21 HCV positive patients, 22 biopsies: acute cellular rejection (n = 9), without acute cellular rejection (n = 13). The expression of some transcripts (CASP8 and BMP2) was validated through qRT-PCR in this data set and also in a validation set: 32 biopsies from 25 HCV positive patients.
Statistics. Class discovery: unsupervised clustering analysis. Class comparison: Mann Whitney U test, supervised cluster analysis. Biological explanation: networks were built by Ingenuity Pathway Analysis (IPA).
Gimino et al. [17]
(Minneapolis Dataset)
2003
Lung (BAL)
Affymetrix Human Genome U133A
~ 18, 000 genes
Aim. To determine markers of acute rejection in lung recipients.
Methods. (Adults) 26 patients, 34 samples: acute rejection (n = 27), without diagnosis of rejection (n = 7).
Statistics. Class comparison: significance analysis of microarray. Class description: supervised clustering analysis.
Patil et al. [18]
(Minneapolis2 Dataset)
2008
Lung (BAL)
Affymetrix Human Genome U133A
~ 18, 000 genes
Aim. to improve acute rejection diagnostics by identifying genes whose expression best classifies acute rejection versus no rejection
Methods. (Adults) 32 patients, 32 samples: acute rejection (n = 14), without diagnosis of rejection (n = 18). Expression of some transcript was also assessed through qRT-PCR.
Statistics. Class comparison: Significance analysis of microarrays.
Class prediction: prediction analysis of microarrays, method of nearest shrunken centroids with 10 fold cross validation. Biological explanation: Gene Ontology and GoHyperG.
Karason et al. [19]
2006
Heart (biopsies)
Affymetrix Human Genome U133A
~ 18, 000 genes
Aim. To utilize microarray analysis to search for potential biomarkers of cardiac allograft rejection.
Design. (Adults). 20 patients, 14 patients experienced acute rejection episodes. 3 patients with acute rejection and biopsy available at three different time-points (before: normal histology, during: biopsy with acute rejection episode, after: biopsy with normal histology after the rejection episode) were profiled. qRT-PCR was performed for selected genes (CXCL9, CXCL10, NNPA). Serum levels of CXCL9 and -10 in 10 patients at three time points were also determined.
Statistics. Gene clustering according to time-point analysis: self organizing map (SOM) algorithm. Biological explanation: Gene Ontology (GO) and Netaffx.
Akalin et al. [21]
2001
Kidney (biopsies)
Affymetrix
HU 6800
~ 6, 400 genes
Aim. To analyze gene expression profile using microarrays in acute allograft rejection.
Design. (Adults) 10 biopsies: histological evidence of acute cellular rejection (n = 7), without evidence of rejection (n = 3).
Statistics. Each acute rejection sample was compared with each control sample. Genes with a > fourfold increase in the majority of the samples were selected.
Sarwal et al. [22]
(Stanford Dataset)
2003
Kidney (biopsies)
Lymphochip
> 12, 000 genes
Aim. To investigate the possibility that variations in gene-expression patterns in allograft-biopsy samples from patients with acute rejection and related disorders could identify molecularly distinct subtypes of acute rejection to possibly explain differences in clinical behavior.
Design. (Pediatric patients) 50 patients. 67 biopsies: biopsies during acute or chronic allograft dysfunctions (n = 52) and at the time of the engraftment or when graft function was stable (n = 15). The possibility of different sampling of the medullary and the cortical regions was also addressed.
Statistics. Class discovery: unsupervised clustering analysis. Class comparison: significance analysis of microarray. Survival analysis: Kaplan-Meyer/Cox log-rank method. Biological explanation: enrichment of specific functional groups through evaluation of hypergeometric distribution. The exclusion of data from genes whose expression was correlated with the depth of biopsy did not change the cluster analysis.
Flechner et al. [23]
(Cleveland Dataset)
2004
Kidney
(biopsies and PBLs)
Affymetrix
HG-U95Av2
~ 10, 000 genes
Aim. To determine gene expression profiling in transplant patients including: normal donor kidneys, well functioning transplants without rejection, kidneys undergoing acute rejection, and transplants with renal dysfunction without rejection.
Design. (Adults) 23 graft recipients and 9 donors. Acute rejection biopsies (n = 7), renal dysfunction without rejection on biopsies (n = 6), biopsies carried out more than one year post transplant in patient with good transplant function and normal histology (n = 10), biopsies from living donor controls (n = 9). PBLs were also collected and profiled. Expression of some transcript was also assessed through qRT-PCR.
Statistics. Class discovery: unsupervised clustering analysis. Class comparison: significance analysis of microarray filtered with limit fold model and MAS 5.0 present/absent calls. Class-prediction: leave-one-out method. Biological explanation: analysis of functional classes of the differentially expressed genes.
Reeve et al. [24]
(Edmonton Dataset)
2009
Kidney (biopsies)
Affymetrix Human Genome U133 Plus 2.0
> 38, 000 genes
Aim. To define a classifier to distinguish rejection vs non rejection using predictive analysis for microarrays.
Design. (Adults) 143 patients, 186 biopsies: acute rejection samples (acute cellular rejection, antibody mediated rejection or mixed) (n = 51), non-rejection samples (n = 135).
Statistics. Class comparisons: Bayesian t-test and false discovery rate. Class prediction: prediction analysis of microarrays. Biological explanation: analysis of functional classes of the differentially expressed genes according to KEGG pathways and to authors' defined pathogenesis-based transcripts.
Morgun et al. [25]
(San Paulo Dataset)
2006
Heart (biopsies)
Qiagen/Operon Array
~ 14, 000 genes
Aim. To analyze gene expression differences between rejection, non rejection and Trypanosoma cruzi infection.
Design. (Adults) 40 patients, 76 biopsies (rejection, no rejection and Trypanosoma cruzi infection recurrence). Expression of some transcripts was also assessed through qRT-PCR.
Statistics. Class comparison: random variance t-test filtered with univariate/multivariate tests for false discovery rates; supervised clustering analysis. Class prediction: 6 different multivariate models models (compound covariate predictor, diagonal linear discriminant analysis, 1- and 3-nearest neighbor predictor, nearest centroid predictor, support vector machine) and leave-one-out cross validation. The authors validated the predictor-set in independent datasets of biopsies (collected on different continents and analyzed with different chip batches). The authors also tested the predictor set by analyzing the data from data from Cleveland (Kidney) Stanford (Kidney) and Minneapolis (Lung) datasets.
Biological explanation: Database Annotation, Visualization and Integrated Discovery (DAVID)/Gene Ontology and KEGG Pathways.
Saint-Mezard et al. [26]
(Paris Dataset)
2008
Kidney (biopsies)
Affymetrix Human Genome U133 Plus 2.0
> 38, 000 genes
Aim. To identify a robust and reliable molecular signature for acute rejection in humans.
Design. (Adults) 45 patients, 47 biopsies: acute rejection (n = 8), acute rejection and chronic allograft nephropathy (n = 8), borderline (n = 3), non rejection (n = 7), and chronic allograft nephropathy (n = 22). Normal kidney tissue was obtained from histopathologically unaffected areas of the cortex of native nephrectomies performed for renal carcinoma was used as control.
Statistics. Genes differentially expressed (Paris Dataset) were intersected with those from with 2 public human datasets: 1) Stanford Dataset and 2) Cleveland Dataset and with one Non Human Primate (NHP) model of acute renal allograft. However, the authors used biopsy microarray data from Edmonton Dataset as in independent confirmation set. Score from the identified classifier was correlated with the histopathological Banff score. Expression of some transcripts was also assessed through qRT-PCR.
Class comparison: ANOVA with or without false discovery rate and additional cutoff based on twofold change. Class discovery: Principal component analysis, supervised clustering analysis (using the genes differentially expressed in all four datasets); Class prediction: leave-one-out cross-validation and 10-fold cross-validation. Biological explanation: Gene regulatory networks were generated using MetaCore.
Rodder et al. [29]
(Tenon/Inelspital Dataset)
2011
Kidney (biopsies)
Affymetrix Human Genome U133 Plus 2.0
> 38, 000 genes
Aim. To identify the expression of metzincins and related genes in allograft rejection biopsies.
Design. (Adults) 41 biopsies: normal histology (n = 20), borderline changes (n = 4), acute rejection (n = 10) and acute rejection and interstitial fibrosis/tubular atrophy (n = 7). Expression of some transcripts was also assessed through qRT-PCR.
Statistics. Class prediction: ANOVA and shrinking centroids methods were used for variable selection and a variety of classification methods were tested. Leave-one-out method was performed as internal cross-validation. Classifier performance was estimated as correct rate after 1-level cross validation. The model was validated in Edmonton, Cleveland and Stanford datasets. Gene set scores from biopsies were also determined and correlated with Banff scores.
Chen et al. [27]
(Stanford2 Dataset)
2011
Kidney (biopsies)
Affymetrix Human Genome U133 Plus 2.0
> 38, 000 genes
Aim. To identify biomarkers across similar conditions through integration of related datasets.
Methods. (Pediatric patients) 36 patients and biopsies: acute rejection biopsies (n = 18), stable function biopsies (n = 18).
Statistics. Class comparison: significance analysis of microarrays and fold change filter. The upregulated genes during acute rejection were intersected with genes upregulated during acute rejection in two other datasets (Cleveland and San Paulo).
Notes
*For the Minneapolis Dataset only the publication by Gimino et al. is described;
Microarray chips details: Atlas human cDNA microarrays ~ 588 gene analyzed; Affymetrix GeneChip HU6800 Array containing > 7, 000 oligonucleotide probe sets representing ~ 6, 400 human genes (Affymetrix, Santa Clara, CA);
Affymetrix Human Genome U133A Array containing > 22, 000 oligonucleotide probe sets representing > 18, 000 transcripts (~ 14, 500 human genes) (Affymetrix, Santa Clara, CA); Lymphochip: in-house microarrays containing > 28, 000 cDNA probes representing > 12, 000 genes (Stanford University); Affymetrix GeneChip HG-U95Av2 Array containing ~ 12, 000 oligonucleotide probes representing ~ 10, 000 human genes; Affymetrix Human Genome U133A Array containing > 22, 000 oligonucleotide probe sets representing > 18, 000 transcripts (~ 14, 500 human genes) (Affymetrix, Santa Clara, CA); Affymetrix Human Genome U133 Plus 2.0 Array containing > 54, 000 oligonucleotide probe sets representing > 47, 000 transcripts (~ 38, 500 human genes) (Affymetrix, Santa Clara, CA); Qiagen/Operon array: in-house oligonucleotide array platform designed by Qiagen/Operon (Alameda, CA) and printed at NIAID Microarray facility, representing ~ 14, 000 human genes;
Study aim/design is referred to gene expression experiments;
Abbreviations: BOS: Bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome; PBLs: Peripheral blood lymphocyte; CMV: cytomegalovirus; HCV: hepatitis C virus; qRT-PCR: quantitative real time polymerase chain reaction;
The Ingenuity Systems Pathway Analysis (IPA) http://​www.​ingenuity.​com and MetaCore http://​www.​genego.​com were used to illustrate the relationships among the compiled list of key genes. Additional detail regarding the data extraction is provided in Additional File 1.

Overview of microarray studies

Considering the heterogeneity among the selected studies in terms of platform used, purpose, design, and interpretation (see also Table 2), a quantitative approach was not feasible, making this review qualitative in nature. The diversity of the clinical setting (pediatric or adult patients; heart, lung, liver or kidney transplants) also added complexity to this analysis. The purposes of the original studies included here ranged between class discovery, class comparison, and/or class prediction. Different methods (summarized in Table 2) were used by different investigators to provide a list of genes modulated during acute allograft rejection. Not surprisingly, little overlap exists among studies with respect to specific 'genes' described as upregulated during acute rejection, yet, we found a striking consistency in terms of pathway overrepresentation suggesting that each individual study identified different pieces of the same puzzle.
It should be noted that these studies lacked the use of micro/macro-dissection which prohibited identification of the cellular source of the transcripts differentially expressed during acute rejection. It is logical to think that analysis of RNA from the whole tissue samples could influence gene expression patterns. With this in mind, Sarwal et al. [22], investigated if the molecular changes observed during allograft rejection could have been related to the differential sampling of cortical and medullary kidney sections. For this analysis the authors excluded the genes whose expression was shown to be correlated with the depth of biopsy in a previous investigation. The introduction of this filter did not significantly change the results. In another study involving kidney recipients, Rodder et al. [29] performed qRT-PCR on isolated glomeruli, and on proximal and distal tubules. Although qRT-PCR of targets genes (metzincins and related genes) revealed some differences between glomeruli and tubules, it confirmed, overall, the differences between acute rejection and normal samples detected by microarray analysis.

The Immunologic Constant of Rejection pathways in acute allograft rejection

After reviewing the literature, we found that pathways involved in the ICR hypothesis are frequently activated during acute allograft rejection across studies conducted by different investigators in different organs (see Table 1). Figure 1 provides a visualization of the relationships among the key genes described. Here, we attempt to illustrate the hypothetical role of these pathways during acute allograft rejection.

IFN-γ pathway

IFN-γ is a pleiotropic cytokine that plays a role in the modulation of many aspects of the immune response. Studies conducted involving IFN-γ -/- mice suggest that this cytokine, in addition to its pro-inflammatory functions, might be important for graft acceptance, preventing early graft necrosis, and maintaining microvascular viability [52, 53]. However, the molecular mechanisms through which IFN-γ exerts its anti-inflammatory action during the early phases of the engraftment are unclear. On the other hand, this interferon is considered a central cytokine in sustaining inflammation during allograft rejection both in humans and in murine models.
IFN-γ is predominantly produced by NK cells as part of the innate immune response, and by CD4 T helper 1 cells (Th1) and CD8 cytotoxic T cells (CTLs) as a part of the adaptive immune response once antigen-specific immunity develops [54, 55]. Its overexpression has also been observed in acute allograft rejection in several human studies where RT-PCR was applied [17, 5658]. Microarray studies have not only enabled the detection of the expression of the IFN-γ gene itself, but also the detection of its downstream effects (IFN-γ stimulated genes) [15, 17, 2124, 59]. Figure 1A represents the first network generated by IPA after analysis of the compiled list of key immune-related genes (Table 1), with IFN-γ serving as the hub of this important network. Detection of IFN-γ stimulated genes alone is not sufficient to discriminate its effect from the effects of other cytokines, such as IFN-α, which can also activate many of the IFN-γ stimulated genes [60, 61]. However, the prevalence of IFN-γ versus IFN-α transcripts in addition to the activation of pathways that specifically enhance the INF-γ loop (e.g. TNF-α, CCR5, and CXCR3) implicate IFN-γ as a driver gene involved in sustaining acute allograft rejection [22, 24, 26, 31, 59, 62]. Although some functions have been described for individual IFN-γ stimulated genes, the overall orchestration is not completely understood. A partial description of the relationship among IFN-γ stimulated genes detected in microarray studies is illustrated in Figure 1A.
Primarily through interferon regulatory factor 1 (IRF-1), IFN-γ upregulates both MHC class I and II, by increasing the expression of antigen peptide transporters TAP1-2, or class II transactivator CIITA, for example [54, 63, 64]. Indeed, IFN-γ promotes the differentiation of naïve CD4 T cells into Th1 cells which are, among the lineage of CD4 T cells (Th1, Th2, Th17 and T Reg), the only ones that produce a consistent amount of IFN-γ [55, 65]. IFN-γ in turn, and usually in synergy with tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α), induces the expression of CXCR3 ligands [54, 66, 67] and CCR5 ligands [68].

CXCR3 and CCR5 ligand pathways

CXCR3 ligands (CXCL9, -10, -11) and CCR5 ligands (CCL3, -4, -5) are the chemokines most frequently upregulated during acute allograft rejection as described by human microarray studies [18, 2127] and RT-PCR (See Table 1). The upregulation of the related receptors, CXCR3 and CCR5, has also been frequently described, though not as much specifically within microarray studies [17, 22, 24, 6972]. Interestingly, high urinary CXCR3 ligand protein levels were detected in clinical trials in patients experiencing acute kidney rejection [4851]. More recently, Chen et al. [27] described CXCL9 as a biomarker of acute rejection in a cross-organ microarray study evaluating pediatric renal, adult renal, and adult cardiac transplant patients. Additionally, CXCL9 proteins were also found to be elevated in serum. Indeed, the CCR5Δ32 polymorphism that encodes for a nonfunctional CCR5 receptor, conferred a greatly reduced risk for the development of acute rejection in kidney [73] and in liver transplantation [74].
The driving role of these two pathways in allograft rejection was suggested by in vivo murine models one decade ago [7578]. The lack of host CCR5 was associated with a three-fold increase in allograft survival rate, but the targeting of any of the three main ligands using knockout mice or monoclonal antibodies had no effect on allograft survival [79]. Similarly, lack of CXCR3 led to graft acceptance indefinitely [75] and in addition, a significant survival benefit has been observed in CXCL10 -/- recipients [76]. This supposed non-redundant effect of CXCR3 that has been assumed correct for almost ten years, is currently object of debate [80]. Recently, in fact, two independent studies reported that disruption or blockade of recipient CXCR3 had relatively little effect on rejection [8183]. These observations, as well as the abundance of CXCR3 ligands present during acute allograft rejection, raise questions about the functional importance of CXCR3 during rejection and the possibility of alternative targets of CXCR3 ligands [80].
Upon antigen stimulation, the co-expression of CXCR3 and CCR5 is a marker of Th1 cell polarization, whereas CCR3, CCR4, CCR8, and CRTh2 are expressed by Th2 cells [65]. The genes and gene pathways frequently overexpressed during acute allograft rejection are consistent with the predominance of Th1 cell polarization. Among CXCR3 and CCR5 ligands, CXCL9, -10 and CCL4, -5 were the most frequently reported chemokines associated with acute rejection in microarray studies [19, 2124, 31] (see Table 1).
CCR5 and CXCR3 ligands can be secreted differentially by dendritic cells, activated macrophages and T cells, endothelial cells, and NK cells [69, 70, 8487]. However, studies that define the cell-specific production of chemokines in allograft rejection in humans are scant. Consequently, evidence-based descriptions of cell-specific chemokine-mediated recruitment have not been well-defined in humans either.
Hoffmann et al. [88] described that a significant proportion of both CD4+ and CD8+ T-cells detected in human renal biopsies during rejection express CXCR3. It has also been speculated that CXCR3 may act as a decoy receptor by binding CCL11, preventing the recruitment of granulocytes via the CCL11/CCR3 binding interaction [80, 89]. This might explain why granulocytes are not classically found in acute cellular rejection. Furthermore, peripheral blood monocytes that are lower in CCR5 expression could be recruited through CCR1 that also binds CCL-3, -4, -5. In addition to Th1 and CTL cells, NK cells could also possibly be recruited through this pathway since they are all known to express CXCR3 and CCR5 receptors [85]. However, NK cells are rarely present in allograft infiltrates and are especially rare in T-cell mediated rejection [39, 90].
Recruitment and activation of CCR5 and CXCR3 ligands can lead to increased production of IFN-γ, with a resultant amplification of the inflammatory stimuli and further release of chemoattractant molecules. Thus, in a concerted fashion, these molecules orchestrate the switch from innate to adaptive immunity, meanwhile sustaining and strengthening the innate cytotoxic mechanisms with a persistent "NK-like" response.
Finally, even though up to 25% of circulating B cells express CXCR3 [9092], and can also produce CXCR3 ligands [87, 93], the recruitment of B cells through this mechanism during acute allograft rejection has not yet been defined in humans.
This complex cascade of cytokines and the coordinate activation of specific pathways so far described, leads to the activation of IEF genes (perforin, granzymes A/B, Fas/Fas ligand, and caspases) during the process of tissue destruction.

IEF genes

The release of granzymes, perforins, and granulysin and the interaction between the Fas/Fas ligand and caspase activation represent the major effector mechanisms of cell-mediated immunity [94]. These IEF transcripts have been consistently described as being associated with acute allograft rejection using transcriptome analyses [17, 22, 23, 26].
By profiling PBMCs, Hidalgo et al. [40] found that cytotoxic molecular transcripts (i.e. granzyme B, Fas ligand, perforin) are commonly overexpressed in CTL CD4+ cells, CTL CD8+ cells, and NK cells. These observations highlight the existence of a common molecular cytotoxic "NK-like" effector mechanism that is shared among the different arms of the immune system, the classically distinct innate and adaptive immune arms. Taking this one step further, Mueller et al. [31] found that gene expression patterns of T-cell mediated rejection are surprisingly similar to the expression patterns found in antibody-mediated rejection. In particular, interferon-γ affected transcripts and IEF genes such as perforin, granzyme B, and Fas ligand were overexpressed in both of them. This observation suggests that effector T cells and antibodies lead to the activation of a common final pathway in tissue destruction and supports the proposed theory of the immunologic constant of rejection [3].

NK cell, B cell, and T-reg signatures

NK signature

NK cells in murine skin and rat liver allografts are the immune cells responsible for early chemokine production of CCR5 and CXCR3 ligands (i.e., CCL3, CCL4, CXCL10) which are important in initiating and sustaining acute allograft rejection [95, 96]. Nevertheless, NK cells do not seem to be sufficient to reject solid organs directly since mice that have intact NK cell function but absent adaptive immunity (RAG-/- or SCID) are able to accept skin and cardiac graft transplants indefinitely [9799]. However, the inability to reject the graft does not prove that innate cells (in this case NK cells) are unable to mediate tissue destruction. A possible explanation could be that, in these models, the lack of stimuli derived from a reciprocal feedback between innate and adaptive cells, does not allow triggering or sustaining a strong enough "NK-like" cytotoxic effector function.
Recently it has been observed that nude mice treated with oncolytic viruses can reject tumor xenografts [100]. This rejection was associated with the activation of ISGs (both IFN-γ and IFN-α stimulated genes), upregulation of CXCR3 and CCR5 ligands, and activation of IEF genes (granzyme B, caspase 8). Since these mice lack T cells and secondarily lack B cell responses, this immune-mediated tissue destruction is thought to be induced by innate immune effectors such as NK cells and activated macrophages. This study suggests that, at least in this model, innate immunity can be an independent effector of tissue-specific destruction not requiring adaptive immunity. It is possible that the oncolytic virus used in this model primes the innate immune system in a manner that bypasses the need for the adaptive immune system interaction.
In humans, however, studies analyzing the individual contribution of innate immune cells in mediating the final step of the alloresponse are lacking. Although NK cells are present, they are only a minor component of allograft tissue infiltrates in acute rejection [98, 101, 102]. For this reason they are traditionally thought to exert only a marginal role. Therefore, the study conducted by Hidalgo et al. [39] was remarkably revealing. The investigators compared the gene expression profiles of antibody-mediated rejection in humans by analyzing the gene expression profiles in biopsies from patients with donor specific antibody. In these antibody-mediated rejection samples there was a strong expression of IFN-γ associated transcripts and NK cells. Immunohistochemical staining displayed more NK cells and macrophages in antibody-mediated rejection than in T-cell-mediated rejection. These findings suggest that the frequent observation of IEF gene upregulation not only during T cell mediated rejection but also during antibody mediated rejection could reflect the activation of common "NK-like" effector functions. Recently, tolerant patients have been found to have an expansion of NK cells and overexpression of NK transcripts in peripheral blood. These findings helped generate new hypotheses on the role of NK cells in balancing tolerance and mediating rejection [103].

B cell signature

The precise role that B cells play in acute allograft rejection is still being discovered. Recent high-throughput studies have exposed the multi-faceted role of B cells within allografts. With some evidence to suggest a significant role for B cells in mediating rejection, other evidence also suggests a role for B cells in tolerance. The B cell is an enigma and the details of its functions must be further elucidated.
In a breakthrough paper in 2003, Sarwal et al. [22] found an enrichment of B cell transcripts in pediatric renal biopsies experiencing acute rejection. This unexpected B-cell signature was also confirmed by immunohistochemistry. Although ectopic germinal center formation with B-cell activation and plasma cell activation can occur locally in chronically inflamed tissue [104, 105], the in situ presence of B cells was not historically reported in acute allograft rejection [22, 106, 107]. This CD20+ B cell infiltration was not associated with intra-graft C4d deposition (required by Banff criteria for diagnosis of acute antibody-mediated rejection) [108] or with the detection of donor-specific antibodies, indicating that it was not necessarily related to the presence of humoral response. The presence of such CD20+ dense clusters in a significant proportion of samples from patients diagnosed with acute allograft rejection would, thereafter, be confirmed by several independent studies [109116], with incidence varying from 15% to 60% [38, 113, 116]. However, the correlation with poor outcome suggested by Sarwal et al. [22] was confirmed by some studies [112, 114, 115, 117] but not by others [38, 109111, 113] and seemed more likely associated with late inflammation in allograft rejection [38]. B cell transcripts have also been detected to be upregulated during acute rejection in lung and heart transplants (Table 1) [17, 25].
The subsequent lineage analysis revealed that CD27+ and chronically activated CD79+, CD20+ B cells expressed HLA antigens and were surrounded by CD4+ T cells. This suggests a putative role for these cells in antigen presentation, driving a T-cell dependent cellular rejection [118]. Another cluster of B cells was represented by CD138+ mature plasma cells [118]. Recently, studies conducted in heart transplantation models showed that a deficiency in B cell mediated antigen presentation leads to lack of CD4 T cell activation and alloantibody production [119]. Other in vivo observations pointed to the possible pivotal role of B cells in the context of pathogen- [120, 121] or autoimmune- [122] induced T cell response. Interestingly, B cell infiltrates have been associated with favorable outcome in early breast cancer patients [123]. However, in addition to functioning as antigen presenting cells, B cells may promote T cell mediated rejection by producing chemoattractant molecules such as CXCR3 ligands (CXCL9, -10, -11) [87].
Despite the elegant rationale behind the use of an anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody (rituximab) in transplantation, this treatment showed only partial efficacy when tested in randomized trials [124126]. Although rituximab depletes CD20+ CD27- naïve and CD20+ CD27+[127] memory cells, it is not active on plasma cells that are CD20- and are thought to be implicated in the pathophysiology of acute antibody-mediated rejection. Additionally, two high-throughput studies evaluating several parameters in peripheral blood [103, 128] and urine [128] of patients with drug-free spontaneous renal allograft tolerance found an expansion of B-cells in peripheral blood, confirming a previous report [129]. The particular phenotype of these B cells seems to be represented by an expression of memory activated B-cells and increased expression of inhibitory molecules [130]. These observations could explain the increased rate of rejection reported in rituximab-treated patients in a recent randomized controlled trial that was forced to stop prematurely [126]. With B-cells implicated in both rejection and in tolerance, their precise functions remain puzzling.

T-reg signature

The recent detection of the association between the transcription factor forkhead box 3 (FOXP3) transcripts and acute rejection deserves comment. The recruitment of CD25+, FOXP3+ T regulatory cells (T-regs) is a well-defined mechanism for controlling autoimmunity in humans and animal models. It is known that humans carrying X-linked FOXP3 mutations manifest an autoimmune syndrome consisting of immune dysregulation, polyendocrinopathy and enteropathy, termed IPEX syndrome. Additionally, FOXP3 knockout mice manifest severe autoimmune diseases as well [131, 132]. However, the presence of FOXP3+ cells and/or the expression of FOXP3 are not always associated with a decreased immune response and their biological significance remains unclear. Interestingly, the pre-treatment presence of FOXP3+ T cells was associated with favorable outcome in colon cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy or immunochemotherapy [133, 134]. In kidney transplantation, however, higher FOXP3 transcripts in cells obtained from urine samples was associated with acute rejection [135]. Additionally, in another study, FOXP3 expression was found to be higher in antibody-mediated and T-cell mediated acute rejection samples than it was in the non-rejection samples [136]. Since FOXP3 mRNA directly correlated with post-transplantation time the authors speculated that FOXP3 positive cells possessed the key to control the potential for autoimmunity in these sites rather than representing a cognate immune-response. Nevertheless, it is presently unclear if FOXP3 (acting as a transcription factor) can modulate the immune-response per se through unknown independent pathways.

TNF, Complement and IL-10: the link between the innate and adaptive immunity

TNF-α

The upregulation of the TNF-α pathway is another signature often associated with acute allograft rejection (Table 1, Figure 1B). Many of the genes expressed during allograft rejection are associated with innate immunity: TNF-α, ubiquitin, C3, Heat shock protein 70 (HSPA1A, which is the endogenous ligand of Toll-like receptor (TLR)-4) [137, 138] and IRF-9 (a protein that interacts with STAT-1 and STAT-2 to form ISGF3, a transcription factor for IFN-α) [139, 140].
The presence of TNF-α is not indicative of acute inflammation, and it is typically also present in chronic inflammation [3, 141, 142]. Although the transformation from an indolent process to an acute one is unknown, it seems plausible that an innate stimulus that leads to increased TNF-α, could help elicit a cascade of events associated with acute response [3]. Rather than the increase of TNF-α per se, these stimuli could produce a series of interconnected events, of which TNF-α upregulation might be one of the consequences. For example, the engagement of toll-like-receptors (TLRs) by the endogenous danger-associated molecules (the rise of which can be caused by the intervention itself or by the ischemic-reperfusion injury) [97, 143], may lead to NF-kB (nuclear factor kappa B) activation and transcription of NF-kB induced genes, including TNF-α [144]. TNF-α is a potent activator of NF-kB, thereby amplifying a positive feedback mechanism. Moreover, NF-kB, by inducing transcription of CXCR3 and CCR5 ligands [144], could trigger and sustain the IFN-γ cascade by promoting the migration of IFN-γ-producing Th1 cells, cytotoxic T cells, and NK cells. Concurrently, the activation of TLRs on antigen presenting cells (APCs) could also enhance antigen presentation and induce upregulation of co-stimulatory molecules, promoting adaptive responses and recruiting CTLs [145, 146], with further amplification of the immune response.
In allograft rejection, the continuous and abundant availability of antigens from the surface of donor cells, and the interaction with T and possibly with B cells (directly through interaction of B cell receptor and MHCs) cause a labile condition particularly vulnerable to being switched to a destructive acute response. Thus, whether this condition is sufficient per se to determine an acute response (according to the self non-self model) or needs to be prompted (in accordance with the danger model), is object of ongoing debate [137, 147].
In conclusion, we could hypothesize that both innate and adaptive mechanisms synergize in generating/sustaining the immune response. Indeed, the dual presence of such strong stimuli leads almost inevitably to a progressive destructive response, thereby requiring lifelong immunosuppression, with the exception of the rare cases of spontaneous tolerance [103, 128, 148].

Complement

Complement is the archetypal innate defense mechanism and provides a vital link between innate and adaptive functions [149151]. Briefly, the central event in complement activation is the proteolysis of C3 (activated by antibodies or microbial cell surfaces) to generate biologically active products that lead to the formation of membrane attack complexes that result in the activation of granulocytes and cell lysis [149151]. The majority of complement is synthesized in the liver; however, local sources of complement include endothelial cells, macrophages, neutrophils, and epithelial cells (particularly renal tubular epithelial cells). The molecular pathways that lead to the activation of complement transcription during the alloresponse are not completely clear, but activation of the NF-kB pathway has been suggested to be a potential stimulus for local C3 production [152, 153]. It has been proposed that C3 could also be responsible for the Th1 response observed during allorejection, directly by sustaining Th1 development [154], or indirectly by inhibiting Th2 polarization [155]. Priming C3 deficient mice with dendritic cells led to delayed skin allograft rejection. Additionally, complement can activate B cells and initiate humoral responses [156]. In kidney transplantation in animal models, it has been shown that local renal C3 production leads to faster allograft rejection [157, 158]. However, opposing results were reached in three independent studies analyzing liver transplantation in animal models. In these cases, an association between overexpression of C3 and tolerance was found [159161]. Thus, at least in animal models, it is possible to hypothesize the existence of diverse regulatory mechanisms in different organs.
The presence of C4d (a C4 split product) by immunohistochemical staining is a feature associated with antibody-mediated rejection since it can activate the classical pathway of complement. Since the majority of circulating complement is produced by the liver, complement is not typically detected by microarray analysis. Thus, detection of complement transcripts during acute allograft rejection by gene expression suggests local production within the graft.
C3 and/or other complement components (C1 and C4) have been associated with acute allograft rejection in several microarray studies conducted in renal [23, 21], liver [15], heart [19, 25], and lung [17] transplants. Currently, interest in the role of complement in the regulation of the alloresponse is rising [149, 150, 162]. In a recent study conducted by Naesens et al. (Stanford group [162]), the authors observed upregulation of complement genes before transplantation in deceased donor kidney biopsies compared to living donors. In the same publication, the authors reported a significant overexpression of genes involved in the complement cascade (including C1 and C3) when comparing 32 acute rejection samples to 20 non-rejection samples obtained from pediatric kidney recipients [162].

IL-10

Contrary to the popular belief that IL-10 is principally an anti-inflammatory cytokine, the IL-10 pathway is frequently described as upregulated during acute allograft rejection in kidney and liver transplants in humans [14, 23, 26] (Table 1).
Although the canonical effects of IL-10 are regulatory and function in the termination of inflammatory processes [163], this cytokine cannot merely be classified as anti-inflammatory, due to its pleiotropic ability to both positively and negatively influence the function of innate and adaptive immunity in pre-clinical models [164166]. In humans, intravenous administration of recombinant IL-10 produces pro-inflammatory effects by enhancing the release of IFN-γ, TNF-α, and IL-1, and appears to induce the activation of CTLs and NK cells, as reflected by increased plasma levels of granzyme-B [167, 168]. Interestingly, high levels of serum IL-10 were associated with anti-tumor response in a clinical trial involving metastatic melanoma patients treated with immunochemotherapy (i.e., bevacizumab and fotemustine) [169]. In human monocyte lineage cells, IL-10 increases the expression of TLRs, which might sensitize these cells to 'danger signal' mediators. This suggests that IL-10 plays a key role in the early phases of the acute immune response. Systemic administration of IL-10 exacerbates alloreactions in murine models [170, 171], and, accordingly, the administration of anti-IL-10 monoclonal antibody prolongs graft survival [172]. In addition, by inhibiting APC maturation and postponing their migration to lymph nodes, this cytokine may lead to more efficient antigen loading, and might activate locally adaptive effectors [164166]. In humans, post-transplant levels of IL-10 [173] and a specific IL-10 polymorphism [174] were associated with risk of acute rejection in kidney transplants.
The evidence provided supports IL-10 involvement in tumor rejection and allograft rejection in humans, and suggests that this cytokine defies its reputation of having solely anti-inflammatory properties.

IRF-1 and STAT-1

By using MetaCore algorithms, IRF-1 and STAT-1 were predicted to be regulators of several of the key transcripts after analysis of our key genes list extracted from microarray studies (Figure 2). IRF-1 is an inducible IFN-γ transcription factor and it is transcribed in response to IFN-γ via STAT-1 [54, 175]. This transcription factor could mediate the upregulation of several gene/gene pathways during acute allograft rejection, as shown in Figure 2. Genes upregulated by IRF-1 include pro-inflammatory cytokines (e.g. TNF-α [176]), chemokines (e.g. CXCL10 [66, 67], CCL5 [68]), and MHC class I and class II molecules [54, 177]. It could also drive the synthesis of IL-10 RA [66]. Another important pro-inflammatory function of this gene is the induction of IL-12 [178] and IL-15 [179] with consequent enhancement of the IFN-γ cascade.
IRF-1 has been better described with relation to tumor rejection. In a study conducted in melanoma patients by Wang et al. [2], IRF-1 was the most significantly and consistently upregulated transcript in metastatic melanoma lesions undergoing clinical regression after the systemic administration of high-dose interleukin-2. IRF-1 appeared to play a central role in orchestrating the immune response, generating the switch from chronic to acute inflammation in this as well as several subsequent studies [3, 4].
Regarding the allograft, although statistical algorithms recognize IRF-1 as one of the main transcription factors that regulate genes involved in acute allograft rejection, it should be noted that its overexpression per se has not yet been identified as relevant according to human microarray studies. Thus, these data must be interpreted cautiously. Nevertheless, STAT-1 has been massively described as upregulated during acute allograft rejection (see Table 1), suggesting the regulation of IRF-1 through the IFN-γ/STAT-1 pathway as a plausible mechanism. In a recent mouse liver transplant model microarray study, IRF-1 was one of the two genes overexpressed both in leukocytes and intragraft during acute cellular rejection (GBP2 was the other gene, also an IFN-γ inducible gene) [180]. Accordingly, studies have reported an association between IRF-1 and acute cellular rejection in heart transplant models [181, 182]. On the other hand, other groups have reported STAT-1/IRF-1 pathway to be upregulated in tolerant models [159, 160]. In order to explain these findings, investigators proposed the induction of T cell apoptosis by IFN-γ signaling [159]: the transcripts STAT-1 and IRF-1 were also found to be involved in the induction of apoptosis via a caspase-mediated mechanism [183] (Figure 2). Thus, it is likely that IRF-1 plays a different role according to the independent co-activation of different pathways, which can greatly differ from cell to cell but can also vary with changes in the surrounding environment [183].
Although IRF-1 seems to be regulated primarily by IFN-γ signaling [175], in vivo and in vitro observations suggested that IRF-1 regulation does not necessarily require the interaction of this cytokine. Indeed, IRF-1 has been observed in response to IL-2 stimulation in vitro[184] and in the absence of interferon upregulation in animal models [100]. In addition, IRF-1-/-mice have defects not observed in IFN-γ or IFN-γ- receptor -/- animals, (such as alterations in CD8+ T cells and thymocyte development), supporting the existence of an IFN-γ-independent activation pathway of IRF-1, [54, 185]. Vice versa, even supposing a central role for this protein in the induction of pro-inflammatory mediators, a recent microarray study in heart transplanted mice suggested that IRF-1 functions could be bypassed by other mediators [186]. That same study showed that the expression profile of the allograft from IRF-1-/- mice and wild type mice were nearly identical to each other and very different from the profile of isograft control.

Comparative analyses

Despite discrepancies among different studies, cross-comparison of datasets has been remarkably revealing [25, 26], probably because of the highly conserved molecular patterns associated with immune-mediated tissue destruction. The first comparative analysis was performed by Morgun et al. [25] who, after identifying a gene set predictive of acute-rejection in a series of heart allograft recipients, analyzed the data from two published studies on kidney (Stanford dataset [187] and Cleveland dataset [23]) and lung (Minneapolis dataset [17]) transplants. The authors observed a striking agreement with the histological diagnosis of the three studies. The predictive accuracy of the gene set obtained from studying hearts was close to 95% in kidney and lung acute rejection illustrating the similarity of activated pathways from different rejected organs. Similar to observations in renal transplants [22], B cell transcripts (immunoglobulins) were among the most upregulated, suggesting that B cells may also have a local effect in heart rejection. Another interesting finding was the similar pattern of immune-response-related gene expression (antigen presentation, innate immunity, chemotaxis, immunoglobulins and cytokines) among samples with diagnosis of acute rejection versus infection. Here, the gene expression pattern of transplant recipients who underwent rejection was similar to that of patients with Trypanosoma cruzi infection (which represents a frequent cause of chronic heart failure and consequent need for heart transplant in Latin America) [25]. The similarities in inflammatory/immune expression patterns between acute rejection and infection have also been described by Sarwal et al. [22].
By utilizing an established protein prediction model for discovering serum biomarkers of disease, (Integrated RNA Data Driven Proteomics (IRDDP)), Chen et al. [27] applied this model to cross-organ acute allograft rejection datasets. In this analysis, three existing gene expression datasets were analyzed to identify candidate serum protein biomarkers. Evaluation of the three datasets revealed 45 genes commonly differentially expressed in acute allograft rejection (see Table 1). The datasets were extracted from GEO and were derived from microarray studies conducted on pediatric renal, adult renal, and adult cardiac human tissue biopsies during acute allograft rejection. Interestingly, by applying this protein biomarker prediction model, this data guided the investigators to discover three serum protein biomarkers, PECAM1, CXCL9, and CD44, that could distinguish acute rejection from stable allograft function. Notably, since gene expression data was compared in heart and kidney samples, it reinforces the principal that common molecular mechanisms exist in acute allograft rejection across different organs.
Another comparative analysis was conducted by Saint-Mezard et al. [26] analyzing three datasets from human renal acute allograft rejection microarray studies. These authors compared their own data, which consisted of human and non-human primate kidney acute rejection biopsy specimens, to the Stanford [22] and Cleveland [23] datasets. By doing so, the authors analyzed 36 acute rejection samples, identifying 70 genes that were upregulated during acute allograft rejection. Importantly, they successfully validated their findings by using 143 microarrays from the Edmonton dataset [31].
Using GeneGo MetaCore algorithms (a web-based suite for functional analysis of experimental data http://​www.​genego.​com) STAT-1, Interferon Regulatory Factor (IRF-1), Nuclear Factor Kappa B (NF-kB), and PU.1 (a transcription factor involved in the in the development of myeloid and lymphoid cells [188]) were identified as the main transcription factors that regulate the 70 genes consistently represented during kidney acute rejection in according to the Saint-Mezard comparative analysis [26]. The relationship among different protein-protein interactions, activation of transcription factors, and functional response is often difficult to establish because of its complexity and due to the incompletely understood association among signaling pathways. In simple terms, during the alloresponse, NF-kB represents a constitutive activation of innate immunity (e.g. TNF-α pathway), and IRF-1 superimposes a switch toward adaptive immunity (through the IFN-γ pathway). As described previously, these two pathways can amplify each other, and can also collaborate in inducing the transcription of common genes. For example, IFN-γ (through IRF-1) and TNF-α (through NF-kB) can synergize in promoting the overexpression of common genes such as CXCR3 ligands [67] and CCR5 ligands [144]. Figure 3 summarizes a likely reciprocal enhancement of function between the NF-kB and the STAT-1/IRF-1 pathways during allograft rejection. Beyond the function of master regulator of innate immunity, NF-kB is also important in driving the adaptive response. In fact, it plays a key role in IL-2 and TCR signaling, and in the regulation of immunoglobulin production [152]. It should be noted that most of the drugs effective in the treatment and/or prevention of acute allograft rejection (e.g. glucocorticoids, cyclosporine, and tacrolimus), interact with NF-kB pathway, and result in reduced production of several cytokines such as IL-2 and TNF-α [152]. Accordingly, NF-kB activity impairment leads to an attenuation of acute rejection in heart [189191], lung [192] and skin [193] in animal models.
Recently, attention has been brought to the role of the metzincins (a superfamily of endopeptide cleaving extracellular matrix proteins implicated in remodeling and modulation of cell signaling) in acute allograft rejection. In the Rodder meta-analysis, expression of Metzincins and Related Genes (MARGs) were analyzed from four separate microarray study databases to characterize markers of acute rejection in renal transplantation [22, 23, 29, 31], revealing MMP7 and TIMP1 as the most highly upregulated genes [29]. Interestingly, MMP9, TIMP1, and ADAM genes have also been noted to be associated with liver and heart acute allograft rejection [14, 15, 25] as listed in Table 1 of this review. Further, MMP9 and MMP2 were also described to be upregulated in a case report of small bowel acute rejection profiled by microarray. Of note, IFN-γ was also upregulated in this case report emphasizing the similarity cross-organ in acute allograft rejection [20].

Conclusions

High-throughput gene expression profiling has emerged as a powerful and reliable tool in investigating immune response in vivo in humans [11, 12]. Bypassing the traditional hypothesis-driven approach, microarray studies have revealed unsuspected mechanisms that mediate the balance between rejection and tolerance.
The pathways thought to be central during acute allograft rejection have been described in this review. Most of the pathways analyzed (IFN-γ/STAT-1/IRF-1 path, CXCR3/CXCR3 ligands path, CCR5/CCR5 ligands path, and IEFs path) have also been associated with other immune-mediated processes, strengthening the concept that there are common convergent molecular mechanisms in tissue specific destruction, as described by the Immunologic Constant of Rejection [3, 194198]. Even if the pathways analyzed are consistently observed in humans, previous experiments in animal models failed to demonstrate them as necessary or sufficient for the development of rejection, in concordance with the high redundancy of mammalian immune system [54, 82, 83]. Moreover, some of the genes associated with acute rejection also seem to play a role in tolerance models (e.g.STAT-1/IRF-1 [159, 160]), stressing the pleiotropism of such molecules, as well as illustrating the complexity of these networks and the necessity of investigating immune-response mechanisms in vivo in humans. Despite the wide-ranging observations at molecular level which could be significantly influenced by multiple factors including sample collection time, sample type, sample handling and storage conditions, patient physiological condition, coexisting pathological conditions, environmental factors and genetic predisposition, distinct molecular patterns associated with tissue destruction have been revealed and summarized in this review.
In conclusion, the purpose of this review was to contribute to the understanding of how tissue specific destruction occurs. Understanding why this occurs is one of the most challenging and intriguing questions facing modern human immunology.

Acknowledgements

Tara Spivey's research fellowship was made possible through the Clinical Research Training Program, a public-private partnership supported jointly by the NIH and Pfizer Inc. (via a grant to the foundation for NIH from Pfizer Inc.). Davide Bedognetti is a participant in the NIH Graduate Partnership Program and a graduate student at University of Genoa. Davide Bedognetti's fellowship is supported by the Conquer Cancer Foundation of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (2011 Young Investigator Award). Davide Bedognetti thanks Dr. Pietro Blandini (U.C. Sampdoria, Genoa, Italy) for his useful suggestion on multidimensional data analysis.
Open Access This article is published under license to BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( https://​creativecommons.​org/​licenses/​by/​2.​0 ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Authors' contributions

DB and TLS performed data extraction from the available literature and prepared the manuscript collaboratively with input and review by all co-authors. FMM and EW reviewed data extraction and literature research and revised the manuscript for important intellectual contents. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.
Anhänge

Electronic supplementary material

Additional file 1: supplemental data extraction information. supplemental information for key gene selection used for Table 1, IPA and Meta Core analysis. Comprehensive lists of relevant upregulated genes, in according with the original publication, are reported for the following studies: Akalin et al, Tannapfel et al, Sreekumar et al, Karason et al (genes most frequently upregulated during the rejection episode and returned to baseline levels with its resolution), Reeve et al (genes most frequently represented in the predictive analysis for microarrays classifier), Saint-Mezard et al. Morgun et al: we reported the upregulated genes selected from the list of 98 genes belonged to the first predictor set that discriminate acute cardiac, renal and lung rejection from non rejection. CCL5 belonged to the second prediction set. Sarwal et al: we selected key immune genes from the list of genes upregulated in three different subtypes of acute allograft rejection (see also Mansfield et al. 2004 and Weintraub et al 2006). Gimino et al and Lande et al: we selected key genes from a list of genes reported as upregulated during acute rejection according to the first (Gimino et al) and second (Lande et al) analyses. Flechner et al: we selected key genes a list of genes upregulated in acute rejection samples compared to samples without diagnosis of rejection. Others upregulated genes included in the original list were: Morgun et al: Homo sapiens cDNA FLJ10266 fis, clone HEMBB1001024; Homo sapiens cDNA FLJ10580 fis, clone NT2RP2003533, mRNA sequence; Homo sapiens cDNA FLJ10981 fis, clone PLACE1001610; Homo sapiens mRNA, cDNA DKFZp434P1019; Homo sapiens mRNA; cDNA DKFZp564P073; Homo sapiens mRNA; cDNA DKFZp586H0718; Homo sapiens mRNA; cDNA DKFZp761G0924; Homo sapiens mRNA; cDNA DKFZp761P221; DKFZP434B033; Unknown (protein for IMAGE:4251653) [Homo sapiens], mRNA sequence; Unnamed protein product [Homo sapiens]. Karason: Homo sapiens Alu repeat (LNXI) mRNA sequence. Reeve et al: affymetrix id 235529_at and 238725_at. The 14 genes selected in the Inkinen et al study were those genes highly upregulated in AR vs NR control. Morgun et al: we reported the upregulated genes selected from the list of 98 genes belonged to the first classifier that discriminate acute cardiac rejection vs non rejection and immune-related genes selected from the second and third classifier (130 and 188 genes respectively): the three classifier also discriminated rejection and non rejection lung and kidney samples. Asaoka et al analyzed biopsies from 21 liver transplant recipients with recurrent HCV (RHC). Analysis compared 9 with AR + RHC versus 13 with RHC only (control). Genes shown in this table selected from the network classified as "Cell death, hematological disease, and immunological disease" via IPA. (DOC 24 KB)

Authors’ original submitted files for images

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Metadaten
Titel
Gene expression profiling in acute allograft rejection: challenging the immunologic constant of rejection hypothesis
verfasst von
Tara L Spivey
Lorenzo Uccellini
Maria Libera Ascierto
Gabriele Zoppoli
Valeria De Giorgi
Lucia Gemma Delogu
Alyson M Engle
Jaime M Thomas
Ena Wang
Francesco M Marincola
Davide Bedognetti
Publikationsdatum
01.12.2011
Verlag
BioMed Central
Erschienen in
Journal of Translational Medicine / Ausgabe 1/2011
Elektronische ISSN: 1479-5876
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1479-5876-9-174

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