Objectives. To gain insight into the immune pathogenesis of primary ANCA-associated vasculitides, the prevalence of circulating T lymphocytes expressing CD11b as a marker for activation was analysed in patients with WG or microscopic polyangiitis. Methods. Receptor expression and IFN+ synthesis were measured in T cells of patients with active disease by cytofluorometry and compared with expression in patients in remission and in healthy donors. Results. During active disease, a small but conspicuous population of CD8+CD28+CD11b+ was found which produced IFN+. In healthy donors and in patients in remission or undergoing immunosuppressive therapy, CD11b was exclusively associated with CD8+CD28+ cells, the latter being more frequent in patients with long-lasting or severe disease. In vitro experiments confirmed that CD11b is up-regulated when T cells are activated. After multiple rounds of restimulation, the CD11b expression persists whereas CD28 expression is lost, compatible with the notion that CD8+CD28+CD11b+ represents a transient phenotype in the course of T-cell activation. The IFN+-producing T cells activated polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMN) to express MHC class II, thus generating the same PMN phenotype as in patients with active ANCA-associated vasculitis. A similar PMN phenotype could be generated by cultivation with supernatants of activated T cells or by IFN+ alone, but not by antibodies to proteinase 3. Conclusions. In active primary vasculitis, a small population of CD8+ T cells, identified by the expression of CD11b, expands, producing IFN+. These T cells could activate PMN, thus generating a long-living and potentially destructive PMN phenotype. © The Author 2008. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Society for Rheumatology. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Iking-Konert, C., Vogl, T., Prior, B., Wagner, C., Sander, O., Bleck, E., … Hänsch, G. M. (2008). T lymphocytes in patients with primary vasculitis: Expansion of CD8+ T cells with the propensity to activate polymorphonuclear neutrophils. Rheumatology, 47(5), 609–616. https://doi.org/10.1093/rheumatology/ken028
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