Scientific Reports (Dec 2020)

Molecular patterns of isolated tubulitis differ from tubulitis with interstitial inflammation in early indication biopsies of kidney allografts

  • Petra Hruba,
  • Katellyn Madill-Thomsen,
  • Martina Mackova,
  • Jiri Klema,
  • Jana Maluskova,
  • Ludek Voska,
  • Alena Parikova,
  • Janka Slatinska,
  • Philip F. Halloran,
  • Ondrej Viklicky

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-79332-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract The Banff 2019 kidney allograft pathology update excluded isolated tubulitis without interstitial inflammation (ISO-T) from the category of borderline (suspicious) for acute T cell-mediated rejection due to its proposed benign clinical outcome. In this study, we explored the molecular assessment of ISO-T. ISO-T or interstitial inflammation with tubulitis (I + T) was diagnosed in indication biopsies within the first 14 postoperative days. The molecular phenotype of ISO-T was compared to I + T either by using RNA sequencing (n = 16) or by Molecular Microscope Diagnostic System (MMDx, n = 51). RNA sequencing showed lower expression of genes related to interferon-y (p = 1.5 *10–16), cytokine signaling (p = 2.1 *10–20) and inflammatory response (p = 1.0*10–13) in the ISO-T group than in I + T group. Transcripts with increased expression in the I + T group overlapped significantly with previously described pathogenesis-based transcript sets associated with cytotoxic and effector T cell transcripts, and with T cell-mediated rejection (TCMR). MMDx classified 25/32 (78%) ISO-T biopsies and 12/19 (63%) I + T biopsies as no-rejection. ISO-T had significantly lower MMDx scores for interstitial inflammation (p = 0.014), tubulitis (p = 0.035) and TCMR (p = 0.016) compared to I + T. Fewer molecular signals of inflammation in isolated tubulitis suggest that this is also a benign phenotype on a molecular level.