pubmed:abstractText |
The addition of calcineurin inhibitors, including cyclosporine A (CsA) and FK-506 (tacrolimus), to transplant protocols has markedly reduced acute allograft rejection and prolonged patient survival. Although monitoring of serum drug levels has been shown to be a poor indicator of efficacy, there is little data on calcineurin enzymatic activity in humans. Therefore, we measured calcineurin in isolated CD3(+)/4(+) T cells from 81 non-transplant controls and 39 renal allograft patients by using a (32)PO(4)-labeled calcineurin-specific substrate. A gender difference was observed in the control cohort, with activity in males significantly higher than that in females (1073 +/- 134 versus 758 +/- 75 fmol/microg/min, respectively). Activity of both groups was comparably inhibited by 5 ng/ml tacrolimus (27 +/- 4 versus 30 +/- 4%). Calcineurin is a downstream target of the T-cell receptor (TCR). Therefore, activity was measured in isolated T cells after incubation with anti-CD3/CD28 antibodies to stimulate the TCR. Calcineurin activity increased significantly from 1214 +/- 111 to 1652 +/- 138 fmol/microg/min; addition of either tacrolimus or CsA (500 ng/ml) blocked CD3/CD28 stimulation. Despite therapeutic levels of tacrolimus and CsA (mean 11.4 and 172 ng/ml), basal calcineurin activity was significantly higher among renal transplant recipients than controls (1776 +/- 175 versus 914 +/- 78 fmol/microg/min). In contrast, anti-CD3/CD28 antibodies failed to stimulate calcineurin activity in transplant subjects. Finally, we found that basal and stimulated calcineurin activities are inversely related. Consistent with this finding, basal activity in resting T cells rose over time after transplant but stimulation fell (r(2) = 0.785, p < 0.05). These data suggest that examination of TCR-stimulated calcineurin activity after renal transplantation may be useful for monitoring immunosuppression of individual patients.
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pubmed:publicationType |
Journal Article,
Comparative Study,
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't,
Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
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