Cell types required for anti-acetylcholine receptor antibody synthesis by cultured thymocytes and blood lymphocytes in myasthenia gravis.

HN Willcox, J Newsom-Davis… - Clinical and experimental …, 1984 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
HN Willcox, J Newsom-Davis, LR Calder
Clinical and experimental immunology, 1984ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
In most young myasthenia gravis patients, the thymic medulla contains germinal centres.
Thymocytes from these cases spontaneously synthesize anti-acetylcholine receptor
autoantibody (anti-AChR) in culture; after irradiation they may also selectively stimulate anti-
AChR antibody production by autologous blood lymphocytes. By depleting cortical or mature
thymic T cells by complement killing, we now show that neither of these responses depends
on thymic T cells, unlike the total IgG response to pokeweed mitogen which is T cell …
Abstract
In most young myasthenia gravis patients, the thymic medulla contains germinal centres. Thymocytes from these cases spontaneously synthesize anti-acetylcholine receptor autoantibody (anti-AChR) in culture; after irradiation they may also selectively stimulate anti-AChR antibody production by autologous blood lymphocytes. By depleting cortical or mature thymic T cells by complement killing, we now show that neither of these responses depends on thymic T cells, unlike the total IgG response to pokeweed mitogen which is T cell-dependent and shows T/B cell synergy. The results suggest that much of the spontaneous anti-AChR production is by autonomous thymic plasma cells, which may be HLA-DR-. The ability to stimulate autologous blood lymphocytes does not require viable HLA-DR+ thymic cells but appears to depend on rare antigen presenting cells from the germinal centres. In preliminary experiments, blood T cells were apparently also necessary.
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