Change of specific T cells in an emerging neonatal infectious disease induced by a bacterial superantigen

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Abstract

A new epidemic, NTED, has recently occurred in Japan. The cause of NTED is a bacterial superantigen, TSST-1. The aim of the present study was to analyze the change in Vβ2+ T cells reactive to TSST-1 in NTED in order to establish T-cell-targeted diagnostic criteria for NTED. Blood samples from75 patients with clinically diagnosed NTED were collected from 13 neonatal intensive care units throughout Japan. We investigated the percentages of Vβ2+, Vβ3++ and Vβ12+ T cells and their CD45RO expressions in the samples using flow cytometry. In 18 of the 75 patients, we conducted multiple examinations of the T cells and monitored serial changes. The Vβ2+ T-cell population rapidly changed over three phases of the disease. Whereas the percentage of Vβ2+ T cells was widely distributed over the entire control range, CD45RO expression on Vβ2+ T cells in CD4+ in all 75 patients was consistently higher than the control range. Patients cannot necessarily be diagnosed as having NTED based on expansion of Vβ2+ T cells alone in the early acute phase. Instead, CD45RO expression on specific Vβ2+ cells isapotential diagnostic marker for a rapid diagnosis of NTED. We present three diagnostic categories of NTED. Fifty patients (66.7%) were included in the category 'definitive NTED'. It is important to demonstrate an increase of Vβ2+ T cells in the following phase in cases of 'probable NTED' or 'possible NTED'. © 2009 The Societies and Blackwell Publishing Asia Pty Ltd.

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Takahashi, N., Kato, H., Imanishi, K., Ohki, T., Uehara, R., Momoi, M. Y., … Uchiyama, T. (2009). Change of specific T cells in an emerging neonatal infectious disease induced by a bacterial superantigen. Microbiology and Immunology, 53(9), 524–530. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1348-0421.2009.00155.x

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