Abstract

Intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) binds to leukocyte adhesion receptors LFA-1 and MAC-1, and mediates leukocyte adhesion to target structures. During acute rejection there is increased expression of ICAM-1 in vascular and tubulointestial cells, and consequently accumulation of inflammatory leukocytes. Soluble ICAM-1 (sICAM-1) is released from ICAM-1 expressing cells and excreted into the surrounding fluid. Increased serum sICAM-1 levels are found in patients with acute rejections of various allografts, and high urinary levels in steroid resistant acute kidney allograft rejection. Urinary excretion of sICAM-1 was measured by EIA in 136 kidney allograft recipients during the first 1-6 post transplant weeks: 30 patients developed acute rejection, and 106 patients had stable graft function. The molecular weight, binding to hyaluronan, and the origin of urinary sICAM-1 were studied. We show that urinary sICAM-1 circulates as a monomer with a molecular weight between 50 and 100 kD. It binds to immobilized, but not to circulating hyaluronan. About one week after transplantation the mean sICAM-1/creatinine ratio (306 ng/mmol) in transplanted patients was higher than in the healthy controls (167 ng/mmol, P<0.01), and remained basically unchanged during the follow-up in patients with stable graft function, whereas it increased in patients developing rejection, being about 2.5-fold above the initial level a few days before rejection (P<0.01). Urinary sICAM-1 did not correlate with the urinary albumin, whereas in patients developing rejection it correlated with urinary IL-2R (r=0.5146, P<0.001), a marker of lymphocyte activation. In the urinary sediment of rejecting patients ICAM-1 was demonstrated in the tubular epithelial cells, and in the macrophages. Increased urinary excretion of sICAM-1 was demonstrated in kidney transplanted patients a few days before acute rejection. It seems to originate from activated macrophages and/or from the tubular epithelial cells. The fact that urinary sICAM-1 is not bound to hyaluronan or to leukocytes suggests that it is not able to compete with membrane-bound ICAM-1 for these bindings, but may do so for the binding of activated macrophages.

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