Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0024141 (systemic lupus erythematosus)
44,322 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

CD2 (T11; sheep erythrocyte receptor) is the surface component of an alternative, antigen-independent pathway of human T cell activation. The response to certain anti-CD2 antibodies is relatively independent of accessory cell signals and therefore provides a direct measurement of T cell function. The CD2 pathway may be important in the differentiation of thymocytes, on which the expression of CD2 precedes the appearance of the CD3-T cell receptor complex. In view of the impaired T cell regulation of immune responses in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), we examined the activation of peripheral blood lymphocytes by anti-CD2 antibodies in 57 SLE patients and 32 normal control subjects. The CD2 pathway response was lower in the SLE patients (P less than 0.0001); 18 of the 57 SLE patients had a lower response than any of the control subjects. The SLE low-responder patients did not differ from the normal-responder patients in terms of disease activity or use of antiinflammatory and immunosuppressive medications. Low responses to anti-CD2 were corrected to normal by the coaddition of a submitogenic amount of phorbol myristate acetate (1 ng/ml). In some low-responder patients, the responses were normalized by the removal of non-T cells. The data indicate that some SLE patients have impaired responses to CD2 pathway activation and that this may reflect intrinsic T cell defects and/or regulatory influences of non-T cells.
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PMID:Defective CD2 pathway T cell activation in systemic lupus erythematosus. 167 43

Monoclonal antibodies to known surface antigens on B cells and on resting and activated T cells of various types were used in several approaches to examine the specificity of IgM antilymphocyte antibodies in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Surface determinants that were sought included: T3, T11, Leu-1, Leu-8 (pan-T); T4, T8 (T subset); beta 2-microglobulin (beta 2m); L243, Leu-10 (DR and DS/DC framework, respectively); anti-Tac (interleukin-2 receptor); 5E9 (transferrin receptor); and 4F2, AA1 (other activation antigens). The first strategy was based on inhibition of rosette formation between mouse monoclonal antibody-coated targets and anti-mouse IgG-coated erythrocytes by SLE sera, either directly at 4 degrees C or after modulation of IgM antilymphocyte antibody-reactive target cell antigen at 37 degrees C. Significant rosette inhibition, defined as greater than 2 standard deviations from the mean value for 10 control sera, was seen only for beta 2m (13 of 20 SLE sera were positive; inhibition = 15-58%). Next, relative fluorescence intensity of lymphocyte staining by monoclonal antibodies was assessed by flow microfluorometry after preincubation of cells with SLE serum at 4 degrees C or after modulation of SLE antibody-reactive antigen. Modulation markedly reduced or eliminated SLE antilymphocyte antibody IgM staining. Except for beta 2m, neither cold nor warm temperature preincubations altered the relative fluorescence intensity for the known surface antigens. These data confirm anti-beta 2m as a common antibody specificity in SLE and suggest that antilymphocyte antibodies in this disorder are not directed to Ia or to certain other defined lymphocyte antigens of functional interest.
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PMID:Surface antigen specificity of cold-reactive IgM antilymphocyte antibodies in systemic lupus erythematosus. 257 82

Intravenous cyclophosphamide therapy of severe systemic lupus is associated with reduction in the numbers of circulating T and B lymphocytes, suppression of T11 (CD2) receptor-mediated responses, and suppression of autoantibody production. In clinical trials, intravenous cyclophosphamide plus moderate-to low-dose daily oral prednisone appears to reduce the rate of progression of irreversible renal injury in patients who have active nephritis and definite but limited chronic changes in biopsy specimens. It may also be effective in other forms of severe lupus, although controlled trials are lacking. It may be the treatment of choice in severe lupus characterized by ongoing antibody or immune-complex mediated tissue injury.
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PMID:Intravenous cyclophosphamide therapy of severe SLE. 267 32

Biopsy specimens from mixed connective tissue disease (MCTD) and discoid lupus erythematodes (DLE) skin lesions were stained with monoclonal antibodies to differentiation and activation antigens. In addition, the blast cells were studied by combining autoradiography with immunoperoxidase staining. In both disease conditions most of the inflammatory cells in situ were positive for T11 antigen, the CD4/CD8 ratio being low. Only a few of the cells were pan-B positive B cells. The expression of various activation antigens did not differ significantly between MCTD and DLE biopsy specimens; the number of T9, Tac, and 4F2 antigen carrying cells was relatively low, whereas Ia-positive cells were more numerous. 3H-Thymidine incorporating T blasts comprised less than 1% of all inflammatory cells. T4 and T8 marker-carrying blast cells were present in about equal proportions. These findings suggest that Ia antigen-expressing T cells are important from the pathogenetic point of view in both MCTD and DLE. Because the local proliferation of T cells was extremely low according to the lack of interleukin-2 receptor and OKT9 markers and 3H-thymidine incorporation, it seems probable that most of the T cells are recruited from the circulation to the site of the inflammation.
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PMID:Evaluation of lymphocyte activation in skin lesions of patients with mixed connective tissue disease and discoid lupus erythematodes. 325

Severe systemic lupus erythematosus affecting the kidney or central nervous system may lead to organ failure or death despite treatment with high doses of corticosteroids. To evaluate the clinical and immunologic effects of intravenous cyclophosphamide in this setting, we treated nine patients with monthly intravenous infusions of cyclophosphamide for six months. A comparison of characteristics at entry and follow-up revealed improvements (by paired t-test) in creatinine clearance (66 vs. 96 ml per minute, P less than 0.001); 24-hour urinary protein level (4.11 vs. 0.90 g, P less than 0.05), Farr anti-DNA titer (43 vs. 8.5 percent, P less than 0.01); complement components C3 (894 vs. 1150 mg per liter, P less than 0.05), C4 (154 vs. 222 mg per liter, P less than 0.05), and total complement activity (CH50) (88.7 vs. 113.4 IU, P less than 0.05); and Westergren erythrocyte sedimentation rate (60.2 vs. 34.4 mm per hour, P less than 0.0005). Other manifestations of lupus improved markedly in most cases, despite a reduction in the mean daily dose of prednisone, from 45 mg at entry to 17 mg at follow-up (P less than 0.01). The numbers of lymphocytes positive for T3, T4, T8, and B1 declined progressively during treatment. At follow-up, persistent decreases were observed in the T-lymphocyte subsets, whereas the absolute number of B lymphocytes had returned to levels near base line. T-cell proliferative responses at follow-up were not significantly different from entry values, except that the response to mitogenic anti-T11 (CD2) antibodies was decreased (P less than 0.01). Our data indicate that monthly intravenous administration of cyclophosphamide was associated with a substantial amelioration of severe systemic lupus, in conjunction with discrete changes in T-lymphocyte markers and T-cell function. This was a preliminary, uncontrolled study, but the results warrant further investigation of this form of treatment.
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PMID:Clinical and immunologic effects of monthly administration of intravenous cyclophosphamide in severe systemic lupus erythematosus. 325 86

Invasive candidal infections are encountered with increasing frequency in compromised hosts but bone infection is uncommon. A woman with systemic lupus erythematosus and end-stage renal failure managed by continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis developed a painful thoracic kyphosis and a lytic lesion in the vertebral bodies of T10 and T11. Blood cultures were sterile but bone biopsy material contained Candida albicans which also grew on culture. Circulating immune complexes were measured in high levels and contained candida antigens and specific anti-candida antibody as determined by isoelectric focusing, immunoblotting and immunoprinting techniques. Pain persisted after anti-fungal therapy had sterilized the lesion necessitating surgical excision of affected vertebrae, kyphosis correction and iliac crest bone grafting. The titres of circulating immune complexes and anti-candidal precipitins closely paralleled the clinical course.
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PMID:Candida albicans vertebral osteomyelitis in chronic renal failure. 342 76

Monoclonal anti-beta 2-microglobulin (beta 2m) inhibited in a specific, dose-dependent fashion both in vitro tetanus toxoid-induced human-T-cell proliferation and sheep erythrocyte (E)-rosette formation, a function of the 50 kDa T11 molecule. In these respects, anti-beta 2m exhibited effects similar to those of sera from patients with SLE. Although 10 of 16 SLE sera contained antibody to beta 2m in monoclonal rosette inhibition assays, the presence of antibody of this specificity contributed only partially to the capacity of SLE serum to inhibit E-rosette formation or the T-cell response to tetanus toxoid. Removal of anti-beta 2m from SLE serum by solid phase absorption with beta 2m-Sepharose 4B reduced inhibition of the tetanus toxoid response and E-rosette formation in certain cases, but to a lesser extent than that observed following absorption with T-cell blasts, which completely eliminated inhibitory activity. Neither SLE antilymphocyte antibodies (including anti-beta 2m) nor heterologous anti-beta 2m were directed to the E receptor binding site (T11(1) epitope), as indicated by failure to inhibit OKT11 monoclonal antibody rosette formation or to reduce the relative intensity of OKT11 immunofluorescent staining. These data suggest an interesting functional relationship between beta 2m, the E receptor, and T-cell activation. While anti-beta 2m antibodies in SLE exert some inhibitory effect on antigen-induced T-cell proliferation, other distinct autoantibody systems to T-cell activation antigens appear to play the predominant role in this regard.
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PMID:Relationship of anti-beta 2-microglobulin antibodies to T11 and T-cell activation in systemic lupus erythematosus. 389 32

The acute spinal cord infarction is a rare cause of acute-onset paraplegia. Furthermore, it is specially uncommon that the infarction occurs in patients with apparent low predisposition to vascular disease. The 20210A allele of the prothrombin gene (causing a threefold-increased risk in venous thromboembolism) was recently associated with unexplained spinal cord infarction in young women under treatment with estrogens (contraceptive pill). We report a case of anterior spinal artery syndrome resulting from an ischaemic infarction at the anterior aspect of the spinal cord in a healthy 50-year-old woman, carrying this mutation, being the first published case under treatment with transdermal estradiol. She referred the typical sudden-onset back pain associated to clinical anterior spinal artery syndrome with sphincter dysfunction and nontraumatic paraplegia. A possible multiple sclerosis was ruled out and the steroids or immunoglobulin therapy induced no clinical improvement. Cerebrospinal fluid and other investigations were all negative. Sequential MRI scans revealed development of spinal cord infarction from T10 to T11, with increased signal in T2-weighted image (T2). Because she referred a previous thrombophlebitis and suffered a deep-vein thrombosis one month after paraplegia, a complete coagulation study was performed. Antithrombin, proteins C and S, homocysteine, factor V Leiden, lupus anticoagulant and anticardiolipin antibodies were all normal or negatives. In opposite, the 20210A variation was positive (heterozygous) and the factor VIIIc level was very high (280 U/dl eight months later). We argue the relative importance of both findings. The patient had no a substantial recovery over a period of 20 months.Certainly, the prothrombin 20210A seems to be associated with unexplained ischemic myelopathy among the young women with estrogens.
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PMID:[Spinal cord infarction and recurrent venous thrombosis in association with estrogens and the 20210A allele of the prothrombin gene]. 1174 25

Glucocorticoid (GC)-induced osteoporosis mostly affects trabecular bone of vertebrae. Only 30% of vertebral fractures are symptomatic, yet both clinical and radiological vertebral fractures have been associated with increased mortality and morbidity. The aims of this cross-sectional, outpatient-based study were to measure the prevalence of asymptomatic vertebral fractures in a large sample of post-menopausal women given GCs for different diseases; to compare prevalence of asymptomatic vertebral fractures according to disease, GC treatment and major risk factors; and to assess the quality of life in GC users with and without asymptomatic vertebral fractures. 551 patients referring to 39 centers as outpatients for their programmed follow-up and satisfying the inclusion criteria were included in the analysis. Each patient underwent structured medical interview (including dose and duration of GC therapy, major risk factors for osteoporosis, the quality of life questionnaire of the European Foundation for Osteoporosis (QUALEFFO) and a back function score questionnaire), thoraco-lumbar radiographs and subsequent morphometry; for 253 and 437 patients, respectively, lumbar spine bone mineral density (BMD) assessed by dual energy X-ray absorptiometry and calcaneal bone stiffness assessed by quantitative ultrasonometry were available. The prevalence of asymptomatic vertebral fractures resulted >37%, with >14% of patients having two or more asymptomatic vertebral fractures and was much higher than that found in epidemiological studies on healthy women. Distribution of asymptomatic vertebral fractures along the spine showed a bimodal pattern, with two peaks at T7 and T11. The prevalence of asymptomatic vertebral fractures clearly increased with age. Differences in prevalence among diseases were evidenced. When controlled for age, GC cumulative dose, duration of therapy and personal history of fractures, the adjusted prevalences were 30.77% for systemic lupus erythematosus, 33.78% for rheumatoid arthritis, 37.78% for asthma/chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, 43.20% for polymyalgia rheumatica and 43.36% for diseases grouped as "other vasculitides/connective tissue diseases". No significant association was found with GC cumulative dose and duration of therapy. Established risk factors for osteoporosis (except for age, years since menopause and personal history of fractures), lumbar spine BMD, calcaneal stiffness and QUALEFFO score were not associated with number and severity of asymptomatic vertebral fractures. Underlying disease is likely to contribute to the risk of fracture, but disease by itself could not be dissected from GC regimen. Vertebral fractures should be looked for carefully in all post-menopausal women receiving long-term systemic GCs since they can be asymptomatic and are scarcely predictable.
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PMID:High prevalence of asymptomatic vertebral fractures in post-menopausal women receiving chronic glucocorticoid therapy: a cross-sectional outpatient study. 1723 33