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1.
Increasing evidence in both murine and human systems suggests that the interaction of the T cell surface antigens CD28/CTLA4 with their ligand B7 on the antigen-presenting cells (APC) is the critical costimulatory pathway involved in the induction of maximal T cell activation and the prevention of induction of anergy. It has also been demonstrated that efficient induction of clonal expansion of normal CD4+ T cells requires the delivery of the T cell receptor (TCR) ligand and costimulation by the same APC. We demonstrate here that normal murine CD4+ T cells can be efficiently activated by soluble anti-CD3 cross-linked by fixed macrophages and by a costimulatory signal delivered by a bystander APC, B7-transfected L cells. The major factor which determined the ability of an APC to provide costimulation in “trans” was the level of cell surface B7 expression. The requirement for B7 costimulation appears to be at initial stage of TCR engagement since optimal T cell activation was only observed when TCR triggering and B7 costimulatory activity were delivered at same time by different APC. Induction of maximal proliferation of both naive CD45RBhi and memory CD45RBlo CD4+ T cells was B7 dependent and both populations of cells responded equally well to the B7 costimulation delivered in “trans”. Furthermore, trans-costimulation provided by B7 transfected L cells efficiently prevented the induction of anergy in normal murine CD4+ T cells induced by anti-CD3 cross-linked by fixed-resting macrophages. Addition of exogenous interleukin-2 (IL-2) and IL-7 to the primary culture in the absence of B7-transfected L cells or addition of IL-2 to the culture containing the B7 transfectant and CTLA4Ig completely prevented the induction of hyporesponsiveness. These findings raise the possibility that in certain pathological states, CD4+ T cells in vivo may be activated by costimulation delivered by bystander APC.  相似文献   

2.
To characterize better the co-stimulatory activity of native B7-1 in the absence of other receptor/ligand interactions that might contribute to the response, B7-1 was purified by monoclonal antibody (mAb) affinity chromatography. Immobilization of purified B7-1 with anti-T cell receptor (TCR) mAb on cell-sized latex microspheres provided an effective stimulus for activation of both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells as measured by proliferation, development of effector function, and changes in motility and adhesion. The CD4+ T cell response was prolonged and resulted in efficient interleukin-2 production and clonal expansion. In contrast, CD8+ responses were transient. Proliferation and clonal expansion peaked on days 3 and 4, coincident with maximal expression of lytic effector function, and the cells then died. These results demonstrate that B7-1 mediated co-stimulation is sufficient for the induction of effector function in both helper and cytotoxic T cell precursors, but suggest that B7-1 co-stimulation is not sufficient to sustain helper-independent CD8+ CTL responses. When the dose responses of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells to B7-1 were compared, CD8+ T cells were found to require higher densities of B7-1 to attain an equivalent level of activation, suggesting that the level of expression of B7-1 by APC may influence the development of helper or CTL responses. Finally, in contrast to results obtained by others with B7-1 transfectants, purified B7-1 did not provide co-stimulation when presented on a surface separate from the TCR stimulus.  相似文献   

3.
Co-stimulatory signals mediated by the interaction of B7-1/B7-2 with CD28 are important for the activation of CD4+ T cells stimulated with antigen on antigen-presenting cells. There are controversies about the expression and function of B7-1/B7-2 on CD4+ T cells. The aim of this study was to analyze the expression of B7-1/B7-2 on naive and memory CD4+ T cells and the co-stimulatory function in the activation of naive CD4+ T cells stimulated by TCR ligation. Present results indicate that memory CD4+ T cells express B7-2 molecules on their surface, whereas naive CD4+ T cells do not. Neither memory nor naive CD4+ T cells expressed B7-1 molecule on their surface, although B7-1 mRNA was faintly expressed in memory T cells. B7-2 molecules expressed on memory T cells co-stimulated CD4+ naive T cells stimulated with plate-coated anti-CD3 to produce IL-2. Naive CD4+ T cells were shown to express B7-2 after co-stimulation with B7-2 and TCR ligation, because the naive T cells stimulated with anti-CD3 and B7-2CHO expressed B7-2 on their surface, although it remained to be studied whether the co-stimulation with B7-2 directly induced B7-2 expression on naive T cells. Our present results indicate that memory CD4+ T cells play some role in the activation of naive CD4+ T cells through the co-stimulation with B7-2 molecules.  相似文献   

4.
CVID is characterized by hypogammaglobulinaemia and impaired antibody production. Previous studies demonstrated defects at the T cell level. In the present study the response of purified CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes to stimulation with anti-TCR monoclonal antibody (the first signal) in combination with anti-CD4 or anti-CD8, anti-CD2 and anti-CD28 MoAbs (the costimulatory signals) was investigated. Both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells from the patients showed significantly reduced IL-2 release following stimulation via TCR and costimulation via CD4 or CD8 and CD2, respectively. However, normal IL-2 production following TCR plus phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) costimulation and normal expression of an early activation marker, CD69, after TCR + CD28 stimulation indicated that TCR was able to transduce a signal. Furthermore, both IL-2 and IL-4 release were impaired in CD4+ lymphocytes following TCR + CD28 stimulation. In addition, stimulation via TCR + CD28 resulted in significantly decreased expression of CD40 ligand in the patients. These results suggest that the integration of activating signals derived from the TCR and costimulatory molecules is defective in CVID patients; the defect is not confined to costimulation via a single molecule, or restricted to cells producing Thl-type cytokines such as IL-2, and is expressed in both CD4+ and CD8+T cell subsets.  相似文献   

5.
We demonstrate that pretreatment of primary CD4+, but not CD8+ T cells with anti-CD45 inhibits activation signals induced through the T cell receptor for antigen (TCRαβ). Specifically, anti-TCRαβ-mediated tyrosine phosphorylation of phospholipase C-γ1 is inhibited, and this in turn correlates with the inhibition of subsequent Ca2+ mobilization and DNA synthesis. In marked contrast, none of these activation parameters are affected by anti-CD45 in CD8+ T cells. Perturbation of TCRαβ signalling in CD4+ cells is observed in conditions which do not detectably affect the level of CD45 expression, or its membrane distribution. Further, changes in the intrinsic phosphatase activity of CD45 are not detectable. While anti-CD45 ablates TCRαβ signalling, anti-CD3?-mediated activation is unaffected. This suggests that elements of the antigen receptor complex can be functionally uncoupled, and indicates that the requirements for CD45 in signalling through these two elements are different. The results demonstrate that the involvement of CD45 in coupling TCRαβ to second messenger-generating pathways is under distinct physical and/or functional constraints in primary CD4+ and CD8+ T cells.  相似文献   

6.
An antibody reactive with CD38 revealed both phenotypic and functional heterogeneity amongst CD45RBlow cells. Functional analysis of the CD38+ and CD38 fractions showed that the latter contained T cells which responded to recall antigens and produced high levels of cytokine in response to polyclonal stimulation. In contrast, the CD38+ population failed to proliferate or to produce detectable levels of cytokines. Despite appearing unresponsive, the CD38+ population significantly inhibited anti-CD3-induced proliferation and cytokine secretion by the reciprocal CD38 population. Immune suppression required stimulation through the TCR and was dependent on a physical interaction between regulatory and responding CD4+ populations. It did not involve killing of the responding T cells or secretion of IL-10 or TGF-β. Despite some similarities there is no direct correlation between the in vitro suppression characteristic of the CD38+ CD45RBlow subset and in vivo suppression which has been shown to be mediated by unseparated CD45RBlow CD4+ T cells. However, these results demonstrate that two functionally distinct subsets of T cells reside within the antigen-exposed or CD45RBlow CD4+ T cell population and are thus generated in vivo: (1) conventional memory T cells which proliferate and secrete cytokines in response to activation and (2) a population of regulatory T cells which inhibit T cell activation in vitro. Antibodies reactive with CD38 may provide a useful tool with which to study the role of these T cell subsets in the induction and regulation of the immune response.  相似文献   

7.
We demonstrate that CD4 and CD8 modify signals induced through the T cell receptor for antigen (TCRαβ) in distinct fashions. Pretreatment of CD4+ lymph node T cells with CD4-specific monoclonal antibody results in a tenfold inhibition of DNA synthesis induced by anti-TCRαβ. In contrast, pretreatment of CD8+ T cells with CD8-specific mAb has no effect on DNA synthesis subsequently induced through TCRαβ. While inhibiting late activation signals, pretreatment with anti-CD4 does not detectably alter the pattern of anti-TCRαβ-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of cellular proteins, nor subsequent Ca2+ mobilization. The distinct biological consequences of anti-CD4 and anti-CD8 pretreatment correlate with the differential association of their respective ligands with the cellular protein tyrosine kinase, p56lck. While both T cell lineages contain similar levels of cellular p56lck, tenfold more is associated with CD4 than with CD8. This difference is associated with the differential effects of pretreatment with anti-CD4 and anti-CD8 on the distribution and activity of p56lck. Further, antibody-mediated aggregation of TCRαβ on CD4+ T cells induces the appearance of a p56lck species with decreased mobility in sodium dodecylsulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. This effect is observed in CD4+ T cells exclusively and involves the fraction of p56lck which is not associated with CD4. The results presented here demonstrate that the signalling elements which couple the antigen receptor to second messenger-generating systems are under distinct physical and/or functional constraints in the two T cell lineages.  相似文献   

8.
CD4+CD25+ T cells as immunoregulatory T cells in vitro   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
We have further characterized the in vitro phenotype and function of anergic and suppressive CD4(+)25(+) T cells. Following TCR ligation, DO.11.10 CD4(+)25(+) T cells suppress the activation of OT-1 CD8(+)25(-) T cells in an antigen nonspecific manner. Although suppression was seen when using a mixture of APC from both parental strains, it was very much more marked when using F1 APC. APC pretreated with, and then separated from CD4(+)25(+) T cells did not have diminished T cell costimulatory function, suggesting that APC are not the direct targets of CD4(+)25(+) T cell regulation. CTLA-4 blockade failed to abrogate suppression by CD4(+)25(+) T cells in mixing experiments. Although CD4(+)25(+) T cells failed to respond following cross-linking of TCR, they could be induced to proliferate following the addition of exogenous IL-2, allowing the generation of a T cell line from CD4(+)25(+) T cells. After the first in vitro restimulation, CD4(+)25(+) T cells were still anergic and suppressive following TCR engagement. However, after three rounds of restimulation, their anergic and suppressive status was abrogated.  相似文献   

9.
We have previously shown that CD4+ T cells from allergic individuals are predisposed to producing interleukin (IL)-4 in response to allergens. IL-4 production could be modulated by antigen concentration as well as by the type of antigen-presenting cells (APC), with B lymphocytes inducing greater quantities of IL-4 than monocytes. Using this system we examined IL-4 synthesis after culture of CD4+ T cells with B cells, monocytes, or both, as APC in the presence of allergen and a monoclonal antibody against CD81 (TAPA-1), a member of the TM4 superfamily of proteins that regulates activation, proliferation and trafficking of B cells. Addition of anti-CD81 mAb during culture enhanced IL-4 synthesis by 2- to 70-fold over that using an isotype-matched control mAb. Furthermore, anti-CD81 mAb enhanced IL-4 synthesis in CD4+ T cells only when CD4+ T cells were cultured with B cells but not monocytes as APC, indicating that anti-CD81 mAb affected IL-4 synthesis in T cells via interactions with B cells. However, pretreatment of either population separately with anti-CD81 mAb prior to culture had no effect on subsequent IL-4 synthesis, suggesting a requirement for temporal or cooperative interactions between T and B lymphocytes. In addition, anti-CD81 mAb enhanced IL-4 production but reduced CD4+ T cell antigen-specific proliferation, demonstrating that IL-4 production and proliferation by CD4+ T cells were inversely related. Finally, mAb to major histocompatibility complex class II but not to anti-CD19 also enhanced IL-4 synthesis when B lymphocytes were used as APC. In all instances, enhancement of CD4+ IL-4 synthesis correlated with the presence of large cell aggregates in T-B lymphocyte cocultures. These results indicate that the capacity of B cells to induce IL-4 can be significantly enhanced by ligation of particular molecules on their surface and should aid in the design of treatments for diseases in which modulation of the cytokine profile would be beneficial.  相似文献   

10.
T cell dysfunction in HIV-infected subjects could be the consequence of altered sensitivity of CD4+ or CD8+ T cells to various costimulatory signals. Therefore, we studied proliferation and cytokine production in highly purified CD8+ and CD4+ T cells from HIV-infected and HIV subjects, induced by co-activation via cell-bound CD80, CD86 and CD40 or by allo-activation. Regardless of the nature of the first and the costimulatory signal, CD8+ T cells from patients proliferated consistently less than controls, while responses from CD4+ T cells were similar in patients and controls. This phenomenon was observed after ligation of CD28 combined with anti-CD3 or phorbol myristate acetate (PMA), but also after allogeneic stimulation and after activation by CD40 and anti-CD3. Anti-CD3 combined with CD80 or CD86 induced a mixed Th1/Th2-type cytokine profile in both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells from controls, whereas anti-CD3 plus CD40 induced only low levels of Th2-type cytokines and no interferon-gamma (IFN-γ) in CD4+ T cells. Compared with controls, CD4+ T cells from patients produced slightly lower levels of IL-10 but equal amounts of IFN-γ, IL-4 and IL-5, while CD8+ T cells from patients produced less of all cytokines tested. In conclusion, responses of purified CD4+ T cells from HIV+ subjects to various costimulatory pathways are relatively intact, whereas CD8+ T cells are hyporesponsive at the level of proliferation and cytokine production. A generalized intrinsic CD8+ T cell failure might contribute to viral and neoplastic complications of HIV infection.  相似文献   

11.
Qiao M  Thornton AM  Shevach EM 《Immunology》2007,120(4):447-455
CD4(+) CD25(+) Foxp3(+) naturally occurring regulatory T cells (nTreg) are potent inhibitors of almost all immune responses. However, it is unclear how this minor population of cells is capable of exerting its powerful suppressor effects. To determine whether nTreg mediate part of their suppressor function by rendering naive T cells anergic or by converting them to the suppressor phenotype, we cocultured mouse nTreg with naive CD4(+) CD25(-) T cells from T-cell receptor (TCR) transgenic mice on a RAG deficient (RAG(-/-)) background in the presence of anti-CD3 and interleukin-4 (IL-4) to promote cell viability. Two distinct responder cell populations could be recovered from the cocultures. One population remained undivided in the coculture and was non-responsive to restimulation with anti-CD3 or exogenous IL-2, and could not up-regulate IL-2 mRNA or CD25 expression upon TCR restimulation. Those responder cells that had divided in the coculture were anergic to restimulation with anti-CD3 but responded to restimulation with IL-2. The undivided population was capable of suppressing the response of fresh CD4(+) CD25(-) T cells and CD8(+) T cells, while the divided population was only marginally suppressive. Although cell contact between the induced regulatory T cell (iTreg) and the responders was required for suppression to be observed, anti-transforming growth factor-beta partially abrogated their suppressive function. The iTreg did not express Foxp3. Therefore nTreg are not only able to suppress immune responses by inhibiting cytokine production by CD4(+) CD25(-) responder cells, but also appear to modulate the responder cells to render them both anergic and suppressive.  相似文献   

12.
T cells express CD28 and CD27 which transduce co-stimulatory signals after interaction with their ligands on antigen-presenting cells (APC). These ligands, CD80, CD86 and CD70, are also expressed to some extent on activated T cells. Here, we show that in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected individuals, CD28 and CD27 expression is decreased on CD8+ T cells. On the other hand, T cell stimulation in vitro induced high CD80, CD86 and CD70 expression on T cells from HIV-infected individuals. It appeared that an inverted CD4:CD8 T cell ratio could explain this enhanced expression of co-stimulatory ligands. Indeed, high expression levels of CD80, CD86 and CD70 were found on activated CD8+ T cells from HIV individuals cultured in the absence of CD4+ T cells. Addition of CD4+ T cells prevented this up-regulation. However, in HIV-infected individuals, addition of excess autologous or healthy control CD4+ T cells did not completely counteract up-regulation of co-stimulatory ligand expression on CD8+ T cells. Thus, to some extent, CD8+ T cells in HIV-infected individuals appeared to be refractory to CD4+ T cell-mediated regulation of ligand expression in vitro. Activated T cells from HIV-infected individuals and activated CD8+ T cells from healthy controls were able to act as accessory cells in CD3-induced T cell proliferation, which was dependent on cell-cell contact. Thus, we showed that T cells from HIV-infected individuals express enhanced levels of co-stimulatory ligands upon activation, which provides them with accessory cell properties. Enhanced stimulatory potential of these nonprofessional APC may contribute to persistently high levels of immune activation in HIV infection related to disease progression.  相似文献   

13.
There is a growing body of evidence which suggests that CD8+ T cells play an important part in regulating the IgE response to non-replicating antigens. In this study we have systematically investigated their role in the regulation of IgE and of CD4+ T cell responses to ovalbumin (OVA) by CD8+ T cell depletion in vivo. Following intraperitoneal immunization with alum-precipitated OVA, OVA-specific T cell responses were detected in the spleen and depletion of CD8+ T cells in vitro significantly enhanced the proliferative response to OVA. Depletion of CD8+ T cells in vivo 7 days after immunization failed to enhance IgE production, while depletion of CD8+ T cells on days 12–18 greatly enhanced the IgE response, which rose to 26 μ/ml following a second injection of anti-CD8 on day 35 and remained in excess of 1 μ/ml over 300 days afterwards. Reconstitution on day 21 of rats CD8-depleted on day 12 with purified CD8+ T cells from animals immunized on day 12 completely inhib ited the IgE response. This effect was antigen specific; CD8+ T cells from OVA-primed animals had little effect on the IgE response of bovine serum albumin immunized rats. In vivo, CD8+ T cell depletion decreased interferon (IFN)-γ production but enhanced interleukin (IL)-4 production by OVA-stimulated splenic CD4+ T cells. Furthermore, CD8+ T cell depletion and addition of anti-IFN-γ antibody enhanced IgE production in vitro in an IL-4-supplemented mixed lymphocyte reaction. These data clearly show that antigen-specific CD8+ T cells inhibit IgE in the immune response to non-replicating antigens. The data indicate two possible mechanisms: first, CD8+ T cells have direct inhibitory effects on switching to IgE in B cells and second, they inhibit OVA-specific IL-4 production but enhance IFN-γ production by CD4+ T cells.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Regulatory T (Treg) cells induce immunologic tolerance by suppressing effector functions of conventional lymphocytes in the periphery. On the other hand, immune silencing is mediated by recognition of phosphatidylserine (PS) on apoptotic cells by phagocytes. Here we describe expression of the PS-binding protein Annexin V (ANXA5) in CD4+ CD25hi Treg cells at the mRNA and protein levels. CD4+ ANXA5+ T cells constitute about 0·1%–0·6% of peripheral blood CD3+ T cells, exhibit co-expression of several Treg markers, such as Forkhead box P3, programmed cell death protein-1, cytotoxic T-lymphocyte antigen-4 and CD38. In vitro, ANXA5+ Treg cells showed enhanced adhesion to PS+ endothelial cells. Stimulated by anti-CD3 and PS+ syngeneic antigen-presenting cells CD4+ ANXA5+ T cells expanded in the absence of exogenous interleukin-2. CD4+ ANXA5+ T cells suppressed CD4+ ANXA5 T-cell proliferation and mammalian target of rapamycin phosphorylation, partially dependent on cell contact. CD4+ ANXA5+ T-cell-mediated suppression was allo-specific and accompanied by an increased production of anti-inflammatory mediators. In vivo, using a model of delayed type hypersensitivity, murine CD4+ ANXA5+ T cells inhibited T helper type 1 responses. In conclusion, we report for the first time expression of ANXA5 on a subset of Treg cells that might bridge classical regulatory Treg function with immune silencing.  相似文献   

16.
Co-stimulatory signals are absolutely required for T cell activationafter TCR–MHC-peptide interaction. The most importantco-stimulatory signal known so far is mediated by the interactionof CD28 on T cells with B7 on APC. Here we demonstrate thatthe co-stimulatory signal from the B7 molecule does not necessarilyhave to come from the same cell which presents antigen. Titrationcurves obtained by limiting the amount of anti-CD3 mAb suggeststhat the same amount of TCR–CD3 cross-linking is requiredfor full T cell activation whether B7 is present on the sameor on another cell, but that the kinetics of T cell activationis slower when B7 is present on a separate cell from the primarysignal. Finally and most importantly we also show that CD45RO+memory T cells, but not CD45RA+ naive T cells, can be efficientlyactivated when B7 is expressed on bystander cells. These findingsimply that co-stimulatory activation requirements of B7 aremore stringent for naive than for memory T cells, which couldbe an important mechanism involved in the maintenance of self-tolerance.  相似文献   

17.
Clonal selection of T cells mediated through the T cell antigen receptor (TCR) mostly occurs at the CD4+CD8+ double positive thymocyte stage. Immature CD4+CD8+ thymocytes expressing self-reactive TCR are induced to die upon clonotypic engagement of TCR by self antigens. CD3 engagement by antibody of the surface TCR-CD3 complex is known to induce apoptosis of CD4+CD8+ thymocytes, a process that is generally thought to represent antigen-induced negative selection in the thymus. The present study shows that the CD3-induced apoptosis of CD4+CD8+ thymocytes can occur even in TCRα? mutant mice which do not express the TCRαβ/CD3 antigen receptor. Anti-CD3 antibody induces death of CD4+CD8+ thymocytes in TCRα? mice either in cell cultures or upon administration in vivo. Interestingly, most surface CD3 chains expressed on CD4+CD8+ thymocytes from TCRα? mice are not associated with clonotypic TCR chains, including TCRβ. Thus, apoptosis of CD4+CD8+ thymocytes appear to be induced through the CD3 complex even in the absence of clonotypic antigen receptor chains. These results shed light on previously unknown functions of the clonotype-independent CD3 complex expressed on CD4+CD8+ thymocytes, and suggest its function as an apoptotic receptor inducing elimination of developing thymocytes.  相似文献   

18.
Elimination of CD25+ T cells, which constitute 5-10% of peripheral CD4+ T cells in normal naive mice, leads to spontaneous development of various autoimmune diseases. These immunoregulatory CD25+CD4+ T cells are naturally unresponsive (anergic) in vitro to TCR stimulation, and, upon stimulation, suppress proliferation of CD25-CD4+ T cells and CD8+ T cells. The antigen concentration required for stimulating CD25+CD4+ T cells to exert suppression is much lower than that required for stimulating CD25-CD4+ T cells to proliferate. The suppression, which results in reduced IL-2 production by CD25-CD4+ T cells, is dependent on cellular interactions on antigen-presenting cells (and not mediated by far-reaching or long-lasting humoral factors or apoptosis-inducing signals) and antigen non-specific in its effector phase. Addition of high doses of IL-2 or anti-CD28 antibody to the in vitro T cell stimulation culture not only breaks the anergic state of CD25+CD4+ T cells, but also abrogates their suppressive activity simultaneously. Importantly, the anergic/suppressive state of CD25+CD4+ T cells appeared to be their basal default condition, since removal of IL-2 or anti-CD28 antibody from the culture milieu allows them to revert to the original anergic/suppressive state. Furthermore, transfer of such anergy/suppression-broken T cells from normal mice produces various autoimmune diseases in syngeneic athymic nude mice. These results taken together indicate that one aspect of immunologic self-tolerance is maintained by this unique CD25+CD4+ naturally anergic/suppressive T cell population and its functional abnormality directly leads to the development of autoimmune disease.   相似文献   

19.
20.
Since lymphoid organs constitute the site of active and progressive HIV disease, analysis of their lymphocytes may provide more accurate information on T cell abnormalities than that obtained from studying peripheral blood lymphocytes. The objective of this study was to compare the expressions of activation markers and T cell receptor (TCR) V beta gene products by CD4+ and CD8+ T cells in lymph nodes (LN) and peripheral blood (PB) from healthy individuals and asymptomatic HIV-infected patients to determine whether anomalies that could be identified at the HIV replication site could support the hypothesis of T cell activation by HIV-encoded antigens or superantigens. CD4+ and CD8+ T cells in paired LN and PB obtained from six healthy controls and five asymptomatic HIV-infected individuals were analysed by flow cytometry, using anti-CD38, anti-HLA-DR and 13 anti-V beta MoAbs that cover, approximately, 45% of the T cell repertoire. Analysis of T cell activation marker expression indicated that the percentages of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells bearing CD38 or CD38 and HLA-DR molecules were higher in patients than in controls and, in patients, higher in LN than in PB. Comparison between the V beta repertoires of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells in LN and PB showed that, in each healthy individual, a limited number of V beta families expressed by CD4+ or CD8+ T cells had different repartition in LN and PB, whereas in each HIV+ patient, more V beta families exhibited different distributions and these differences recurred among certain V beta segments, such as V beta 5.3 and V beta 21 in the CD4+ T cell population and V beta 5.2/5.3, V beta 12 and V beta 21 in the CD8+ T cell population. Taken together, these data argue for a skewed TCR repertoire in HIV infection and sustained activation of T cells by HIV-encoded antigens at the site of HIV replication, and further demonstrate that a high proportion of CD4+ T cells are in an activation state that may, indirectly, participate in their functional abnormalities.  相似文献   

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