Dysregulated lymphocyte proliferation and differentiation in patients with rheumatoid arthritis

F Ponchel, AW Morgan, SJ Bingham… - Blood, The Journal …, 2002 - ashpublications.org
F Ponchel, AW Morgan, SJ Bingham, M Quinn, M Buch, RJ Verburg, J Henwood…
Blood, The Journal of the American Society of Hematology, 2002ashpublications.org
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a chronic, inflammatory disease of the synovium of uncertain
pathogenesis. A number of phenotypic and functional T-cell defects have been described in
RA, including abnormal clonal expansions and suppressed proliferative responses, which
suggest a defect in T-cell differentiation. Here, we show that RA patients possess fewer
naive CD4+ T cells than healthy controls. Furthermore, a smaller proportion of these cells
contains a T-cell receptor excision circle (TREC). Patients with RA also have unusual …
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a chronic, inflammatory disease of the synovium of uncertain pathogenesis. A number of phenotypic and functional T-cell defects have been described in RA, including abnormal clonal expansions and suppressed proliferative responses, which suggest a defect in T-cell differentiation. Here, we show that RA patients possess fewer naive CD4+ T cells than healthy controls. Furthermore, a smaller proportion of these cells contains a T-cell receptor excision circle (TREC). Patients with RA also have unusual populations of T cells. These include immature cells characterized as CD45RBbrightCD45RA+CD62L by flow cytometry and a large population that coexpresses CD45RA and CD45RO. These cells are hyperresponsive to mitogen and TCR stimulation when compared to naive cells. Additionally, an unusual putative central memory subset expressing CD62L, but not CD45RA, appears in RA patients at the expense of more typical cells. Levels of C-reactive protein correlate inversely with the TREC content of naive T cells and positively with the sizes of naive and immature atypical T-cell subsets. These data suggest that inflammation drives proliferation of naive T cells in RA and encourages their differentiation into atypical, hyperresponsive progeny. TREC content of individual naive and atypical T-cell subsets suggests an ontogeny consistent with this hypothesis. These studies provide further evidence of a T-cell differentiation defect in RA, which could explain some of the well-characterized immunologic features of the disease.
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