Clinical immunology : the official journal of the Clinical Immunology Society
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Retracted Publication
Simultaneous presence of mucous membrane pemphigoid and pemphigus vulgaris: molecular characterization of both autoantibodies.
There are several reports in the literature describing the coexistence of features of pemphigus vulgaris and pemphigoid in the same patient. We describe 15 patients with clinical, histological, and immunopathological features of mucous membrane (cicatricial) pemphigoid at the time of initial diagnosis. All 15 patients failed to respond clinically to conventional systemic agents over a mean period of 7.2 years. ⋯ The IgG4 subclass is a characteristic feature associated with pathogenic autoantibodies in pemphigus vulgaris. Hence, in such patients, a dual diagnosis should be considered and confirmed by various serological assays. It is possible that the presence of two pathogenic autoantibodies in these patients could have contributed to the lack of response to conventional immunosuppressive therapy.
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Depressed mitogen-induced IL-2 and IFN-gamma responses after severe mechanical or thermal injury are postulated to result from an expansion of Th2 lymphocytes with concomitant excessive production of IL-4 and/or IL-10. Here, we simultaneously assessed proliferation and Th1 (IFN-gamma) versus Th2 (IL-10, IL-4) lymphokine production in trauma patients' isolated T cells stimulated in a costimulation sufficient, antigen presenting cell independent system (anti CD3 + anti-CD4). T cells with depressed proliferation and IL-2 production simultaneously lost IL-4, IL-10, and IFN-gamma protein and mRNA responses. ⋯ Although initially partially restored by exogenous IL-2 or stimulation with PMA + ionomycin, patient T cells with persisting anergy progressively lost even these lymphokine and proliferative responses. Development of global T cell anergy was not a result of lost T cell viability or protein synthesis, since it corresponded to predominance of anergic T cells with upregulated expression of CD11b, but downregulated CD28 and CD3 expression. Thus, the subset of posttrauma patients whose isolated T cells become unresponsive experienced progressively worsening global anergy, mediated not by an increased production of Th2 lymphokines, but possibly by T cell incapacity to be activated through TCR triggering or Ca(2+) mobilization.
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Granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF) deficient mice develop a pulmonary alveolar proteinosis (PAP) syndrome which is corrected by the administration/expression of GM-CSF. These observations implicate GM-CSF in the pathogenesis of human PAP. We hypothesized that human PAP may involve an intrinsic cellular defect in monocytes/macrophages with an inability to produce GM-CSF and/or respond to GM-CSF. ⋯ IL-10 is a potent inhibitor of LPS-stimulated GM-CSF production from healthy control alveolar macrophages. These studies are the first to demonstrate that circulating monocytes and alveolar macrophages from PAP patients are able to synthesize GM-CSF and respond to GM-CSF, suggesting no intrinsic abnormalities in GM-CSF signaling. In addition, these observations suggest that PAP in a subset of patients is the result of decreased availability of GM-CSF due to GM-CSF blocking activity and reduced GM-CSF production by IL-10.
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We previously reported that certain short gp120 V2 region peptides homologous to vasaoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), such as "peptide T," were potent inhibitors of gp120 binding, infectivity, and neurotoxicity. The present study shows that synthetic V2-region-derived peptides have potent intrinsic chemotaxis agonist activity for human monocytes and also act as antagonists of high-affinity (0.1 pM) gp120-mediated monocyte chemotaxis. Selectivity is shown in that peptide T is more potent at suppressing M-tropic than T-tropic gp120 chemotaxis. ⋯ Peptide T also partially suppressed (125)I-MIP1-beta binding to human monocytes, suggesting action at a subset of MIP1-beta receptors. The V2 region of gp120 thus contains a potent receptor binding domain and synthetic peptides derived from this region modulate CCR5 chemokine receptor chemotactic signaling caused by either gp120 or chemokine ligands. The results have therapeutic implications and may explain recent clinical improvements, in that HIV/gp120 actions at CCR5 receptors, such as occur in the brain or early infection, would be susceptible to peptide T inhibition.
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The pattern of cytokine production in T cell clones derived from bronchoalveolar lavages (BAL) of active pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) patients was analyzed in clones obtained by limiting dilution procedures which expand with high efficiency either total T lymphocytes, independently of their antigen-recognition specificity, or Mycobacterium tuberculosis-specific T cells. BAL-derived clones, representative of CD4(+) cells from five patients with active TB, produced significantly higher amounts of IFN-gamma than BAL-derived CD4(+) clones from three inactive TB donors or four controls (with unrelated, noninfectious pathology). Average IL-4 and IL-10 production did not differ significantly in the three groups. ⋯ The M. tuberculosis-specific BAL-derived T cell clones from three active TB patients were almost exclusively CD4(+) and produced consistently high levels of IFN-gamma often in association with IL-10, but very rarely with IL-4. Unlike the BAL-derived clones, the M. tuberculosis-specific clones derived from PB CD45RO(+) CD4(+) T cells of three different active TB patients and two healthy donors showed large individual variability in cytokine production as well as in the proportion of CD4(+), CD8(+), or TCR gamma/delta(+) clones. These results indicate the predominance of CD4(+) T cells producing both the proinflammatory cytokine IFN-gamma and the anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10 in BAL of patients with active TB.