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Characterizing T Cells in SCID Patients Presenting with Reactive or Residual T Lymphocytes

Authors :
Atar Lev
Amos J. Simon
Luba Trakhtenbrot
Itamar Goldstein
Meital Nagar
Polina Stepensky
Gideon Rechavi
Ninette Amariglio
Raz Somech
Source :
Clinical and Developmental Immunology, Vol 2012 (2012)
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Hindawi Limited, 2012.

Abstract

Introduction. Patients with severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) may present with residual circulating T cells. While all cells are functionally deficient, resulting in high susceptibility to infections, only some of these cells are causing autoimmune symptoms. Methods. Here we compared T-cell functions including the number of circulating CD3+ T cells, in vitro responses to mitogens, T-cell receptor (TCR) repertoire, TCR excision circles (TREC) levels, and regulatory T cells (Tregs) enumeration in several immunodeficinecy subtypes, clinically presenting with nonreactive residual cells (MHC-II deficiency) or reactive cells. The latter includes patients with autoreactive clonal expanded T cell and patients with alloreactive transplacentally maternal T cells. Results. MHC-II deficient patients had slightly reduced T-cell function, normal TRECs, TCR repertoires, and normal Tregs enumeration. In contrast, patients with reactive T cells exhibited poor T-cell differentiation and activity. While the autoreactive cells displayed significantly reduced Tregs numbers, the alloreactive transplacentally acquired maternal lymphocytes had high functional Tregs. Conclusion. SCID patients presenting with circulating T cells show different patterns of T-cell activity and regulatory T cells enumeration that dictates the immunodeficient and autoimmune manifestations. We suggest that a high-tolerance capacity of the alloreactive transplacentally acquired maternal lymphocytes represents a toleration advantage, yet still associated with severe immunodeficiency.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17402522 and 17402530
Volume :
2012
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Clinical and Developmental Immunology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.40d4d0d0e6ff41589c8f71b5b69f31d5
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/261470