Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, January 1999, p. 85-88, Vol. 6, No. 1
1071-412X/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Variable-Gene Usage
in Cutaneous Late-Phase Reactions: Implications for T-Lymphocyte
Recruitment in Cutaneous Inflammation
Philadelphia Veterans Affairs Medical Center,1 and Departments of Dermatology2 and Internal Medicine,3 Division of Allergy and Immunology, University of Pennsylvania Medical Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Received 24 April 1998/Returned for modification 11 September 1998/Accepted 6 November 1998
To determine if functionally distinct T-lymphocyte (T cell) subsets
accumulate in late-phase immunoglobulin E-mediated reactions (LPR), we
quantitatively analyzed the immunophenotype and the T-cell receptor
variable-gene (V
) repertoire of T cells in cutaneous LPR. Peripheral
blood and skin biopsies were obtained 6 or 24 h after sensitive
subjects were challenged with intradermal injections of grass pollen
allergen (Ag) and control (C) solution. The frequency of cells
expressing CD3, CD4, CD8, CD45RO, and CD25/mm2 was
determined by immunohistochemistry in nine subjects. V
usage was
assessed by reverse transcription-PCR in five of nine subjects. A
significantly greater frequency of CD3+ and
CD45RO+ (memory) T cells was detected in Ag sites than in C
sites at 24 h after challenge but not at 6 h. The frequency
of activated (CD25+) and helper (CD4+) T cells
appeared to be increased in Ag sites as well, though not significantly.
V
6 was the most commonly expressed V
detected in Ag
sites, but it was also detected in accompanying C sites. V
2 was the
most commonly expressed V
detected in C sites. Sequence analysis in
one case revealed V
expression in a 6-h Ag site to be essentially
polyclonal. Our findings suggest that memory T cells with V
expression similar to that in normal skin accumulate in developing
cutaneous LPR. The limited usage of V
suggests a preferential
recruitment or retention of reactive T cells from an endogenous
subset of skin-homing T cells with its own skewed V
repertoire.
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