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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

CD4+ and CD8+ clonal T cell expansions indicate a role of antigens in ankylosing spondylitis; a study in HLA-B27+ monozygotic twins.

Ankylosing spondylitis (AS) is a complex genetic disease in which both MHC and non-MHC genes determine disease susceptibility. To determine whether the T cell repertoires of individuals with AS show signs of increased stimulation by exogenous antigens, CD4+ and CD8+ T cell subsets of five monozygotic HLA-B27+ twins (two concordant and three discordant for AS) and CD8+ T cell repertoires of three healthy HLA-B27+ individuals were characterized by TCR beta-chain (TCRB) CDR3 size spectratyping. Selected TCRB-CDR3 spectra were further analysed by BJ-segment analysis and TCRB-CDR3 from expanded T cell clones were sequenced. In an analysis of all data (519/598 possible TCRB-CDR3 spectra), AS was associated with increased T cell oligoclonality in both CD8+ (P = 0.0001) and CD4+ (P = 0.033) T cell subsets. This was also evident when data were compared between individual twins. Nucleotide sequence analysis of expanded CD8+ or CD4+ T cell clones did not show selection for particular TCRB-CDR3 amino acid sequence motifs but displayed sequence homologies with published sequences from intra-epithelial lymphocytes or synovial T cells from rheumatoid arthritis patients. Together, these results provide support for the hypothesis that responses to T cell-stimulating exogenous or endogenous antigens are involved in the induction and/or maintenance of AS.[1]

References

  1. CD4+ and CD8+ clonal T cell expansions indicate a role of antigens in ankylosing spondylitis; a study in HLA-B27+ monozygotic twins. Duchmann, R., Lambert, C., May, E., Höhler, T., Märker-Hermann, E. Clin. Exp. Immunol. (2001) [Pubmed]
 
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