TY - JOUR KW - Humans KW - Immunity, Cellular KW - In Vitro Techniques KW - Interleukin-2 KW - leprosy KW - Lymphocyte Activation KW - Monocytes KW - Phagocytes KW - T-Lymphocytes KW - T-Lymphocytes, Regulatory AU - Kaplan G AU - Cohn Z A AB -

The depression of cellular immunity in lepromatous patients is not understood. While the blood monocytes of leprosy patients appear to be activated normally by lymphokines, T cell proliferation and production of lymphokines in response to Mycobacterium leprae are impaired in lepromatous patients. Attempts to restore responsiveness in cells from these patients have been unsuccessful in our hands. The addition of exogenous IL-2 to leukocyte cultures does not appear to restore responsiveness to M. leprae in cells from nonresponder patients. Rather, some enhancement, often not antigen specific, is observed in cells from patients with a preexisting response. Similarly, depletion of monocytes does not restore responsiveness to M. leprae in non-responder patients, but a nonspecific enhancement of proliferation is observed in monocyte-free cultures from patients that do respond to M. leprae. Thus, the defect in lepromatous non-responder patients does not result from a simple lack of IL-2 production or suppression by monocytes and/or their products. Possibly, there is a low level or lack of M. leprae responsive T cells in the circulation of these patients.

BT - Immunology letters C1 - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2935494?dopt=Abstract DA - 1985 DO - 10.1016/0165-2478(85)90169-5 IS - 3-4 J2 - Immunol. Lett. LA - eng N2 -

The depression of cellular immunity in lepromatous patients is not understood. While the blood monocytes of leprosy patients appear to be activated normally by lymphokines, T cell proliferation and production of lymphokines in response to Mycobacterium leprae are impaired in lepromatous patients. Attempts to restore responsiveness in cells from these patients have been unsuccessful in our hands. The addition of exogenous IL-2 to leukocyte cultures does not appear to restore responsiveness to M. leprae in cells from nonresponder patients. Rather, some enhancement, often not antigen specific, is observed in cells from patients with a preexisting response. Similarly, depletion of monocytes does not restore responsiveness to M. leprae in non-responder patients, but a nonspecific enhancement of proliferation is observed in monocyte-free cultures from patients that do respond to M. leprae. Thus, the defect in lepromatous non-responder patients does not result from a simple lack of IL-2 production or suppression by monocytes and/or their products. Possibly, there is a low level or lack of M. leprae responsive T cells in the circulation of these patients.

PY - 1985 SP - 205 EP - 9 T2 - Immunology letters TI - Cellular immunity in lepromatous and tuberculoid leprosy. VL - 11 SN - 0165-2478 ER -