1. Increased Multiclonal Antibody-Forming Cell Activity in the Peripheral Blood of Patients with SLE
- Author
-
Reeves Jp, Becker Tm, Merchant B, Lizzio Ef, and Alfred D. Steinberg
- Subjects
Antibody forming cell ,Guinea Pigs ,Immunology ,Hemolytic Plaque Technique ,Antibodies ,Disease activity ,immune system diseases ,Animals ,Humans ,Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic ,Immunology and Allergy ,Medicine ,Antibody-Producing Cells ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,B cell ,Sheep ,biology ,business.industry ,Complement C3 ,DNA ,General Medicine ,Peripheral blood ,Clone Cells ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,biology.protein ,Rabbits ,Elevated igm ,Antibody ,business ,Hapten - Abstract
21 patients with criteria for systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and 12 normal controls were studied for their spontaneous circulating IgM and IgG plaque-forming cells (PFCs) reactive against sheep erythrocytes (SRBC) and against a panel of five haptens. Quantitatively defined active and mildly active SLE patients had significantly elevated IgM- and IgG-producing PFCs in their peripheral blood reactive with the panel of five chemically defined haptens. Those patients having inactive SLE also showed increased circulating IgM PFCs. Significant elevations in circulating hapten-reactive PFCs were found to correlate progressively with disease activity in the inactive, mildly active, and active SLE patient groups. Circulating IgM- and IgG-secreting PFC reactive against SRBC were both significantly elevated only in those patients with active SLE. The data support the concept that SLE patients have a generalized increase in B cell activity against a broad repertoire of determinants, even those ostensibly unrelated to natural tissue antigens.
- Published
- 1981