PLoS ONE (Jan 2016)

Identification of Molecular Markers of Delayed Graft Function Based on the Regulation of Biological Ageing.

  • Dagmara McGuinness,
  • Johannes Leierer,
  • Olivier Shapter,
  • Suhaib Mohammed,
  • Marc Gingell-Littlejohn,
  • David B Kingsmore,
  • Ann-Margaret Little,
  • Julia Kerschbaum,
  • Stefan Schneeberger,
  • Manuel Maglione,
  • Silvio Nadalin,
  • Sylvia Wagner,
  • Alfred Königsrainer,
  • Emma Aitken,
  • Henry Whalen,
  • Marc Clancy,
  • Alex McConnachie,
  • Christian Koppelstaetter,
  • Karen S Stevenson,
  • Paul G Shiels

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0146378
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
p. e0146378

Abstract

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Delayed graft function is a prevalent clinical problem in renal transplantation for which there is no objective system to predict occurrence in advance. It can result in a significant increase in the necessity for hospitalisation post-transplant and is a significant risk factor for other post-transplant complications.The importance of microRNAs (miRNAs), a specific subclass of small RNA, have been clearly demonstrated to influence many pathways in health and disease. To investigate the influence of miRNAs on renal allograft performance post-transplant, the expression of a panel of miRNAs in pre-transplant renal biopsies was measured using qPCR. Expression was then related to clinical parameters and outcomes in two independent renal transplant cohorts.Here we demonstrate, in two independent cohorts of pre-implantation human renal allograft biopsies, that a novel pre-transplant renal performance scoring system (GRPSS), can determine the occurrence of DGF with a high sensitivity (>90%) and specificity (>60%) for donor allografts pre-transplant, using just three senescence associated microRNAs combined with donor age and type of organ donation.These results demonstrate a relationship between pre-transplant microRNA expression levels, cellular biological ageing pathways and clinical outcomes for renal transplantation. They provide for a simple, rapid quantitative molecular pre-transplant assay to determine post-transplant allograft function and scope for future intervention. Furthermore, these results demonstrate the involvement of senescence pathways in ischaemic injury during the organ transplantation process and an indication of accelerated bio-ageing as a consequence of both warm and cold ischaemia.