Background: Human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-C is expressed on nucleated cells and platelets in lower levels than HLA-A,B, and its antigens are in linkage disequilibrium with HLA-B antigens. Therefore, HLA-C antibody detection is difficult. The authors questioned whether HLA-C could serve as a target in clinical kidney transplantation using a newly developed assay.
Methods: Flow cytometry was performed with sera from patients (n=34) awaiting a kidney retransplant using nine cell lines expressing a single HLA-C antigen (single-antigen lines [SAL]).
Results: The SAL were validated with HLA-C-specific alloantisera and human monoclonal antibodies against HLA-A, -B, and -C. The results were in agreement with the specificities previously reported. Exceptions, because of new HLA-C specificities used here, could be explained by epitope sharing between the antigens. With respect to patient sera, 15 of the 34 patients tested (44%) showed serum reactivity toward one or more HLA-C SAL.
Conclusions: In contrast to peripheral blood lymphocytes, SAL are excellent targets for detecting HLA-C-reactive alloantibodies by flow cytometry. This preliminary analysis revealed that HLA-C-reactive antibodies are frequently present in sera of retransplant patients, serving as possible targets in clinical transplantation.