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

Clonotype analysis of peripheral blood T cells and autoantigen-reactive T cells from patients with mixed connective tissue disease.

T cells that recognize autoantigens may play a central role in the autoimmune response. We have previously shown that autoantigen-reactive T cells (CD4+) to U1-small nuclear ribonucleoprotein A were found in the PBMC of patients with systemic lupus erythematosus or mixed connective tissue disease. To reveal clonotypes of such T cells that spread to the periphery, T cell clonal accumulations and their TCR-beta chain variable gene usages in fresh PBMC from eight patients with mixed connective tissue disease were analyzed by a new method of single strand conformation polymorphism applying to TCR gene detection. The results revealed that the numbers of accumulated T cell clones (mean: 24.3 clones) were greater than the numbers of clones detected in healthy donors (mean: 4.0 clones). Frequently used V beta genes in these accumulated T cell clones were V beta 1, 3, 4, 5.2, 14, and 16. After the stimulation for these samples with the soluble recombinant U1-small nuclear ribonucleoprotein A protein, proliferative T cell responses were observed. We found that T cell clones expressing more restricted TCR V beta genes (1, 3, 5.2, and 14 families) accumulated in vitro. These results suggest that autoantigen-reactive oligoclonal T cell accumulations are present in the peripheral blood from systemic autoimmune disease patients.[1]

References

  1. Clonotype analysis of peripheral blood T cells and autoantigen-reactive T cells from patients with mixed connective tissue disease. Okubo, M., Kurokawa, M., Ohto, H., Nishimaki, T., Nishioka, K., Kasukawa, R., Yamamoto, K. J. Immunol. (1994) [Pubmed]
 
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