Abnormal signal transduction in a patient with severe combined immunodeficiency disease |
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Authors: | G T Rijkers J G Scharenberg J J Van Dongen H J Neijens B J Zegers |
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Affiliation: | Department of Immunology, University Hospital for Children and Youth, Het Wilhelmina Kinderziekenhuis, Utrecht, The Netherlands. |
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Abstract: | We have studied an 8-yr-old male patient with adenosine deaminase-positive severe combined immunodeficiency disease with a normal number of peripheral CD3+, T cell receptor-alpha beta+ T cells. The majority of these T cells expressed the CD8 molecule and were oligoclonal in nature as proven by Southern blot analysis of the T cell receptor genes. T cells failed to proliferate in vitro either upon stimulation with T cell mitogens or when stimulated with a combination of the phorbol ester phorbol myristate acetate and the Ca-ionophore ionomycin. High doses of recombinant IL-2, when added to in vitro cultures, were able to restore proliferation induced by phorbol myristate acetate and ionomycin but the response to concanavalin A remained severely defective. However, activation of the patient's T cells with phytohemagglutinin or concanavalin A induced an increase of free cytoplasmic Ca++, which was 2- to 5-fold higher than in normal CD8+ T cells. Furthermore, phorbol myristate acetate or phytohemagglutinin induced the translocation of protein kinase C from cytosol to plasma membrane. Analysis of membrane phospholipid composition of the patient's T cells disclosed that the ratio of phosphatidylcholine to phosphatidylserine was 5-fold higher than in normal T cells. The abnormal Ca++ response after activation with T cell mitogens as well as the high phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylserine ratio may be causally linked to the defective in vitro T cell proliferation. Because the capacity of T lymphocytes to produce or respond to IL-2 may vary, the oligoclonality of the T cells of the patient should be considered as well in the explanation of defective cell proliferation. |
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