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Article Search for correlation of CD8 T cell response to Epstein-Barr virus with clinical status in rheumatoid arthritis: a 15 month followup pilot study. 2003
Berthelot JM, Saulquin X, Coste-Burel M, Peyrat MA, Echasserieau K, Bonneville M, Houssaint E. · Rheumatology Unit, CHU Nantes, Nantes, France. · J Rheumatol. · Pubmed #12913921 No free full text.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To assess in a longitudinal 15 month followup study the CD8 T cell response to immunodominant Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) antigens of 17 patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA); and to seek an association between these responses and both clinical activity/severity of RA and a qualitative PCR for EBV in peripheral blood. METHODS: At each patient's visit every 3 months: (1) RA activity was assessed for Disease Activity Score (DAS-28); (2) a qualitative PCR for EBV was performed; (3) CD8 T cell response to EBV epitopes was screened in peripheral blood, using an autopresentation assay of 13 EBV peptides previously identified as immunodominant targets in RA synovia. Activation of anti-EBV CD8 T cells was evaluated by measuring the release of tumor necrosis factor-a. RESULTS: The semiquantitative CD8 T cell response to EBV roughly paralleled RA clinical activity in only 4/17 patients. No clear association could be found between positive PCR for EBV (performed at least once in 10/17 patients) and RA activity/severity or fatigue. Reactivity was not qualitatively broader in samples where PCR for EBV proved positive, and most often focused on one or 2 EBV antigens. However, these antigens differed between patients, as did the magnitude of CD8 T cell response to immunodominant antigens at different timepoints for the same patient. CONCLUSION: The CD8 T cell response to EBV paralleled clinical activity in only 4/17 patients. Our pilot study does not support the hypothesis that this CD8 response contributes to RA activity/flares, although the quantitative variations in the pattern of this reactivity over time confirmed that control of EBV manifestations was difficult in most patients with RA.
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Article Frequent enrichment for CD8 T cells reactive against common herpes viruses in chronic inflammatory lesions: towards a reassessment of the physiopathological significance of T cell clonal expansions found in autoimmune inflammatory processes. 1999
Scotet E, Peyrat MA, Saulquin X, Retiere C, Couedel C, Davodeau F, Dulphy N, Toubert A, Bignon JD, Lim A, Vie H, Hallet MM, Liblau R, Weber M, Berthelot JM, Houssaint E, Bonneville M. · INSERM U463, Institut de Biologie, Nantes, France. · Eur J Immunol. · Pubmed #10092102 No free full text.
Abstract: We recently evidenced a dramatic enrichment for T cells reactive against Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) within inflamed joints of two rheumatoid arthritis patients. To assess the generality of this phenomenon and its relevance to autoimmunity, we studied the responses of CD8 T cells from patients with either acute or chronic inflammatory diseases (rheumatoid arthritis: n = 18, ankylosing spondylitis: n = 5, psoriatic arthritis: n = 4, Reiter's syndrome: n = 3, arthrosis: n = 2, uveitis: n = 2, multiple sclerosis: n = 2, encephalitis: n = 1) against viral proteins derived from EBV and another common herpes virus, human cytomegalovirus (CMV). T cell responses against EBV and/or CMV epitopes were frequently observed within CD8 T cells derived from chronic inflammatory lesions, irrespective of their location (knee, eye, brain) and autoimmune features. In most cases, CD8 T cells derived from affected organs yielded stronger anti-viral T cell responses than CD8 T cells derived from patients' PBL, even in chronic inflammatory diseases devoid of autoimmune features or induced by defined bacterial agents. Taken together, these results suggest that the presence of virus-specific T cells within inflamed lesions of patients suffering from autoimmune diseases is a general phenomenon associated with chronic inflammation rather than the initiating cause of the autoimmune process. Since this phenomenon was sometimes associated with long-term T repertoire biases within inflamed lesions, the physiopathological significance of T cell clonal expansions found in a recurrent fashion within chronically inflamed autoimmune lesions should be interpreted with caution.
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