A total of 27 T-lymphocyte cell strains were established from skin biopsies of 24 patients with various stages of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL) by addition of the T-cell growth factors interleukin (IL)-2 and IL-4. Cellular proliferation and phenotypic changes were measured over 3 months in culture, and T-cell clones were studied using T-cell receptor-γ re-arrangement techniques. An average outgrowth of 134 million T lymphocytes from a 4-mm skin biopsy was observed over 2 months. Initially, most T cells expressed the CD4+ phenotype. In 17 cell strains from patients with early CTCL a statistically significant predominance of CD8+ T-lymphocytes developed over 8-weeks' culture, indicating that CD8+ T cells controlled the growth of CD4+ T cells, whereas CD4+ T cells were predominant in cell strains from advanced CTCL (p <0.05). TCR-γ re-arrangement studies revealed, on average, 12 T-cell clones per cell strain, which was reduced over time to 6 T-cell clones per cell strain. Lymphocy tes from peripheral blood could kill lymphocytes from an autologous cell strain, suggesting the presence of autoreactive cytotoxic T cells. Our study suggests how skin-homing CD8+ T lymphocytes from patients with early stage CTCL can suppress the in vitro growth of skin-homing CD4+ T-lymphocytes, indicating immune surveillance. © 2007 Acta Dermato-Venereologica.
CITATION STYLE
Thestrup-Pedersen, K., Parhar, R., Wu, K., Bertilsson, P. A., Meyer, B., Abu-Amero, S., … Al-Mohanna, F. (2007). Skin-homing CD8 + T lymphocytes show preferential growth in vitro and suppress CD4 + T-cell proliferation in patients with early stages of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma. Acta Dermato-Venereologica, 87(2), 118–126. https://doi.org/10.2340/00015555-0206
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