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Query: UMLS:C0003873 (
rheumatoid arthritis
)
53,068
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Expansion of CD4+CD28null T cells is a characteristic finding in patients with
rheumatoid arthritis
. Despite lacking CD28 molecules, these unusual CD4 T cells undergo clonal proliferation and form large and long-lived clonal populations. They produce high levels of IFN-gamma, exhibit autoreactivity, and have cytolytic function. The mechanisms facilitating the expansion and longevity of CD4+CD28null T cell clones in vivo are unknown. Here, we report that CD4+CD28null, but not CD4+CD28+, T cells express MHC class I-recognizing receptors normally found on NK cells. CD4+CD28null T cells preferentially expressed killer cell activating receptors (KAR), often in the absence of killer cell inhibitory receptors. Cross-linking of KAR molecules enhanced the proliferative response to
TCR
-mediated stimulation, but not the cytolytic function of CD4+CD28null T cells, suggesting different signaling pathways in CD4 T cells and NK cells. Triggering of KAR signaling led to the phosphorylation of several cellular targets, although the pattern of phosphorylation differed from that induced by the
TCR
. Aberrant expression of KAR molecules in the absence of inhibitory receptors and in the appropriate HLA setting may lead to the clonal outgrowth of autoreactive CD4+CD28null T cells commonly seen in
rheumatoid arthritis
.
...
PMID:Killer cell activating receptors function as costimulatory molecules on CD4+CD28null T cells clonally expanded in rheumatoid arthritis. 1087 93
An ELISA system for the human glycosylation inhibiting factor (GIF) was established using polyclonal antibodies against highly purified 13 kDa recombinant human GIF, and the concentration of GIF in the sera of healthy donors and patients with various diseases was determined. GIF was detected in the sera of most healthy individuals and its concentration tended to increase with age. It was also found that the serum GIF levels markedly increased in some patients with
rheumatoid arthritis
or malignant tumors. Analysis of serum samples by SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting revealed a 55 kDa protein that has both the GIF antigenic determinant and the
TCR
alpha chain determinant. A 13 kDa GIF was not detected in the sera. In view of our previous findings on antigen-specific GIF from murine suppressor T cell hybridomas indicating that the 55 kDa GIF is a post-translationally formed conjugate of a
TCR
alpha chain with 13 kDa GIF, we suspect that the 55 kDa GIF detected in human sera is a human homologue of the murine 55 kDa GIF.
...
PMID:Presence of the 55 kDa glycosylation inhibiting factor in human serum. 1096 25
For the treatment of
rheumatoid arthritis
, efficient drug delivery methods to the inflamed joints need to be developed. Because T cells expressing an appropriate autoantigen-specific receptor can migrate to inflamed lesions, it has been reasoned that they can be employed to deliver therapeutic agents. To examine the ability and efficiency of such T cells as a vehicle, we employed an experimentally induced model of arthritis. Splenic T cells from DO11.10
TCR
transgenic mice specific for OVA were transduced with murine IL-10. Adoptive transfer of the IL-10-transduced DO11.10 splenocytes ameliorated OVA-induced arthritis despite the presence of around 95% nontransduced cells. Using green fluorescent protein as a marker for selection, the number of transferred cells needed to ameliorate the disease was able to be reduced to 10(4). Preferential accumulation of the transferred T cells was observed in the inflamed joint, and the improvement in the disease was not accompanied by impairment of the systemic immune response to the Ag, suggesting that the transferred T cells exert their anti-inflammatory task locally, mainly in the joints where the Ag exists. In addition, IL-10-transduced DO11.10 T cells ameliorated methylated BSA-induced arthritis when the arthritic joint was coinjected with OVA in addition to methylated BSA. These results suggest that T cells specific for a joint-specific Ag would be useful as a therapeutic vehicle in
rheumatoid arthritis
for which the arthritic autoantigen is still unknown.
...
PMID:Antigen-specific T cells transduced with IL-10 ameliorate experimentally induced arthritis without impairing the systemic immune response to the antigen. 1106 61
Granular lymphocyte-proliferative disorder is characterized by a proliferation of large granular lymphocytes (LGLs). It is often associated with neutropenia,
rheumatoid arthritis
(RA), and pure red cell aplasia (PRCA). Phenotypic analysis has demonstrated that in most cases, the LGLs show a clonal rearrangement of the
TCR
alpha beta rearrangement. We are reporting a patient with
TCR
gamma delta LGL proliferation without clinical findings and lymphocytosis. The patient showed an expansion of the CD3+, CD16+, CD56+, and CD57+ LGL populations which involved coexpression of
TCR
gamma delta with
TCR
J gamma and J delta 1 gene rearrangement. Autoimmune manifestations, including RA and PRCA, have not appeared and the results of laboratory examinations have not changed for 1 year after the diagnosis.
...
PMID:CD3+, CD4-, CD8-, TCR alpha beta-, TCR gamma delta+ granular lymphocyte proliferative disorder without lymphocytosis and clinical symptoms. 1111 Nov 26
Ankylosing spondylitis (AS) is a complex genetic disease in which both MHC and non-MHC genes determine disease susceptibility. To determine whether the T cell repertoires of individuals with AS show signs of increased stimulation by exogenous antigens, CD4+ and CD8+ T cell subsets of five monozygotic HLA-B27+ twins (two concordant and three discordant for AS) and CD8+ T cell repertoires of three healthy HLA-B27+ individuals were characterized by
TCR
beta-chain (TCRB) CDR3 size spectratyping. Selected TCRB-CDR3 spectra were further analysed by BJ-segment analysis and TCRB-CDR3 from expanded T cell clones were sequenced. In an analysis of all data (519/598 possible TCRB-CDR3 spectra), AS was associated with increased T cell oligoclonality in both CD8+ (P = 0.0001) and CD4+ (P = 0.033) T cell subsets. This was also evident when data were compared between individual twins. Nucleotide sequence analysis of expanded CD8+ or CD4+ T cell clones did not show selection for particular TCRB-CDR3 amino acid sequence motifs but displayed sequence homologies with published sequences from intra-epithelial lymphocytes or synovial T cells from
rheumatoid arthritis
patients. Together, these results provide support for the hypothesis that responses to T cell-stimulating exogenous or endogenous antigens are involved in the induction and/or maintenance of AS.
...
PMID:CD4+ and CD8+ clonal T cell expansions indicate a role of antigens in ankylosing spondylitis; a study in HLA-B27+ monozygotic twins. 1120 64
Rheumatoid arthritis
(RA) synovial fluid (SF)-T lymphocytes appear relatively inactive in situ and respond only weakly to diverse stimuli ex vivo. To characterize the molecular defects underlying this hyporesponsiveness we analyzed the expression level of several proteins involved in
TCR
-proximal signal transduction. As compared to peripheral blood (PB)-T lymphocytes, SF-T cells from some (but not all) of the patients analyzed expressed lower levels of TCRalphabeta, CD3epsilon, TCRzeta, p56(lck) and LAT, while p59(fyn), phospholipase C-gamma1 and ZAP-70 expression was unaltered. Semi-quantitative analysis of T cells from several patients revealed that the degree of TCRzeta chain and p56(lck) modulation correlated statistically significantly with the level of SF-T cell hyporesponsiveness. The differential reactivity of p56(lck) specific monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies in SF-T but not PB-T lymphocytes indicated that p56(lck) modulation consists of a conformational change rather than loss of expression. Our results indicate that multiple signaling molecules can be modulated in RA SF-T cells and show for the first time a direct quantitative correlation between T cell hyporesponsiveness and modulation of TCRzeta and of p56(lck), a critical protein tyrosine kinase required for T cell activation.
...
PMID:A potential role for protein tyrosine kinase p56(lck) in rheumatoid arthritis synovial fluid T lymphocyte hyporesponsiveness. 1122 99
Proteoglycan (PG)-induced arthritis (PGIA) is a novel autoimmune murine model for
rheumatoid arthritis
induced by immunization with cartilage PG in susceptible BALB/c mice. In this model, hyperproliferation of peripheral CD4(+) T cells has been observed in vitro with Ag stimulation, suggesting the breakdown of peripheral tolerance. Activation-induced cell death (AICD) is a major mechanism for peripheral T cell tolerance. A defect in AICD may result in autoimmunity. We report in this study that although CD4(+) T cells from both BALB/c and B6 mice, identically immunized with human cartilage PG or OVA, express equally high levels of Fas at the cell surface, CD4(+) T cells from human cartilage PG-immunized BALB/c mice, which develop arthritis, fail to undergo AICD. This defect in AICD in PGIA may lead to the accumulation of autoreactive Th1 cells in the periphery. The impaired AICD in PGIA might be ascribed to an aberrant expression of Fas-like IL-1beta-converting enzyme-inhibitory protein, which precludes caspase-8 activation at the death-inducing signaling complex, and subsequently suppresses the caspase cascade initiated by Fas-Fas ligand interaction. Moreover, this aberrant expression of Fas-like IL-1beta-converting enzyme-inhibitory protein may also mediate
TCR
-induced hyperproliferation of CD4(+) T cells from arthritic BALB/c mice. Our data provide the first insight into the molecular mechanism(s) of defective AICD in autoimmune arthritis.
...
PMID:Impaired Fas signaling pathway is involved in defective T cell apoptosis in autoimmune murine arthritis. 1129 Jul 77
CD28 is a costimulatory receptor expressed in most CD4(+) T cells. Despite the long-standing evidence for up- and downregulation of surface CD28 expression in vitro, and the key regulatory role assigned to the upregulation of CD28 counterreceptor [the CD152 (CTLA-4) molecule], in vivo CD28 induction has attracted little attention. We studied CD28 and CD152 expression and function in 33
rheumatoid arthritis
(RA) patients, 20 clinically active and 13 inactive, and in 24 healthy donors. Four subsets of CD28(-), CD28(low), CD28(int), and CD28(high) peripheral blood human CD4(+) T cells were defined using three-color flow cytometry. The three CD28(+) subsets displayed a one-, two-, or threefold quantitative difference in their relative number of CD28 antibody binding sites, respectively (P < 0.01). RA patients, whether active or inactive, showed a distinct phenotype when compared to healthy donors: (i) the percentage of CD4(+)CD28(high) cells was increased twofold and the CD4(+)CD28(low) subset was reduced twofold (P < 0.01) and (ii) the CD4(+)CD28(high) cells from RA patients showed an in vivo activated phenotype, CD45RO(+)CD5(high)IL-2Ralpha(+) (P < 0.01). Active RA patients were different from inactive patients. They showed a twofold increase in mean CD28 expression (P < 0.05), whereas each of the CD28(+) subsets in the inactive RA patients showed reduced expression when compared to healthy donors. Notably, both active and inactive RA patients showed abnormal CD28 upregulation when T cells were activated in vitro with CD3 antibodies, but only inactive RA patients showed a hypoproliferative response to
TCR
/CD3 triggering when compared to healthy donors (P < 0.01). This defective proliferation was normalized by concurrent crosslinking with CD28 antibody. No differences were noted in the expression of CD152 or CD80, a CD28 and CD152 shared ligand. The disregulated in vivo expression of CD28 was related to the RA patients' disease activity and suggests that modulation of CD28 surface levels may be an additional mechanism to finely tune the delicate responsiveness/tolerance balance.
...
PMID:Cell surface CD28 levels define four CD4+ T cell subsets: abnormal expression in rheumatoid arthritis. 1131 97
Autoantigen-specific T cells have tissue-specific homing properties, suggesting that these cells may be ideal vehicles for the local delivery of immunoregulatory molecules. We tested this hypothesis by using type II collagen-specific (CII-specific) CD4(+) T hybridomas or primary CD4(+) T cells after gene transfer, as vehicles to deliver an immunoregulatory protein for the treatment of collagen-induced arthritis (CIA), a mouse model of
rheumatoid arthritis
(RA). CII-specific T cells or hybridomas were transduced using retroviral vectors to constitutively express the IL-12 antagonist, IL-12 p40. Transfer of engineered CD4(+) T cells after immunization significantly inhibited the development of CIA, while cells transduced with vector control had no effect. The beneficial effect on CIA of IL-12 p40-transduced T cells required
TCR
specificity against CII, since transfer of T cells specific for another antigen producing equivalent amounts of IL-12 p40 had no effect. In vivo cell detection using bioluminescent labels and RT-PCR showed that transferred CII-reactive T-cell hybridomas accumulated in inflamed joints in mice with CIA. These results indicate that the local delivery of IL-12 p40 by T cells inhibited CIA by suppressing autoimmune responses at the site of inflammation. Modifying antigen-specific T cells by retroviral transduction for local expression of immunoregulatory proteins thus offers a promising strategy for treating RA.
...
PMID:Antigen-specific T cell-mediated gene therapy in collagen-induced arthritis. 1139 Apr 15
Plasticity of
TCR
interactions during CD4(+) T cell activation by an MHC-peptide complex accommodates variation in the peptide or MHC contact sites in which recognition of an altered ligand by the T cell can modify the T cell response. To explore the contribution of this form of
TCR
cross-recognition in the context of T cell selection on disease-associated HLA molecules, we have analyzed the relationship between
TCR
recognition of the DRB1*0401- and DRB1*0404-encoded HLA class II molecules associated with
rheumatoid arthritis
. Thymic reaggregation cultures demonstrated that CD4(+) T cells selected on either DRB1*0401 or DRB1*0404 could be subsequently activated by the other MHC molecule. Using HLA tetramer technology we identify hemagglutinin residue 307-319-specific T cells restricted by DRB1*0401, but activated by hemagglutinin residues 307-319, in the context of DRB1*0404. One such clone exhibits an altered cytokine profile upon activation with the alternative MHC ligand. This altered phenotype persists when both class II molecules are present. These findings directly demonstrate that T cells selected on an MHC class II molecule carry the potential for activation on altered self ligands when encountering Ags presented on a related class II molecule. In individuals heterozygous for these alleles the possibility of
TCR
cross-recognition could lead to an aberrant immune response.
...
PMID:T cell selection and differential activation on structurally related HLA-DR4 ligands. 1154 12
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