Correlation of clonal T cell expansion with disease activity in systemic lupus erythematosus.

1997 
It has been proposed that T cell activation may play an important role in the pathogenesis of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). In order to examine this hypothesis, we assessed the whole degree of clonal accumulation of T cells using RT-PCR and subsequent single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) analysis. The analysis of the beta chain of the TCR revealed little clonotypic T cell expansion in the peripheral blood of lupus patients in remission, whereas in patients with active disease many dominant T cell clonal expansions without any distinct V beta bias were observed. The alteration in the number of T cell clones correlated well with disease activities, since these T cell expansions decreased as patients had improved. Furthermore, similar but more intense accumulations of T cell clones were found in pleural and pericardial effusions of patients with lupus serositis. Some of these identical expanded clonotypes were observed irrespective of the lesions and the times of sampling, and some of them were identical to those observed in the peripheral blood. These results suggest that the T cell clonal expansions correlate with the disease activities and that the expansion might contribute to the pathogenic lesion formation in SLE.
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