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Accession: PRJNA476707 ID: 476707

WNT Pathway Signalling in Kidney Transplants with Microvascular Injury (human)

See Genome Information for Homo sapiens
Kidney transplant recipients with biopsy-proven microvascular injury (MVI) have increased risk for allograft failure. MVI is often caused by antibody-mediated injury that is resistant to available treatments. Current diagnostic methods are also inadequate, with interobserver variability in traditional pathology reads, variable assessment of circulating donor-specific antibody between HLA laboratories, and peritubular capillary C4d staining. Molecular assessments of kidney biopsies can provide improved sensitivity for diagnosing MVI and other allograft pathology, while improving reproducibility and objectivity. Most molecular classifiers have been based on whole genome sequencing to develop diagnostic tests, but have provided limited therapeutic targets. In this study, we pursued a candidate gene approach to measure WNT pathway genes in residual clinical FFPE biopsies with and without MVI. We focused on the WNT pathway because of previous translational studies that implicated this pathway in chronic renal allograft injury as well as vascular injury in native chronic kidney disease. Overall design: Case-control study of 95 residual FFPE biopsies with MVI (g+ptc score >= 2, n=50) or Stable (g+ptc score < 2 and no other major abnormalities, n=45). Biopsies were retrieved from a biorepository of over 500 kidney transplant biopsies. We compared expression of 180 WNT pathway genes and 30 custom skipe-in targets (derived from previous studies of endothelial injury in transplantation) between MVI and Stable groups, with correction for multiple comparisons using FDR < 5%.
AccessionPRJNA476707; GEO: GSE115989
Data TypeTranscriptome or Gene expression
ScopeMultiisolate
OrganismHomo sapiens[Taxonomy ID: 9606]
Eukaryota; Metazoa; Chordata; Craniata; Vertebrata; Euteleostomi; Mammalia; Eutheria; Euarchontoglires; Primates; Haplorrhini; Catarrhini; Hominidae; Homo; Homo sapiens
PublicationsSeifert ME et al., "WNT pathway signaling is associated with microvascular injury and predicts kidney transplant failure.", Am J Transplant, 2019 Oct;19(10):2833-2845
Grants
  • "Novel Biomarkers of Angiogenesis and Vascular Injury in Chronic Rejection" (Grant ID K23 DK101690, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases)
SubmissionRegistration date: 19-Jun-2018
UAB School of Medicine
RelevanceMedical
Project Data:
Resource NameNumber
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Publications
PubMed1
PMC1
Other datasets
GEO DataSets1
GEO Data Details
ParameterValue
Data volume, Spots19950
Data volume, Processed Mbytes1
Data volume, Supplementary Mbytes1

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