Basis for defective proliferation of peripheral blood T cells to anti-CD2 antibodies in primary sjögren's syndrome

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Abstract

Anti-CD2-induced T cell proliferation was analyzed in the peripheral blood samples of 31 primary and 8 secondary untreated Sjögren's syndrome patients. Anti-CD2-stimulated PBMC proliferation was very low in about one-third of primary Sjögren's syndrome samples, despite the number of CD2+ cells being similar in primary and secondary Sjögren's syndrome and normal PBMC samples. The depressed response to anti-CD2 was mainly found in anti-Ro+/La+ patients. Experiments on purified T cells demonstrated that a defect at the T cell level was responsible for the anti-CD2 unresponsiveness. Cell proliferation failure was associated with poor IL-2 and IL-2 receptor mRNA expression and, consequently, IL-2 and IL-2 receptor synthesis. Since defective anti-CD2-induced mitogenesis could be reversed by phorbol myristate acetate, but not calcium ionophore A23187, it is probably correlated with impaired protein kinase C activation. Comparison of anti-CD2-triggered PBMC proliferation in treated and untreated patients and a long-term study of nine patients showed that the defect is a stable characteristic in primary Sjögren's syndrome patients, but that it can be reversed by pharmacological immunosuppression.

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Gerli, R., Bertotto, A., Agea, E., Lanfrancone, L., Cernetti, C., Spinozzi, F., & Rambotti, P. (1990). Basis for defective proliferation of peripheral blood T cells to anti-CD2 antibodies in primary sjögren’s syndrome. Journal of Clinical Investigation, 86(6), 1870–1877. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci114918

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