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. 1992 Mar;165(3):506-12.
doi: 10.1093/infdis/165.3.506.

Gamma delta T lymphocytes in human tuberculosis

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Gamma delta T lymphocytes in human tuberculosis

P F Barnes et al. J Infect Dis. 1992 Mar.

Abstract

The manifestations of tuberculous infection reflect the immune response to infection. Most healthy tuberculin reactors develop protective immunity; tuberculous pleuritis reflects a resistant response manifest by mild disease, whereas advanced pulmonary and miliary tuberculosis reflect ineffective immunity. The role of gamma delta T cells was assessed in tuberculous infection by evaluating expansion of these cells from blood mononuclear cells after stimulation with Mycobacterium tuberculosis. After culture in vitro, the percentages of gamma delta+ cells were significantly greater in patients with protective and resistant immunity (tuberculin reactors, 25% +/- 4%; tuberculous pleuritis, 30% +/- 7%) than in those with ineffective immunity (advanced pulmonary tuberculosis, 9% +/- 3%; miliary tuberculosis, 2% +/- 1%). In leprosy, expansion of gamma delta+ cells was greater in immunologically resistant tuberculoid patients (32% +/- 4%) than in Mycobacterium leprae-unresponsive lepromatous patients (9% +/- 2%). M. tuberculosis-reactive gamma delta T cell lines produced interferon-gamma, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor, interleukin-3, and tumor necrosis factor-alpha, cytokines that activate macrophages and may contribute to mycobacterial elimination. These findings suggest that gamma delta T cells contribute to immune resistance against M. tuberculosis.

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