scholarly journals Chronic lymphocytic leukaemia cells drive the global CD4+ T cell repertoire towards a regulatory phenotype and leads to the accumulation of CD4+ forkhead box P3+ T cells

2011 ◽  
Vol 166 (2) ◽  
pp. 154-163 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. P. Piper ◽  
M. Karanth ◽  
A. McLarnon ◽  
E. Kalk ◽  
N. Khan ◽  
...  
Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 803-803
Author(s):  
Claudia Holler ◽  
Nadja Zaborsky ◽  
Josefina Pinon Hofbauer ◽  
Thomas Kocher ◽  
Doris Trapin ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 803 Introduction: The development of B cell chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) involves antigenic selection of the B cell clone, as evidenced by a skewed BCR repertoire found in CLL cells, as well as continuing BCR signaling detected in subgroups of CLL. T cell involvement in the maintenance of the malignant clone is also suggested by a number of evidential lines, such as the severe skewing of T cell subsets in CLL and the presence of relevant numbers of CD4 cells in the so-called “proliferation centers” in lymph nodes. However, neither clonal nor immunologic identities of these T cells have been sufficiently determined. Recently, we have shown in Tcl1 transgenic mice that CLL clones were able to directly drive changes in the T cell repertoire, resulting in relatively fast skewing in subset distribution (similar to that observed in human CLL) as well as a clonal selection of T cells, both in spontaneously developing CLL in the model, as well as in immunocompetent congenic recipient mice in experiments transplanting established murine CLL. Methods: To establish evidence for similar interactions in human CLL, we collected a descriptive database determining patterns of T cell diversity in CLL patient blood. We analyzed T cells from 53 previously-untreated CLL patients established TCR V beta clonality and frequency based on CDR3 length polymorphism in sorted CD4 cells and, in a confirmatory subset, based on TCR V gene-specific flow cytometry. CLL samples were also investigated regarding the BCR VH gene usage, mutation status and clinical and prognostic parameters. Results: BCR analysis confirmed antigenic selection in our patient set with 6 IgVH genes accounting for > 50% of the cases. Stereotyped CDR3 regions were common and one third of the patients showed unmutatetd IgVH gene sequence. Analysing 20 TCR genes by PCR spectratyping, the TCR CDR3 size distribution pattern revealed a relevant frequency of oligoclonal/monoclonal CD4 T cells in CLL samples. While a number of patients showed completely polyclonal patterns in all their TCR CDR3 regions, others showed either single or multiple clonal TCR families. In corresponding flow cytometric analyses clonal T cells could make up to 48% of total CD4 cells in a given patient. In patients with longitudinal samples we found relevant stability of these TCR patterns over time. By comparing the data from the TCR clonality database with our BCR dataset we established that these clonal patterns significantly, but not exclusively, clustered in unmutated patient samples. Overall we found no strong association with any specific IgVH gene, but intriguingly, in some patients a specific clonal TCR corresponded to a stereotyped BCR receptor. In fact in two patient pairs with identical IgVH rearrangements we found corresponding TCR clones that showed sequence identity between the CD4 T cell clones derived from the other patient. In addition in both pairs we found a shared HLA DR and DQ haplotype. These data strongly suggests that there may be an important link between the antigenic selection on the B-CLL clone and the selection of certain TCR clones, thus for the first time postulating an antigentic identity of the CLL-associated T cells. This proposed identity, however, currently remains unclear. Finally, we tested for an influence of T cell clonality on clinical behaviour of CLL disease in the patients. We could intentify the presence of more than one clonal TCR family as a significant predictor of a short treatment-free interval (p=0.03). This was true for both, patients with mutated and unmutated IgVH receptors, although it remained a trend in the latter. Conclusion: Our results imply that a restricted CD4 T cell diversity may be important for CLL progression and that an as of yet still undefined antigenic drive for T cells may be important for this. This may help to define specific monoclonal CD4 T cells as a promising novel target for future therapeutic intervention. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2007 ◽  
Vol 81 (14) ◽  
pp. 7759-7765 ◽  
Author(s):  
Batoul Pourgheysari ◽  
Naeem Khan ◽  
Donna Best ◽  
Rachel Bruton ◽  
Laxman Nayak ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Immune function in the elderly is associated with a number of phenotypic and functional abnormalities, and this phenomenon of immune senescence is associated with increased susceptibility to infection. The immune response to pathogens frequently declines with age, but the CD8+ T-cell response to cytomegalovirus (CMV) is unusual, as it demonstrates a significant expansion over time. Here we have documented the CD4+ T-cell immune response to CMV in healthy donors of different ages. The magnitude of the CMV-specific CD4+ T-cell immune response increases from a mean of 2.2% of the CD4+ T-cell pool in donors below 50 years of age to 4.7% in donors aged over 65 years. In addition, CMV-specific CD4+ T cells in elderly donors demonstrate decreased production of interleukin-2 and less dependence on costimulation. CMV seropositivity is associated with marked changes in the phenotype of the overall CD4+ T-cell repertoire in healthy aged donors, including an increase in CD57+ expression and a decrease in CD28 and CD27 expression, a phenotypic profile characteristic of immune senescence. This memory inflation of CMV-specific CD4+ T cells contributes to evidence that CMV infection may be damaging to immune function in elderly individuals.


2011 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
pp. S212
Author(s):  
C. Holler ◽  
N. Zaborsky ◽  
J. Pinon-Hofbauer ◽  
T. Kocher ◽  
D. Trapin ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (16) ◽  
pp. 2968-2974 ◽  
Author(s):  
Batoul Pourgheysari ◽  
Rachel Bruton ◽  
Helen Parry ◽  
Lucinda Billingham ◽  
Chris Fegan ◽  
...  

Abstract B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia is associated with immune suppression and an altered T-cell repertoire with expansion of memory cells. Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is a common herpes virus that elicits a strong virus-specific T-cell immune response after infection. We studied the CMV-specific CD4+ T-cell response in 45 patients and 35 control subjects and demonstrated that it was markedly expanded in the patient group, averaging 11% of the CD4+ pool compared with 4.7% in controls. The magnitude of the CMV-specific CD4+ immune response increased with disease stage and was particularly high in patients who received chemotherapy. Within this group, the CMV-specific response comprised over 46% of the CD4+ T-cell repertoire in some patients. Serial analysis revealed that CMV-specific immunity increased during treatment with chemotherapy and remained stable thereafter. CMV-seropositive patients exhibited a markedly altered CD4+ T-cell repertoire with increased numbers of CD45R0+ T cells and a reduction in CD27, CD28, and CCR7 expression. Overall survival was reduced by nearly 4 years in CMV-seropositive patients, although this did not reach statistical significance. CLL patients therefore demonstrate an expansion of the CD4+ CMV-specific immune response, which is likely to contribute to the immunological and clinical features of this disease.


2000 ◽  
Vol 192 (12) ◽  
pp. 1719-1730 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcella Fassò ◽  
Niroshana Anandasabapathy ◽  
Frances Crawford ◽  
John Kappler ◽  
C. Garrison Fathman ◽  
...  

We recently described a novel way to isolate populations of antigen-reactive CD4+ T cells with a wide range of reactivity to a specific antigen, using immunization with a fixed dose of nominal antigen and FACS® sorting by CD4high expression. Phenotypic, FACS®, functional, antibody inhibition, and major histocompatibility complex–peptide tetramer analyses, as well as T cell receptor Vβ sequence analyses, of the antigen-specific CD4high T cell populations demonstrated that a diverse sperm whale myoglobin 110–121–reactive CD4+ T cell repertoire was activated at the beginning (day 3 after immunization) of the immune response. Within 6 d of immunization, lower affinity clones were lost from the responding population, leaving an expanded population of oligoclonal, intermediate affinity (and residual high affinity) T cells. This T cell subset persisted for at least 4 wk after immunization and dominated the secondary immune response. These data provide evidence that CD4+ T cell repertoire selection occurs early in the immune response in vivo and suggest that persistence and expansion of a population of oligoclonal, intermediate affinity T cells is involved in CD4+ T cell memory.


2005 ◽  
Vol 62 (1) ◽  
pp. 77-86 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. -D. Nastke† ◽  
L. Herrgen† ◽  
S. Walter ◽  
D. Wernet ◽  
H. -G. Rammensee ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (59) ◽  
pp. eabh1516
Author(s):  
Marion Moreews ◽  
Kenz Le Gouge ◽  
Samira Khaldi-Plassart ◽  
Rémi Pescarmona ◽  
Anne-Laure Mathieu ◽  
...  

Multiple Inflammatory Syndrome in Children (MIS-C) is a delayed and severe complication of SARS-CoV-2 infection that strikes previously healthy children. As MIS-C combines clinical features of Kawasaki disease and Toxic Shock Syndrome (TSS), we aimed to compare the immunological profile of pediatric patients with these different conditions. We analyzed blood cytokine expression, and the T cell repertoire and phenotype in 36 MIS-C cases, which were compared to 16 KD, 58 TSS, and 42 COVID-19 cases. We observed an increase of serum inflammatory cytokines (IL-6, IL-10, IL-18, TNF-α, IFNγ, CD25s, MCP1, IL-1RA) in MIS-C, TSS and KD, contrasting with low expression of HLA-DR in monocytes. We detected a specific expansion of activated T cells expressing the Vβ21.3 T cell receptor β chain variable region in both CD4 and CD8 subsets in 75% of MIS-C patients and not in any patient with TSS, KD, or acute COVID-19; this correlated with the cytokine storm detected. The T cell repertoire returned to baseline within weeks after MIS-C resolution. Vβ21.3+ T cells from MIS-C patients expressed high levels of HLA-DR, CD38 and CX3CR1 but had weak responses to SARS-CoV-2 peptides in vitro. Consistently, the T cell expansion was not associated with specific classical HLA alleles. Thus, our data suggested that MIS-C is characterized by a polyclonal Vβ21.3 T cell expansion not directed against SARS-CoV-2 antigenic peptides, which is not seen in KD, TSS and acute COVID-19.


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