Histocompatibility and Immunogenetics : A Guide for Practitioners (1. Auflage. 2025. 608 S. 9 SW-Abb., 91 Farbabb. 244 mm)

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Histocompatibility and Immunogenetics : A Guide for Practitioners (1. Auflage. 2025. 608 S. 9 SW-Abb., 91 Farbabb. 244 mm)

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Full Description

The EFI-, ASHI-, and APHIA-endorsed professional guide for laboratory diagnostics in transplantation medicine

In Histocompatibility and Immunogenetics: A Guide for Practitioners, expert authors from across the globe deliver an authoritative introduction to the concepts, methods, and clinical applications of matching donors with acceptors of transplanted cells and organs. Fundamental concepts and limitations of current immunogenetic as well as histocompatibility diagnostic approaches are explained, and best practices to improving the outcomes of transplantation therapies are discussed. Readers will also find:

A holistic view of transplantation diagnostics, including drug and disease associations with histocompatibility markers
Options for the medical treatment of organ rejection
Practical discussions of specific methods in immunogenetics and histocompatibility, such as crossmatching in transplantation and KIR genotyping
A thorough introduction to the regulatory aspects of histocompatibility and immunogenetics

Perfect for clinical geneticists and immunologists, Histocompatibility and Immunogenetics will also benefit medical and research professionals working in medical laboratories and hospitals.

Contents

Preface xxiii

Part I Biological Basics 1

1 Innate Immune Defence 3
Margot Lepage and Valérie Dubois

1.1 Introduction 3

1.2 Anatomical Barriers and Initial Chemical Defenses 3

1.3 The Complement System 6

1.4 Danger Recognition 8

1.5 Inflammatory Reaction and Effector Cells of the Innate Immune Response 16

1.6 Bridging Innate and Adaptive Immunity 27

1.7 Conclusion 29

1.8 Perspective: The Concept of Trained Immunity 31

Abbreviations 32

References 35

2 Specific Immune Defence 39
Eric Spierings

2.1 Introduction 39

2.2 Components of the Adaptive Immune System 40

2.3 The Major Histocompatibility Complex and Adaptive Immune Responses 43

2.4 T Cell-Mediated Immune Response 47

2.5 B Cell-Mediated Immune Response 52

2.6 Receptors of the Specific Immune System 58

2.7 Immunological Memory 62

2.8 Conclusion/Summary/Future 64

References 65

3 The HLA/MHC System 69
Neema Mayor and James Robinson

3.1 Introduction 69

3.2 IPD-IMGT/HLA Database 82

3.3 Limits to HLA Variation 83

3.4 Summary 84

References 84

4 The HNA System 89
Anthony Poles

4.1 Neutrophils and Associated Functions 89

4.2 Human Neutrophil Antigens (HNA) 90

4.3 Clinical Conditions Associated with HNA Specific Antibodies 96

References 98

5 Natural Killer Cell Receptors 101
Dianne De Santis and Lucy Sullivan

5.1 Introduction 101

5.2 NK Cells 101

5.3 "Missing Self" Hypothesis and Hybrid Resistance 102

5.4 NK Cell Receptors 103

5.5 Killer Immunoglobulin-Like Receptors (KIRs) 104

5.6 CD94-NKG2 Receptors 113

References 119

6 The HPA System 127
Romy Pothof, Leendert Porcelijn, and Masja de Haas

6.1 Platelet Antigens 127

6.2 Human Platelet Antigens 127

References 131

7 Other Polymorphic Systems 133
Hana Rohn and Vera Rebmann

7.1 Introduction 133

7.2 The Structure of HLA-like MICA and MICB Molecules 133

7.3 The Functions of HLA-like MICA and MICB Molecules 134

7.4 The Expression of HLA-like MICA and MICB Molecules 134

7.5 The Polymorphisms of HLA-like MICA and MICB Molecules and Functional Consequence 135

7.6 Nonclassical HLA Class I 136

7.7 Key Differences Between Nonclassical HLA Class I and Classical HLA Class I Molecules 136

7.8 The Expression of HLA-E Molecules 137

7.9 The HLA-E Peptide Presentation Controls the Functional Interaction with NK and T Cells 137

7.10 The Polymorphisms of HLA-E and Its Influence on Gene Expression 139

7.11 The Expression of HLA-G 139

7.12 The Unique Structural Features of HLA-G 140

7.13 The Functions of HLA-G are Directed by the Structural Features 141

7.14 The Polymorphisms of HLA-G and Its Impact on Gene Expression 142

7.15 The Expression of HLA-F 143

7.16 The Functions of HLA-F are Directed by Its Structural Features 144

7.17 The Polymorphisms of HLA-F and Its Impact on Gene Expression 144

7.18 Summary 145

References 147

Part II Clinical Applications 155

8 Basic Concepts of Organ Transplantation 157
Ilias Doxiadis and Claudia Lehmann

8.1 Introduction 157

8.2 Overview of the Decision-Making Procedure 158

8.3 Registration and Waiting List 159

8.4 Procurement of the Organs 161

8.5 Postmortem Allocation 163

8.6 The Crossmatch 166

8.7 Prospective Outlooks 167

References 168

9 Basic Concepts of Organ Rejection 171
Volker Oberle and Melanie Gerth

9.1 Introduction 171

9.2 The Immune System: Balancing Self and Foreign Recognition 171

9.3 Antigens: Self and Foreign? 172

9.4 Immune Tolerance: Maintaining the Balance 172

9.5 Autoimmunity 173

9.6 Foreign Recognition Leading to Rejection 173

9.7 GvHD 175

9.8 Conclusion 175

References 177

10 Treatment of Organ Rejection 179
Marie Dirix, Britt Ceuleers, and Johan W. De Fijter

10.1 Introduction 179

10.2 Prevention of Rejection: Induction and Maintenance Immunosuppression 180

10.3 Treatment of Rejection 192

10.4 Conclusions 198

References 198

11 Stemcell Transplantation 209
Effie W. Petersdorf

11.1 State-of-the-Art of Allogeneic Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation 209

11.2 Haploidentical HCT 212

11.3 Immunobiology of Haploidentical Related Donor Transplantation 215

11.4 Selection of Related Donors for Transplantation: Non-HLA Factors 229

11.5 Concluding Remarks 231

References 232

12 Stemcell Transplantation from Unrelated Donors 251
Volker Oberle

12.1 Introduction 251

12.2 The Search for Unrelated Donors 251

12.3 Laboratory Work 254

12.4 Clinical Outcomes of Unrelated Stem Cell Transplantation 257

12.5 Challenges in Unrelated Stem Cell Transplantation 257

12.6 Future Directions and Emerging Technologies 258

12.7 Conclusion 258

References 258

13 Chimerism Testing in Stem Cell Transplantation 263
Andreas Heinold

13.1 Introduction 263

13.2 Methods for Molecular Genetic Chimerism Testing 264

13.3 Sensitivity of Molecular Genetic Chimerism Testing 270

13.4 Choice of Markers for Quantification 271

13.5 Chimerism Testing for Nonmalignant Disorders 272

13.6 Reporting Chimerism 272

13.7 Time Course of Chimerism Analyses 273

13.8 Advantages and Disadvantages of Highly Sensitive Chimerism Testing 275

13.9 Cell Sources for Identifying Recipient- and Donor-Specific Markers 275

13.10 Cell Sources for Chimerism Monitoring 276

13.11 Intervals for Chimerism Testing 276

13.12 Chimerism-Related Diagnostics 277

References 279

14 Disease Associations with HLA Alleles 285
Eduard Palou

14.1 HLA and Disease Association 285

14.2 Mechanisms of HLA and Disease Associations 286

14.3 Autoimmune Diseases Associated with HLA 289

14.4 Other Diseases Associated with HLA 295

14.5 Laboratory Diagnostics 298

14.6 Concluding Remarks 299

References 300

15 Drug Associations with HLA Alleles 303
Melanie Gerth and Thomas M. C. Binder

15.1 Introduction 303

15.2 Classification of Drug Hypersensitivity Syndromes 304

15.3 Immunopathogenesis of Drug Hypersensitivity Syndromes 307

15.4 HLA and Hypersensitivity Reactions 310

15.5 Clinical Implications of HLA Testing 321

15.6 Future Directions 323

15.7 Conclusion 323

References 324

16 Diseases in the Field of Transfusion Medicine 333
Andrea Bontadini, Roberto Crocchiolo, and Luca Mascaretti

16.1 Introduction 333

16.2 Platelet Transfusion Refractoriness 334

16.3 Transfusion-Related Adverse Events 340

16.4 Neonatal Alloimmune Neutropenia 345

16.5 Fetal and Neonatal Alloimmune Thrombocytopenia 347

16.6 Conclusions 349

References 349

Part III Methods in Immunogentics and Histocompatibility 359

17 Isolation and Purification of Test Material 361
Ingrid Faé

17.1 DNA Extraction 361

17.2 RNA Extraction 365

17.3 cfDNA Extraction 366

17.4 Cell Preparation 368

Abbreviations 372

References 372

18 HLA-Antibody Determination 375
Stefan Schaub, Caroline Wehmeier, and Gideon Hönger

18.1 Overview and Characteristics of Different HLA Antibody Detection Assays 375

18.2 The Multiplex Bead Array Platform (Luminex®) 379

18.3 Additional Methods/Tools 387

References 393

19 Low/Medium-Resolution HLA Typing 399
Milena Ivanova and Velizar Shivarov

19.1 Introduction 399

19.2 Cellular and Serological Tests for HLA Typing 400

19.3 DNA-based Methods for HLA Low-Resolution Typing 401

References 408

20 High-Resolution HLA Typing 413
EH Rozemuller and W. Mulder

20.1 Introduction 413

20.2 HLA Genes 414

20.3 PCR Amplification 414

20.4 Gene Capture Method 417

20.5 SBT by Sanger Sequencing 417

20.6 HLATypingbyNGSSBT 419

20.7 HLA Typing by Short-read Sequencing 421

20.7.1 Paired-end Sequencing 423

20.8 HLA Typing by Long-read Sequencing 424

20.9 Ambiguities 425

20.10 Phasing 427

20.11 Data Analysis 429

20.12 Special Cases 437

Abbreviations 439

References 440

21 Crossmatching in Transplantation 443
Melanie Gerth and Volker Oberle

21.1 Introduction 443

21.2 The Mechanism of Crossmatching 444

21.3 Crossmatch Methods 444

21.4 Summary 452

References 453

22 Determination of Antibodies and Typing in the HPA System 455
Volker Kiefel

22.1 Introduction to Platelet Antibody and Antigen Testing 455

22.2 Principles of Antibody Testing 455

22.3 Additional Techniques 457

22.4 Protocol: Platelet Suspension Immunofluorescence Test 458

22.5 Protocol: Isolation of Platelets for Serological Testing 459

22.6 Protocol: Monoclonal Antibody Immobilization of Platelet Antigens Assay (MAIPA) 460

22.7 New Developments for Platelet Antibody Detection 464

22.8 HPA-Antigen Testing 464

22.9 Concluding Remarks 465

References 466

23 KIR Genotyping 469
Dianne De Santis, Katherine M. Kichula, and Paul J. Norman

23.1 Complexity of KIR Genomic Region 469

23.2 KIR Genotyping 471

References 479

24 Determination of Antibodies and Typing in the HNA System 485
Anthony Poles

24.1 Introduction to Granulocyte Antibody and Antigen Testing 485

24.2 Principles of Antibody Testing 485

24.3 HNA Typing Techniques 490

References 491

25 Determination and Typing of Other Polymorphic Systems 495
Falko M. Heinemann, Vera Rebmann, and Rafael Tomoya Michita

25.1 Introduction 495

25.2 MICA/B Allele Typing Methods 495

25.3 MICA/B Single Nucleotide Variant Genotyping Methods 508

25.4 HLA-G Allele Typing Methods 508

25.5 HLA-E Typing Methods 515

25.6 HLA-F Typing Methods 518

25.7 Technical Aspects for the Detection of Anti-MICA Antibodies in Transplantation Patients 521

References 523

Part IV Regulatory Aspects 535

26 Regulations in Histocompatibility and Immunogenetics: Accreditation, External Proficiency Testing, Quality Management 537
Eduard K. Petershofen, Andrea Harmer, and Luca Mascaretti

26.1 Introduction 537

26.2 Legal Requirements 537

26.3 National Guidelines 538

26.4 Standards 538

26.5 Elements of Quality Management Systems 540

26.6 Practical Considerations for a QMS 540

26.7 Licensing, Accreditation, and Certification 544

26.8 EFI Accreditation Program 545

26.9 ISO Standards 546

26.10 Future Perspectives 547

Table of Acronyms and Abbreviations 548

References 549

Index 561

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