Characterization of antigen-specific T cells in multiple sclerosis twins with elevated proliferative responses to measles virus.

  • Greenstein J
  • McFarland H
  • Richert J
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Abstract

The proliferative response to measles virus in normal individuals is low compared with the response to mumps virus. This is probably due to a low precursor frequency of OKT4+, IL 2-secreting helper cells. The presence of a measles high-responder state has previously been identified in some twin individuals with multiple sclerosis. Further characterization of the measles response in these high-responder individuals has demonstrated that the enhanced measles responses are due to a greater response by OKT4+ cells, which secrete higher levels of IL 2; this contrasting with the low levels of IL 2 secretion and OKT4+ cell proliferation seen in the unaffected twins. No evidence for suppression by either accessory or T cells, which would account for the quantitative differences between the high responders with multiple sclerosis and their unaffected low-responder twin siblings, was detected. The results indicate that a clonally expanded population of measles-specific responder cells is responsible for the high-responder state in these twins with multiple sclerosis. The mechanism producing this state may have relevance to possible immunoregulatory abnormalities producing autoimmunity in multiple sclerosis.

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APA

Greenstein, J. I., McFarland, H. F., & Richert, J. R. (1986). Characterization of antigen-specific T cells in multiple sclerosis twins with elevated proliferative responses to measles virus. The Journal of Immunology, 137(2), 546–550. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.137.2.546

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