Publication: Characterization of the C1q-Binding Ability and the IgG1-4 Subclass Profile of Preformed Anti-HLA Antibodies by Solid-Phase Assays.
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Identifiers
Date
2019-07-08
Authors
Navas, Ana
Molina, Juan
Agüera, Maria-Luisa
Guler, Ipek
Jurado, Aurora
Rodriguez-Benot, Alberto
Alonso, Corona
Solana, Rafael
Advisors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Frontiers Research Foundation
Abstract
Humoral alloimmunity, particularly that triggered by preformed antibodies against human leukocyte antigens (HLA), is associated with an increased prevalence of rejection and reduced transplant survival. The high sensitivity of solid phase assays, based on microbeads coated with single antigens (SAB), consolidated them as the gold-standard method to characterize anti-HLA antibodies, ensuring a successful allograft allocation. Mean fluorescence intensity (MFI) provided by SAB is regularly used to stratify the immunological risk, assuming it as a reliable estimation of the antibody-level, but it is often limited by artifacts. Beyond MFI, other properties, such as the complement-binding ability or the IgG1-4 subclass profile have been examined to more accurately define the clinical relevance of antibodies and clarify their functional properties. However, there are still unresolved issues. Neat serum-samples from 20 highly-sensitized patients were analyzed by SAB-panIgG, SAB-IgG1-4 subclass and SAB-C1q assays. All 1:16 diluted serum-samples were additionally analyzed by SAB-panIgG and SAB-IgG1-4 subclass assays. A total of 1,285 anti-HLA antibodies were identified as positive, 473 (36.8%) of which were C1q-binding. As expected, serum-dilution enhanced the correlation between the C1q-binding ability and the antibody-strength, measured as the MFI (rneat = 0.248 vs. rdiluted = 0.817). SAB-subclass assay revealed at least one IgG1-4 subclass in 1,012 (78.8%) positive antibody-specificities. Among them, strong complement-binding subclasses, mainly IgG1, were particularly frequent (98.9%) and no differences were found between C1q- and non-C1q-binding antibodies regarding their presence (99.4 vs. 98.5%; p = 0.193). In contrast, weak or non-C1q-binding subclasses (IgG2/IgG4) were more commonly detected in C1q-binding antibodies (78.9 vs. 38.6%; p< 0.001). Interestingly, a strong association was found between the C1q-binding ability and the IgG1 strength (rIgG1dil = 0.796). Though lower, the correlation between the IgG2 strength and the C1q-binding ability was also strong (rIgG2dil = 0.758), being both subclasses closely related (rIgG1−IgG2 = 0.817).
Description
MeSH Terms
Antibody specificity
Complement C1q
Female
HLA antigens
Histocompatibility
Humans
Immunoglobulin G
Male
Middle aged
Complement C1q
Female
HLA antigens
Histocompatibility
Humans
Immunoglobulin G
Male
Middle aged
DeCS Terms
Antígenos HLA
Complemento C1q
Especificidad de anticuerpos
Histocompatibilidad
Inmunoglobulina G
Complemento C1q
Especificidad de anticuerpos
Histocompatibilidad
Inmunoglobulina G
CIE Terms
Keywords
C1q-binding ability, IgG1-4 subclass profile, Anti-HLA antibodies, Humoral alloimmunity, Kidney transplantation, Single antigen bead assay
Citation
Navas A, Molina J, Agüera ML, Guler I, Jurado A, Rodríguez-Benot A, et al. Characterization of the C1q-Binding Ability and the IgG1-4 Subclass Profile of Preformed Anti-HLA Antibodies by Solid-Phase Assays. Front Immunol. 2019 Aug 2;10:1712