Deficiency of a subset of T-cells with immunoregulatory properties in sarcoidosis

LP Ho, BC Urban, DR Thickett, RJO Davies… - The Lancet, 2005 - thelancet.com
LP Ho, BC Urban, DR Thickett, RJO Davies, AJ McMichael
The Lancet, 2005thelancet.com
Background Sarcoidosis is a multisystem disorder that predominantly involves the lungs,
characterised by a T-helper 1 (Th1) biased CD4-positive T-cell response and granuloma
formation, for which the explanation is unknown. A newly identified subset of T-cells with
immunoregulatory functions, CD1d-restricted natural-killer T (NKT) cells, has been shown to
protect against disorders with increased CD4-positive Th1 responses in animals. We
explored whether abnormalities in these cells are implicated in the pathogenesis of …
Background
Sarcoidosis is a multisystem disorder that predominantly involves the lungs, characterised by a T-helper 1 (Th1) biased CD4-positive T-cell response and granuloma formation, for which the explanation is unknown. A newly identified subset of T-cells with immunoregulatory functions, CD1d-restricted natural-killer T (NKT) cells, has been shown to protect against disorders with increased CD4-positive Th1 responses in animals. We explored whether abnormalities in these cells are implicated in the pathogenesis of sarcoidosis.
Methods
We generated fluorescence-labelled CD1d-tetrameric complexes and used them, with monoclonal antibodies to Vα24 and Vβ11 T-cell receptor, to assess the frequency of CD1d-restricted NKT cells in the peripheral blood of 60 patients with histologically proven sarcoidosis (16 with Löfgren's syndrome) and 60 healthy controls. Lung lymphocytes were also analysed in 16 of the patients with sarcoidosis.
Findings
CD1d-restricted NKT cells were absent or greatly reduced in peripheral blood from all patients with sarcoidosis, except those with Löfgren's syndrome (median proportion of lymphocytes 0·01% [IQR 0–0·03] vs 0·06% [0·03–0·12] in controls; p=0·0004). The deficiency was found in both acute and resolved disease and was unrelated to systemic corticosteroid therapy. There was no difference in the proportion of CD1d-restricted NKT cells between peripheral blood and lungs in patients, suggesting that the peripheral-blood deficiency is not due to sequestration of these cells in the lungs. The NKT cells were not observed in mediastinal lymph nodes or granulomatous lesions. CD1d expression on antigen-presenting cells of patients was normal, thus the deficiency of CD1d-restricted NKT cells is not explained by abnormal CD1d expression.
Interpretation
Loss of immunoregulation by CD1d-restricted NKT cells could explain the amplified and persistent T-cell activity that characterises sarcoidosis.
Relevance to practice
Our findings give new insight into the pathogenesis of sarcoidosis and draw attention to a potential target for therapeutic modulation in sarcoidosis.
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