Publications by authors named "MIERT P"

Detection of ovarian cancer (OC) circulating tumour cells (CTCs) is primarily based on targeting epithelial markers, thus failing to detect mesenchymal tumour cells. More importantly, the immune checkpoint inhibitor marker PD-L1 has not been demonstrated on CTCs from OC patients. An antibody staining protocol was developed and tested using SKOV-3 and OVCA432 OC cell lines.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Abacavir administration is associated with drug-induced hypersensitivity reactions in HIV+ individuals expressing the HLA-B*57:01 allele. However, the immunological effects of abacavir administration in an HLA-B57 mismatched transplantation setting have not been studied. We hypothesized that abacavir exposure could induce de novo HLA-B57-specific allorecognition.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Virus-specific T cells have been shown to cross-react with allogeneic HLA (allo-HLA) at a clonal level. However, the impact of a single virus on the allorepertoire has never been investigated at the polyclonal level. We made an inventory of the incidence and specificity of allo-HLA-cross-reactive-virus-specific CD8 T cells in 24 healthy individuals.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Heterologous immunity of virus-specific T cells poses a potential barrier to transplantation tolerance. Cross-reactivity to HLA-A and -B molecules has broadly been described, whereas responses to allo-HLA-C have remained ill defined. In contrast to the transplant setting, HLA-C is the only polymorphic HLA molecule expressed by extravillous trophoblasts at the maternal-fetal interface during pregnancy.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Virus-specific T cells can recognize allogeneic HLA (allo-HLA) through cross-reactivity of their T-cell receptor (TCR). In a transplantation setting, such allo-HLA cross-reactivity may contribute to harmful immune responses towards the allograft, provided that the cross-reactive T cells get sufficiently activated upon recognition of the allo-HLA. An important determinant of T-cell activation is TCR avidity, which to date, has remained largely unexplored for allo-HLA-cross-reactive virus-specific T cells.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We hypothesized that HIV-specific CD8 T cell clonotypes can be stimulated by allogeneic HLA molecules. Multiple HIV-specific CD8 T cell clones were derived from 12 individuals with chronic HIV infection, specific for 13 different HIV Gag antigens and restricted to 7 different HLA molecules. The generated T cell clones were assayed for alloreactivity against a panel of single HLA class I expressing cell lines (SALs).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Virus-specific T cells can recognize allogeneic HLA (allo-HLA) through TCR cross-reactivity. The allospecificity often differs by individual (private cross-reactivity) but also can be shared by multiple individuals (public cross-reactivity); however, only a few examples of the latter have been described. Because these could facilitate alloreactivity prediction in transplantation, we aimed to identify novel public cross-reactivities of human virus-specific CD8 T cells directed against allo-HLA by assessing their reactivity in mixed-lymphocyte reactions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Acute rejection is a risk factor for inferior long-term kidney transplant survival. Although T cell immunity is considered the main effector in clinical acute rejection, the role of myeloid cells is less clear. Expression of S100 calcium-binding protein A8 (S100A8) and S100A9 was evaluated in 303 biopsies before and after transplantation from 190 patients.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Recognition of donor antigens can occur through two separate pathways: the direct pathway (non-self HLA on donor cells) and the indirect pathway (self-restricted presentation of donor derived peptides on recipient cells). Indirect allorecognition is important in the development of humoral rejection; therefore, there is an increasing interest in the monitoring of indirect alloreactive T-cells. We have used an in vitro model to determine the optimal requirements for indirect presentation and assessed the risk for semidirect presentation in this system.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Despite excellent short-term results, long-term survival of transplanted kidneys has not improved accordingly. Although alloimmune responses and calcineurin inhibitor-related nephrotoxicity have been identified as main drivers of fibrosis, no effective treatment options have emerged. In this perspective, mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) are an interesting candidate because of their immunosuppressive and regenerative properties.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Blood transfusion (BT) may elicit both harmful and beneficial immune responses against a subsequent organ graft. Immune parameters of a single, non leukocyte-depleted BT were investigated in two groups: non-human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-sensitized recipients with a one-HLA-DR matched donor (protocolled BT [PBT]) and females with previous exposure to HLA alloantigens through pregnancy (donor-specific transfusion [DST]).

Methods: Thirty-five percent of DST recipients and 9.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Dexamethason (DEX) treated DC display several features that establish them as candidates for specific allogeneic tolerance induction. We report the results of in vitro studies of polarization of the alloimmune T cell response with two types of differentially modulated human DC. Both DEX treated DC triggered by LPS for 6 h (DEX6-DC) and DEX treated DC triggered by LPS for 48 h (DEX48-DC) acquired low levels of costimulatory, adhesion, and MHC class II molecules compared with mature DC (mDC).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

If in vitro tools can be used to predict which renal transplant patients are at risk for rejection and which patients are more predisposed to tolerance, the immunosuppressive regimen can be adjusted to prevent rejection before it becomes clinically apparent or, in case of a tolerant patient, medication can be reduced or even stopped. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of patients with persistent stable graft function and of patients with (biopsy-confirmed) acute rejection were stimulated with donor cells and tested with Elispot analysis. A significantly higher number of donor-specific interferon (IFN)-gamma producing cells were found in patients with rejection, as determined with Elispot analysis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Pre- and/or perinatal exposure to noninherited maternal HLA antigens (NIMA) is associated with a decreased HLA antibody formation against the NIMA and a significantly better graft survival of kidney grafts from siblings or those from unrelated donors who were mismatched for the NIMA haplotype compared with the NIPA (noninherited paternal HLA antigens) haplotype later in life. These observations suggest that some form of immunological tolerance against NIMA is induced. We analyzed the in vitro T cell reactivity of healthy individuals toward their parents and/or siblings expressing the NIMA or NIPA haplotype to explore whether the alloimmune response to NIMA has distinct characteristics compared with NIPA.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Activation of immature dendritic cells (DC) in the presence of the glucocorticoid hormone dexamethasone (DEX) results in alternatively matured DC that present antigen in the absence of a proper co-stimulatory context. This maturation process is irreversible, making these cells an attractive potential tool for the induction of antigen-specific T-cell tolerance in vivo. The authors explored the possibility of using these DC for the induction of transplantation tolerance in a fully allogeneic setting in mice.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Administration of pravastatin soon after transplantation successfully lowers cholesterol levels, whereas a reduced number of acute rejection episodes is accompanied by a decrease in natural killer (NK) cell activity. As a consistent low NK cell activity caused by pravastatin might impair tumor surveillance leading to cancer, we studied the effect of pravastatin on NK cell activity in stable renal transplant patients.

Methods: From 14 cyclosporine (CsA)-treated and 11 azathioprine (AZA)-treated patients with hypercholesterolemia, more than 1 year after kidney transplantation, we determined NK cell number and cytotoxic activity before, and at 6 and 12 weeks after, initiating pravastatin treatment.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Pre-transplant blood transfusion (BT) results in better graft survival in organ transplant recipients, especially when BT donor and allograft recipient share an HLA-DR antigen. Although the immunologic mechanisms involved are still poorly understood, we wanted to know whether down regulation of donor-reactive T cells play a role.

Methods: In a retrospective study, we analyzed the clinical effects of BT for 45 heart transplant (HTx) patients who had each received 1 BT that shared an HLA-DR-antigen with the recipient, and 55 who had a DR-mismatched BT before heart transplantation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: In a previous study it was shown that pre-transplant blood transfusion was associated with a better clinical outcome after heart transplantation (HTx). In this study the effect of heart transplantation (HTx) on the T cell receptor V beta chain (TCRVbeta) repertoire was investigated. Therefore, we analyzed the TCRVbeta repertoire of patients after HTx to see whether a correlation with clinical outcome could be observed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Using ethylene glycol (EG) and vitamin D3 as crystal-inducing diet (CID) in rats, we investigated the effect of the dosage of EG on the generation of chronic calcium oxalate (CaOx) nephrolithiasis. We collected weekly 24 hour urines and measured herein the amount of oxalate, calcium, glycosaminoglycans (GAG's), creatinine, protein, alkaline phosphatase (AP), gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (gamma-GT), and N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase (NAG). The potential of these urines to inhibit crystal growth and agglomeration was also evaluated.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In the present study, we exposed rats to a crystal-inducing diet (CID) consisting of vitamin D3 and 0.5% ethylene glycol (EG), and we investigated histologically the kidney damage induced by the deposition of calcium oxalate (CaOx) crystals. After 28 days, 50% of the animals had renal CaOx crystals, of which 60% also had small papillary stones.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Lectin reactivity in epithelial apical cell coats of normal rat kidneys was compared to that from animals subjected to crystal inducing diets (CID). The aim was to see whether the absence of lectin reactivity in cell coats is related to intratubular calcium oxalate crystal retention. In normal rat kidneys, after a pre-embedding procedure, it was observed that at the ultrastructural level, reactivity was present but that the lectin specificity for the various parts of the nephron might have to be reconsidered.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In kidneys of healthy rats submitted to a crystal-inducing diet (CID) with ethylene glycol (EG) and NH4Cl, the fate of retained crystals in the papillar region is studied during a recovery period of one, five or ten days, as model system for human nephrolithiasis. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) shows, at papillary tips bulging into the calycine space, crystal masses covered either by the epithelium or a thin fibrous veil, or by unidentified mobile cuboidal cells. After CID plus one or five days recovery, small sub-epithelial swellings are seen of large sub-epithelial crystals at or around the papillary tip.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Crystal retention is studied in a rat-model system as a possible mechanism for the etiology of human nephrolithiasis. A crystal-inducing diet (CID) of ethylene glycol plus NH4Cl in their drinking-water is offered to healthy rats to generate intratubular crystals. Subsequently, the fate of retained crystals is investigated by allowing the rats a tissue recovery/crystalluria phase for three, five and ten days, respectively, on normal drinking water.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In a rat-model system, tubular crystal retention as a possible mechanism for the etiology of nephrolithiasis in man, was studied by conventional transmission electron microscopy. The animals were supplied for nine days with a crystal-inducing diet, with ethylene glycol plus NH4Cl in their drinking-water. After this induction period, a two day regime with fresh drinking-water was included, to allow crystals to be removed by spontaneous crystalluria.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF