1. Selective activation and accumulation of oligoclonal V beta-specific T cells in active pulmonary sarcoidosis
- Author
-
Mark C. Liu, David R. Moller, Jeffrey D. Forman, Jonathan T. Klein, Richard F. Silver, and Brian M. Greenlee
- Subjects
Interleukin 2 ,Adult ,Male ,Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell, alpha-beta ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Gene Expression ,Biology ,Lymphocyte Activation ,Sarcoidosis, Pulmonary ,T-Lymphocyte Subsets ,Gene expression ,medicine ,Humans ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Peptide sequence ,Gene ,Lung ,Cells, Cultured ,Genes, Dominant ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Base Sequence ,T-cell receptor ,General Medicine ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Bronchoalveolar lavage ,Immunology ,Interleukin-2 ,Female ,Sarcoidosis ,Bronchoalveolar Lavage Fluid ,medicine.drug ,Research Article - Abstract
Sarcoidosis is a granulomatous disease in which activated T cells, responding to an unidentified stimulus, accumulate at sites of disease such as the lung. To evaluate the hypothesis that active sarcoidosis is characterized by a selective activation and expansion of a limited repertoire of T cell receptor (TCR) specific T cells, we analyzed TCR V beta gene expression in lung and blood T cells of patients with active sarcoidosis and, for comparison, normal individuals using polymerase chain reaction amplification of 20 V beta gene families. Analysis of normal bronchoalveolar lavage T cells revealed TCR V beta distributions similar to that of normal blood, providing evidence for a lack of generalized skewing of the T cell repertoire in the normal, noninfected lung. Compared to normal lung and blood, subgroups of individuals with sarcoidosis demonstrated biased expression of one or more V beta genes in either the lung or blood. Five V beta gene families (V beta 5, V beta 8, V beta 15, V beta 16, and V beta 18) were most frequently utilized in a biased fashion by sarcoid lung or blood T cells. Furthermore, dramatic skewing of the T cell repertoire was apparent when sarcoid lung and blood T cells were expanded by short-term culture with IL-2. Sequence analysis demonstrated a bias in V beta gene expression was usually due to expansion of select V beta-specific clones, some of which contained a similar V(D)J junctional region motif. These observations provide evidence for a selective activation and accumulation of antigen-specific V beta-expressing T cells in sarcoidosis.
- Published
- 1994