Abstract
We investigated the putative candidate biomarkers of graft rejection in peripheral blood of intestinal transplant patients. Peripheral blood gene expression analysis was performed in intestinal transplant patients. The results were matched with concurrent graft biopsies using bioinformatics. Peripheral blood samples (n=11), of 3 adult patients [transplant day (n=1), no rejection (n=1), minimal rejection (n=2), mild rejection (n=5) and severe rejection (n=2)] were collected. Bioinformatics: Enrichment Analysis: The three most affected pathways differentially expressed in rejection versus a pool of healthy volunteers were related to protein translation: translation initiation, translation elongation termination, and translation in mitochondria, with p-values for all rejection stages in all patients in the 10-4 to 10-18 range. No significant enrichment was observed for these categories in the day of transplant sample. In addition to translation, significant enrichment of several immune response categories was observed in rejection samples. Subsequent gene set enrichment analysis verified these results. The level of enrichment was very high (p-values of 10-5-10-60) and increased with the level of rejection in all patients. Genes significantly down-regulated in translation related gene sets included ribosomal proteins RPL13A, RP L22, RPS23, RPL13 and RPL10A, that could be used as potential biomarkers for future experiments. In this pilot study we found a list of genes (involved in translation) significantly downregulated in the peripheral blood of three intestinal transplant patients during rejection. These results will be verified in further studies with increased number of patients and with isolation of peripheral blood subpopulations.
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