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Oxford University Press, Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation, 11(35), p. 1984-1995, 2020

DOI: 10.1093/ndt/gfaa151

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Replicative Senescence and Arteriosclerosis After Kidney Transplantation

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

AbstractBackgroundReplicative senescence is associated with telomere shortening. In native kidneys, obtained prior to transplantation, we recently described and validated a significant association between shorter intrarenal telomere length and renal arteriosclerosis. After renal transplantation, animal experiments suggested that ischaemia–reperfusion injury, acute rejection episodes and cytomegalovirus disease associate with accelerated renal allograft senescence. The association between post-transplant events and replicative senescence has not yet been evaluated in a human setting.MethodsIn a cohort of 134 kidney allograft recipients, we performed protocol-specified renal allograft biopsies at 3 months, 1 year, 2 years and 5 years after transplantation (n = 579 biopsies). We used quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction to measure intrarenal relative average telomere length (T/S ratio). The association between donor and recipient demographic factors, post-transplant clinical/histological events, renal allograft histological evolution by 5 years post-transplant and intrarenal telomere length at 5 years after transplantation was studied using multiple regression models.ResultsAt 5 years after transplantation, shorter intrarenal telomere length was associated with male donor gender, older donor age, donor history of hypertension and donor cardiovascular risk, which confirms the associations observed in native kidneys. Recipient characteristics and post-transplant events like delayed graft function, acute rejection episodes, presence of donor-specific antibodies, cytomegalovirus disease and immunosuppressive regimen did not associate with alterations of intrarenal telomere length at 5 years. Independent of donor age and donor cardiovascular risk, intrarenal arteriosclerosis in protocol biopsies obtained at 5 years after transplantation and progressive arteriosclerosis over time after transplantation associated with shorter telomere length, while this was not the case for other histological lesions. Moreover, telomere attrition augments the association between older donor age and the presence of severe arteriosclerosis. In the group with the oldest donor age and shortest telomere length, there was significantly more severe arteriosclerosis (43%) in protocol biopsies at 5 years after transplantation, compared with other combinations (13–28%) (P = 0.001). Intrarenal arteriosclerosis at 5 years after transplantation did not associate with post-transplant clinical events.ConclusionsWe demonstrate that intrarenal telomere length at 5 years after transplantation, as a marker for replicative senescence, associates with renal arteriosclerosis and reflects kidney donor characteristics, but not post-transplant events.