Active regulatory T-cells contribute to broadened T-cell repertoire diversity in ivIg-treated SLE patients
- PDF / 84,138 Bytes
- 1 Pages / 595.28 x 793.7 pts Page_size
- 79 Downloads / 175 Views
POSTER PRESENTATION
Open Access
Active regulatory T-cells contribute to broadened T-cell repertoire diversity in ivIg-treated SLE patients Nuno Costa1*, Ana E Pires2, Ana M Gabriel1, Luiz F Goulart1, Clara Pereira1,3, Barbara Leal3, Ana C Queiros2, Wahiba Chaara4, Maria F Moraes-Fontes1,6, Carlos Vasconcelos5, Carlos Ferreira6, Jorge Martins7, Marina Bastos8, Maria J Santos9, Maria A Pereira10, Berta Martins3, Margarida Lima5, Cristina João2, Adrien Six4, Jocelyne Demengeot1, Constantin Fesel1 From 6th European Workshop on Immune-Mediated Inflammatory Diseases Nice, France. 23-25 November 2011
Intravenous IgG (ivIg) is a therapeutic alternative for lupus erythematosus. Relative oligoclonality of circulating T-cells in SLE has been reported. Also CD4+Foxp3+ regulatory T-cells (Tregs) have a characteristically reduced activity in SLE, reflected by CD25 surface density. Aiming to study the role of Tregs for ivIg therapy, we characterized Tregs and determined TCR spectratypes of four Vb families with reported oligoclonality, in 15 lupus patients (14 with SLE and one with discoid LE) treated with ivIg in cycles of 2-6 consecutive monthly infusions. Among these 15 patients, 11 responded with clinical improvement. Cell counts, cytometry and TCR spectratypes were obtained from peripheral blood at various time points before, during and after ivIg treatment. T-cell oligoclonality was assessed as Vb-familywise repertoire perturbation, calculated for each patient in respect to an individual reference profile averaged over all available time points. For 11/15 patients, average Vb1/Vb2/Vb11/Vb14 repertoires were less perturbed under ivIg treatment than outside ivIg therapy. The four exceptions with relatively increased average perturbation during ivIg therapy included three patients who failed to respond clinically to an ivIg therapy cycle. Patients’ Treg CD25 surface density (cytometric MFI) was, other than Treg/CD4+ frequency, clearly reduced when compared to healthy controls, but not obviously influenced by ivIg. However, patients’ average Treg CD25 MFI was found negatively correlated with both Vb11 and Vb14 perturbations measured under ivIg therapy, which indicates a role of active Tregs in the therapeutic effect of ivIg. 1
Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciência, Oeiras, Portugal Full list of author information is available at the end of the article
Acknowledgements This work was supported by Octapharma. Author details 1 Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciência, Oeiras, Portugal. 2IPO-CIPM/CEDOC-FCM, Lisboa, Portugal. 3ICBAS, Porto, Portugal. 4UPMC-Paris-6/CNRS-UMR7211/APHP, Paris, France. 5Hospital Sto-António, Porto, Portugal. 6Hospital Sta-Maria, Lisboa, Portugal. 7Hospital Marmeleiros, Funchal, Portugal. 8Hospital SãoTeotónio, Viseu, Portugal. 9Hospital Garcia de Orta, Almada, Portugal. 10 Hospital de Faro, Faro, Portugal. Published: 23 November 2011
doi:10.1186/1479-5876-9-S2-P6 Cite this article as: Costa et al.: Active regulatory T-cells contribute to broadened T-cell repertoire diversity in ivIg-treated SLE patients. Journal o
Data Loading...