Blood CD9+ B cell,a biomarker of bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome after lung transplantation |
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Authors: | Carole Brosseau,Richard Danger,Maxim Durand,Eug nie Durand,Aurore Foureau,Philippe Lacoste,Adrien Tissot,Antoine Roux,Martine Reynaud‐Gaubert,Romain Kessler,Sacha Mussot,Claire Dromer,Olivier Brugi re,Jean Fran ois Mornex,Romain Guillemain,Johanna Claustre,Antoine Magnan,Sophie Brouard |
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Affiliation: | Carole Brosseau,Richard Danger,Maxim Durand,Eugénie Durand,Aurore Foureau,Philippe Lacoste,Adrien Tissot,Antoine Roux,Martine Reynaud‐Gaubert,Romain Kessler,Sacha Mussot,Claire Dromer,Olivier Brugière,Jean François Mornex,Romain Guillemain,Johanna Claustre,Antoine Magnan,Sophie Brouard, |
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Abstract: | Bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome is the main limitation for long‐term survival after lung transplantation. Some specific B cell populations are associated with long‐term graft acceptance. We aimed to monitor the B cell profile during early development of bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome after lung transplantation. The B cell longitudinal profile was analyzed in peripheral blood mononuclear cells from patients with bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome and patients who remained stable over 3 years of follow‐up. CD24hiCD38hi transitional B cells were increased in stable patients only, and reached a peak 24 months after transplantation, whereas they remained unchanged in patients who developed a bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome. These CD24hiCD38hi transitional B cells specifically secrete IL‐10 and express CD9. Thus, patients with a total CD9+ B cell frequency below 6.6% displayed significantly higher incidence of bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome (AUC = 0.836, PPV = 0.75, NPV = 1). These data are the first to associate IL‐10‐secreting CD24hiCD38hi transitional B cells expressing CD9 with better allograft outcome in lung transplant recipients. CD9‐expressing B cells appear as a contributor to a favorable environment essential for the maintenance of long‐term stable graft function and as a new predictive biomarker of bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome–free survival. |
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Keywords: | B cell biology basic (laboratory) research/science biomarker bronchiolitis obliterans (BOS) lung transplantation/pulmonology translational research/science |
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