Background: Worldwide, a final crossmatch is the gold standard for determining compatibility between patient and donor before solid organ transplantation and preventing hyperacute rejection. In the absence of autoantibodies, an incompatible crossmatch in a sensitized patient is attributed to mismatched donor HLA. However, current physical crossmatch methods cannot distinguish reactivity to HLA from other clinically irrelevant cell surface targets nor the class of HLA if it is the target.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurrent models describing HLA epitopes are both theoretical and empirical. Each has limitations yielding discordant results and increasingly complex modeling. The models make a priori assumptions that epitopes must be present only on the mature protein, solvent accessible, on the 'top' (peptide binding surface) of the molecule, restricted to the same class as the antibody, and in the same position on the target allele if reactive to more than one locus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCentral to the idea of antibody recognition is some degree of foreignness of the target antigen compared to the antibody producer. Epitopes are distinct regions on an antigen to which antibody can be elicited and bound. However, for HLA antigens, there is no consensus definition of what represents the minimal functional immunogenic unit of dissimilarity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSensitization, defined as the presence of circulating antibodies, presents challenges for heart transplant recipients and physicians. When present, sensitization can limit a transplantation candidate's access to organs, prolong wait time, and, in some cases, exclude the candidate from heart transplantation altogether. The management of sensitization is not yet standardized, and current therapies have not yielded consistent results.
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