Abstract

BackgroundThe pathophysiology of subclinical versus clinical rejection remains incompletely understood given their equivalent histological severity but discordant graft function. The goal was to evaluate serine hydrolase enzyme activities to explore if there were any underlying differences in activities during subclinical versus clinical rejection.MethodsSerine hydrolase activity-based protein profiling (ABPP) was performed on the urines of a case control cohort of patients with biopsy confirmed subclinical or clinical transplant rejection. In-gel analysis and affinity purification with mass spectrometry were used to demonstrate and identify active serine hydrolase activity. An assay for proteinase 3 (PR3/PRTN3) was adapted for the quantitation of activity in urine.ResultsIn-gel ABPP profiles suggested increased intensity and diversity of serine hydrolase activities in urine from patients undergoing subclinical versus clinical rejection. Serine hydrolases (n = 30) were identified by mass spectrometry in subclinical and clinical rejection patients with 4 non-overlapping candidates between the two groups (i.e. ABHD14B, LTF, PR3/PRTN3 and PRSS12). Western blot and the use of a specific inhibitor confirmed the presence of active PR3/PRTN3 in samples from patients undergoing subclinical rejection. Analysis of samples from normal donors or from several serial post-transplant urines indicated that although PR3/PRTN3 activity may be highly associated with low-grade subclinical inflammation, the enzyme activity was not restricted to this patient group.ConclusionsThere appear to be limited qualitative and quantitative differences in serine hydrolase activity in patients with subclinical versus clinical renal transplant rejection. The majority of enzymes identified were present in samples from both groups implying that in-gel quantitative differences may largely relate to the activity status of shared enzymes. However qualitative compositional differences were also observed indicating differential activities. The PR3/PRTN3 analyses indicate that the activity status of urine in transplant patients is dynamic possibly reflecting changes in the underlying processes in the transplant. These data suggest that differential serine hydrolase pathways may be active in subclinical versus clinical rejection which requires further exploration in larger patient cohorts. Although this study focused on PR3/PRTN3, this does not preclude the possibility that other enzymes may play critical roles in the rejection process.

Highlights

  • The pathophysiology of subclinical versus clinical rejection remains incompletely understood given their equivalent histological severity but discordant graft function

  • Subclinical rejection has a unique transcriptome compared to early clinical T-cell mediated rejection (TCMR), suggesting that differing molecular processes may lead to infiltrating T-cells on biopsy [15]

  • The serine hydrolase probe reactive species in urine samples from individual patients with renal transplants displaying biopsy proven normal, subclinical, or rejection histological status were compared by SDS-PAGE

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Summary

Introduction

The pathophysiology of subclinical versus clinical rejection remains incompletely understood given their equivalent histological severity but discordant graft function. Subclinical T-cell mediated rejection (TCMR) is an important predictor of late graft failure [4,5,6,7,8,9]; and its treatment results in improved histology [10, 11], with similar graft survival compared to patients without subclinical TCMR [12] Taken together, these observations demonstrate that subclinical rejection is a clinically significant and treatable form of autoinflammation. The pathophysiology of subclinical versus clinical rejection remains incompletely understood given their equivalent histological severity yet highly discordant presentation in graft function

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