TY - JOUR KW - Antibodies, Monoclonal KW - Antigens, Differentiation, T-Lymphocyte KW - Cells, Cultured KW - Granuloma KW - Humans KW - Immunity, Cellular KW - Inflammation KW - Interleukin-2 KW - leprosy KW - Lymphocyte Activation KW - Phenotype KW - T-Lymphocytes AU - Modlin R L AU - Melancon-Kaplan J AU - Young S M AU - Pirmez C AU - Kino H AU - Convit J AU - Rea T H AU - Bloom B R AB -

The clinical forms of leprosy constitute a spectrum that correlates closely with the degree of cell-mediated immunity. Patients with tuberculoid leprosy develop strong cell-mediated responses and have only a few, localized lesions, whereas patients with multibacillary lepromatous leprosy are specifically unresponsive to antigens of Myobacterium leprae. T cells of the CD4+ subset predominate in tuberculoid lesions, whereas CD8+ cells predominate in lepromatous lesions. Monoclonal antibodies that distinguish subpopulations of CD4+ and CD8+ cells were used to analyze the distribution of T cells infiltrating lesions across the disease spectrum. In lepromatous lesions, T cells of T-suppressor phenotype (9.3-) were the predominant CD8+ cells and suppressor/inducer cells (2H4+, Leu-8+) represented half of the CD4+ subset. In tuberculoid lesions, helper T cells (CD4+4B4+) outnumbered suppressor/inducer T cells by 14:1, compared with a ratio of 1.2:1 in peripheral blood. Analysis of the precursor frequency of antigen-reactive T cells permitted us to estimate that there was a 100-fold enrichment of T cells able to proliferate in response to M. leprae antigens in tuberculoid lesions (2/100), when compared with blood from the same patients. The methods used here to characterize the T-lymphocyte subsets and frequency of antigen-reactive T cells in leprosy may be useful in analyzing immunological reactions occurring in lesions of other inflammatory and autoimmune diseases.

BT - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America C1 - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3257577?dopt=Abstract DA - 1988 Feb DO - 10.1073/pnas.85.4.1213 IS - 4 J2 - Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. LA - eng N2 -

The clinical forms of leprosy constitute a spectrum that correlates closely with the degree of cell-mediated immunity. Patients with tuberculoid leprosy develop strong cell-mediated responses and have only a few, localized lesions, whereas patients with multibacillary lepromatous leprosy are specifically unresponsive to antigens of Myobacterium leprae. T cells of the CD4+ subset predominate in tuberculoid lesions, whereas CD8+ cells predominate in lepromatous lesions. Monoclonal antibodies that distinguish subpopulations of CD4+ and CD8+ cells were used to analyze the distribution of T cells infiltrating lesions across the disease spectrum. In lepromatous lesions, T cells of T-suppressor phenotype (9.3-) were the predominant CD8+ cells and suppressor/inducer cells (2H4+, Leu-8+) represented half of the CD4+ subset. In tuberculoid lesions, helper T cells (CD4+4B4+) outnumbered suppressor/inducer T cells by 14:1, compared with a ratio of 1.2:1 in peripheral blood. Analysis of the precursor frequency of antigen-reactive T cells permitted us to estimate that there was a 100-fold enrichment of T cells able to proliferate in response to M. leprae antigens in tuberculoid lesions (2/100), when compared with blood from the same patients. The methods used here to characterize the T-lymphocyte subsets and frequency of antigen-reactive T cells in leprosy may be useful in analyzing immunological reactions occurring in lesions of other inflammatory and autoimmune diseases.

PY - 1988 SP - 1213 EP - 7 T2 - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America TI - Learning from lesions: patterns of tissue inflammation in leprosy. UR - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC279737/pdf/pnas00256-0252.pdf VL - 85 SN - 0027-8424 ER -