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Complement C3F allotype synthesized by liver recipient modifies transplantation outcome independently from donor hepatic C3
Author(s) -
ValeroHervás Diana María,
SánchezZapardiel Elena,
Castro María José,
GallegoBustos Fernando,
Cambra Félix,
Justo Iago,
LagunaGoya Rocío,
JiménezRomero Carlos,
Moreno Enrique,
LópezMedrano Francisco,
San Juan Rafael,
FernándezRuiz Mario,
Aguado José María,
PazArtal Estela
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
clinical transplantation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.918
H-Index - 76
eISSN - 1399-0012
pISSN - 0902-0063
DOI - 10.1111/ctr.12866
Subject(s) - medicine , allotype , liver transplantation , complement component 5 , transplantation , complement (music) , immunology , outcome (game theory) , complement system , antibody , phenotype , genetics , gene , biology , mathematics , mathematical economics , complementation
Complement component 3 (C3) presents both slow (C3S) and fast (C3F) variants, which can be locally produced and activated by immune system cells. We studied C3 recipient variants in 483 liver transplant patients by RT ‐ PCR ‐ HRM to determine their effect on graft outcome during the first year post‐transplantation. Allograft survival was significantly decreased in C3 FF recipients (C3 SS 95% vs C3 FS 91% vs C3 FF 83%; P =.01) or C3F allele carriers (C3F absence 95% vs C3F presence 90%, P =.02). C3 FF genotype or presence of C3F allele independently increased risk for allograft loss ( OR : 2.38, P =.005 and OR : 2.66, P =.02, respectively). C3 FF genotype was more frequent among patients whose first infection was of viral etiology (C3 SS 13% vs C3 FS 18% vs C3 FF 32%; P =.04) and independently increased risk for post‐transplant viral infections ( OR : 3.60, P =.008). On the other hand, C3 FF and C3F protected from rejection events ( OR : 0.54, P =.03 and OR : 0.63, P =.047, respectively). Differences were not observed in hepatitis C virus recurrence or patient survival. In conclusion, we show that, independently from C3 variants produced by donor liver, C3F variant from recipient diminishes allograft survival, increases susceptibility to viral infections, and protects from rejection after transplantation. C3 genotyping of liver recipients may be useful to stratify risk.