Abstract

Previous studies have demonstrated that donor antigen-specific primed-lymphocyte-test (PLT) reactivity of bronchoalveolar lavage lymphocytes is strongly associated with acute pulmonary rejection and with obliterative bronchiolitis (OB); however, a systematic analysis of PLT reactivity as being class I-or II-directed has not been performed. To assess reactivity directed against individual class I or II antigens, we tested a total of 67 BAL-derived lymphocyte samples from 26 recipients for alloreactivity in the PLT, using a pool of allogeneic cells and selected homozygous typing cells (HTCs) representing the HLA class I and II antigens expressed by the recipient and donor cells. The results obtained by PLT were correlated with the clinical status of the recipient with regard to rejection, infection, and OB. In 9 of 10 cases where transbronchial biopsy results were consistent with rejection, donor antigen-specific allogeneic PLT reactivity was observed and, more specifically, could be determined to be directed toward donor class II antigen in 8 of these cases. For 3 of 4 recipients tested chronologically, positive donor antigen-specific PLT reactivity was observed at the time of and 2-3 1/2 months prior to the diagnosis of rejection by transbronchial biopsy. During periods of acute infection, donor antigen-specific PLT reactivity was not observed; instead, non-specific PLT reactivity of BAL-derived cells (i.e., reactivity that did not correlate with any defined HLA antigens) was observed as well as reactivity associated with the self-antigens expressed by the recipients' cells. The PLT reactivity of BAL-derived cells from a recipient diagnosed with OB correlated specifically with one of the disparate donor class I antigens (HLA-B44). In 23 cases, BAL cells were propagated in the presence of autologous cells and rIL-2, thereby allowing for sufficient numbers of cells to test with a panel of 29 HTCs and to analyze for cell surface phenotype. The cultured BAL cells from 4 recipients undergoing a rejection episode demonstrated a predominant CD4+ phenotype consistent with the class II-directed reactivity observed in PLT. However, these results did not demonstrate a phenotype distinctive from the 7 BAL results obtained from 4 quiescent recipients. In marked contrast, the cultured BAL cells obtained from 4 recipients diagnosed with OB demonstrated a predominant CD8+ phenotype, with 60-92% of the cultured cells being CD8+. These results are consistent with the class I-directed reactivity observed in PLT.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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