Goronzy J J, Zettl A, Weyand C M
Department of Medicine, Mayo Clinic and Foundation, Rochester, MN 55905, USA.
Int Rev Immunol. 1998;17(5-6):339-63. doi: 10.3109/08830189809054410.
CD4+ T cells are a major component of the inflammatory infiltrate in rheumatoid synovitis. Within synovial lesions, clonal CD4+ T cell populations are detectable, supporting the notion of an antigen specific recognition even in the joint. In general, the clonal size of individual T cell clones is small and does not lead to a marked distortion of the synovial T cell receptor (TCR) repertoire. Comparison of TCR sequences derived from different patients has not provided evidence for common sequences. Either multiple antigens are recognized or the TCR repertoire is sufficiently plastic with a multitude of different TCR structures responding to the same antigen(s). However, within one individual, the repertoire of clonal T cell populations is restricted. Identical T cell clones can be identified in different joints and at different timepoints of the disease, emphasizing that the spectrum of antigens recognized is conserved over time and that the T cell response pattern is not subject to evolution. Characterization of antigens involved in the latter stages of the disease may thus provide critical information on disease-initiating events. Recent data have led to the new concept that the role of T cells in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is not limited to synovial inflammation. Evidence has been provided that the premorbid TCR repertoires of RA patients and normal controls can be distinguished. The T cell repertoire in RA patients is prone to recognize certain microbial products and autoantigens. The selection of this response pattern can only partially be attributed to the disease associated HLA-DRB1 alleles. Additional factors common in RA patients but not in HLA-DR matched control individuals seem to be important in shaping the TCR repertoire. Furthermore, the repertoire of mature T cells in RA patients is characterized by oligoclonality which involves T cells in the peripheral blood compartment. Possibly, these clonal T cell populations react to widespread autoantigens, raising the possibility that RA patients have a defect in controlling peripheral tolerance and an anomaly of lymphoproliferation. In contrast to joint residing CD4+ T cells, expanded clonotypes isolated from the blood of different patients have been described to share TCR beta chain structures. How these characteristic features of the global TCR repertoire in RA patients translate into mechanisms of disease remains to be elucidated.
CD4+ T细胞是类风湿性滑膜炎炎症浸润的主要成分。在滑膜病变中,可检测到克隆性CD4+ T细胞群体,这支持了即使在关节中也存在抗原特异性识别的观点。一般来说,单个T细胞克隆的克隆规模较小,不会导致滑膜T细胞受体(TCR)库明显畸变。对不同患者来源的TCR序列进行比较,尚未发现共同序列的证据。要么识别多种抗原,要么TCR库具有足够的可塑性,众多不同的TCR结构对相同抗原作出反应。然而,在个体内部,克隆性T细胞群体的库是受限的。在疾病的不同关节和不同时间点可识别出相同的T细胞克隆,这强调了所识别抗原的谱随时间是保守的,并且T细胞反应模式不会发生演变。因此,对疾病后期所涉及抗原的表征可能会提供有关疾病起始事件的关键信息。最近的数据引出了一个新的概念,即T细胞在类风湿性关节炎(RA)中的作用不仅限于滑膜炎症。已有证据表明,RA患者和正常对照的病前TCR库是可区分的。RA患者的T细胞库易于识别某些微生物产物和自身抗原。这种反应模式的选择只能部分归因于与疾病相关的HLA - DRB1等位基因。RA患者中常见但HLA - DR匹配的对照个体中不存在的其他因素,似乎在塑造TCR库方面很重要。此外,RA患者成熟T细胞的库以寡克隆性为特征,这涉及外周血区室中的T细胞。这些克隆性T细胞群体可能对广泛的自身抗原作出反应,这增加了RA患者在控制外周耐受性方面存在缺陷以及存在淋巴细胞增殖异常的可能性。与驻留在关节中的CD4+ T细胞不同,从不同患者血液中分离出的扩增克隆型已被描述为具有共同的TCRβ链结构。RA患者整体TCR库的这些特征如何转化为疾病机制仍有待阐明。