Use of Proteomics to Discover Novel Markers of Cardiac Allograft Rejection

2004 
Endomyocardial biopsy remains the most reliable method of detecting rejection following cardiac transplantation. Despite numerous attempts to detect rejection using a blood assay, none have proved reliable enough to replace the biopsy. Here, we have investigated the hypothesis that proteomics has the potential to reveal many molecules which are upregulated in the heart during rejection, some of which may serve as novel blood markers of rejection. Initially, sequential cardiac biopsies (33 in total) from 4 patients were analysed by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis according to whether they showed rejection (n = 16) or no rejection (n = 17); over 100 proteins were found to be upregulated by between 2- and 50-fold during rejection. Of these, 13 were identified and were found to be cardiac specific or heat shock proteins. Two of these (αB-crystallin, tropomyosin) were measured by ELISA in the sera of 17 patients followed for 3 months after their transplants. Mean levels of αB-crystallin and tropomyosin wer...
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