T cell subset abnormalities in tissue lesions developing during autoimmune disorders, viral infection, and graft-vs.-host disease
- PMID: 6290528
T cell subset abnormalities in tissue lesions developing during autoimmune disorders, viral infection, and graft-vs.-host disease
Abstract
The authors review a large body of contemporary immunohistologic findings on the tissue distribution of T lymphocytes in normal and pathological conditions. The suggestions for technological advances in this field are: signal amplification using mixtures of monoclonal antibodies directed against different epitopes on the same antigen (e.g. OKT4A+B+D), triple layer amplification systems using hapten-labelled antibodies, and informative double staining methods with combinations of antibodies labelled with different fluorochromes or enzymes. Review of histological observations in a series of human diseases suggests that imbalances of OKT4+ and OKT8+ subsets of T lymphocytes may represent different types of immunoregulatory disorders. Rheumatoid arthritis and sarcoidosis appear to involve a high level of OKT4+ subpopulation response coupled with an associated appearance of a special type of HLA-DR+ macrophages. It remains to be seen whether normal or self-limited immunological responses (early stages of bacterial infection or delayed-type hypersensitivity reactions) produce OKT4+ and macrophage responses that are characteristically different. Meanwhile, excessive levels of OKT8+ cells have been found in a wide range of recognized or presumed immunoregulatory disorders including: graft-vs.-host reaction and viral infections. These disorders, as well as primary biliary cirrhosis and lichen planus, appear to possess both overlapping and disparate clinical characteristics, and the immunohistological observations may reflect the functional heterogeneity of OKT8+ populations in these diseases. These studies show that histologically meaningful heterogeneity can already be demonstrated for the OKT8+ lymphocyte group.
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