T cell receptor gene rearrangements of T lymphocytes infiltrating the liver in chronic active hepatitis B and primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC): oligoclonality of PBC‐derived …

U Moebius, M Manns, G Hess, G Kober… - European journal of …, 1990 - Wiley Online Library
U Moebius, M Manns, G Hess, G Kober, KHM zum Büschenfelde, SC Meuer
European journal of immunology, 1990Wiley Online Library
Immunological events are involved in the pathophysiology of chronic active hepatitis as
indicated from the accumulation of T lymphocytes at the site of tissue damage. We
generated T cell clones from liver biopsies of 3 patients with chronic active hepatitis B and 2
patients with primary biliary cirrhosis. These T cell clones (n= 84) were analyzed by means
of T cell receptor (TcR) β gene rearrangements to determine whether the infiltrate consists of
a polyclonal or oligoclonal T cell population. The vast majority (62 of 64) of T cell clones from …
Abstract
Immunological events are involved in the pathophysiology of chronic active hepatitis as indicated from the accumulation of T lymphocytes at the site of tissue damage. We generated T cell clones from liver biopsies of 3 patients with chronic active hepatitis B and 2 patients with primary biliary cirrhosis. These T cell clones (n = 84) were analyzed by means of T cell receptor (TcR) β gene rearrangements to determine whether the infiltrate consists of a polyclonal or oligoclonal T cell population. The vast majority (62 of 64) of T cell clones from three different patients with chronic active hepatitis B showed no identical rearrangements of the TcR β chain genes. In marked contrast, in both patients with primary biliary cirrhosis, T cell clones established were of limited diversity. Thus 5 out of 10 and 2 out of 10 T cell clones from one patient and 3 out of 9 and 2 out of 9 T cell clones from the second patient, respectively, showed identical TcR β gene rearrangements. These data suggest that a clonal dominance is characteristic for local T cell responses in autoimmune liver disease such as primary biliary cirrhosis whereas in virus‐induced chronic active hepatitis T cell activation occurs polyclonally.
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