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Renewal of the T-cell compartment in multiple sclerosis patients treated with glatiramer acetate

Authors :
Mauro Zaffaroni
Federico Serana
Luisa Imberti
M Rottoli
Alessandra Sottini
Roberto Bergamaschi
Cinzia Cordioli
Cinzia Zanotti
Ruggero Capra
Claudia Ghidini
Marco Chiarini
Source :
Multiple sclerosis (Houndmills, Basingstoke, England). 16(2)
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

The immunomodulating activity of glatiramer acetate on T-cells of multiple sclerosis patients has only been partially clarified. The objective of this work was to investigate whether glatiramer acetate modifies thymic release of newly produced T-cells and the peripheral composition of the T-cell repertoire. T-cell receptor excision circles, thymic naive (CD4+CD45RA+CCR7 +CD31+) T helper cells, and central (CD4+CD45RA -CCR7+) and effector (CD4+CD45RA-CCR7 -) memory T-cells were evaluated in 89 untreated patients, 84 patients treated for at least 1 year, and 31 patients beginning treatment at the time of inclusion in the study and then followed-up for 12 months; controls were 81 healthy donors. The T-cell repertoire was analysed in selected samples. The percentage of thymicnaive T helper cells was diminished in untreated patients, but rose to control values in treated subjects; a decrease in central memory T-cells was also observed in treated patients. Follow-up patients could be divided into two subgroups, one showing unmodified thymicnaive T helper cells and T-cell diversity, the other in which the increased release of new T-cells was accompanied by modifications of the T-cell repertoire. Glatiramer acetate modifies the peripheral T-cell pool by activating a thymopoietic pathway of T-cell release that leads to a different setting of T-cell diversity and, likely, to a dilution of autoreactive T-cells.

Details

ISSN :
14770970
Volume :
16
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Multiple sclerosis (Houndmills, Basingstoke, England)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....891e2b7dfc536d2646992f7a1f7adcc4