Specificity of T cells in synovial fluid: High frequencies of CD8+ T cells that are specific for certain viral epitopes

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Abstract

CD8+ T cells dominate the lymphocyte population in synovial fluid in chronic inflammatory arthritis. It is known that these CD8+ T cells are often clonally or oligoclonally expanded, but their specificity and their relevance to the pathogenesis of joint disease has remained unclear. We found that as many as 15.5% of synovial CD8+ T cells may be specific for a single epitope from an Epstein-Barr virus lytic cycle protein. The virus-specific T cells within the joint showed increased expression of markers of activation and differentiation compared with those in the periphery, and retained their functional capacity to secrete proinflammatory cytokines on stimulation. These activated, virus-specific CD8+ T cells could therefore interact with synoviocytes, either by cell-cell contact or by a cytokine network, and play a 'bystander' role in the maintenance of inflammation in patients with arthritis.

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Tan, L. C., Mowat, A. G., Fazou, C., Rostron, T., Roskell, H., Dunbar, P. R., … Callan, M. F. C. (2000). Specificity of T cells in synovial fluid: High frequencies of CD8+ T cells that are specific for certain viral epitopes. Arthritis Research, 2(2), 154–164. https://doi.org/10.1186/ar80

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