Junker Andreas, Ivanidze Jana, Malotka Joachim, Eiglmeier Ingrid, Lassmann Hans, Wekerle Hartmut, Meinl Edgar, Hohlfeld Reinhard, Dornmair Klaus
Institute for Clinical Neuroimmunology, Ludwig Maximilians University, D-81377 Munich, Germany.
Brain. 2007 Nov;130(Pt 11):2789-99. doi: 10.1093/brain/awm214. Epub 2007 Sep 21.
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is an inflammatory demyelinating disease where T cells attack the brain and the spinal cord. It is known that often particular T-cell clones are expanded in the target tissue, but it is still unknown, whether identical T-cell clones are present at distinct anatomical sites, or whether the T-cell spectrum is locally diverse. Therefore we compared the T-cell receptor (TCR) repertoire in distinct lesions and normal-appearing white matter (NAWM) from post-mortem brains of four MS patients. We analysed 19 lesions (inactive demyelinated, 15; slowly expanding chronic, 3; active lesions, 1) and 5 NAWM regions. The TCR beta-chain repertoire was investigated by CDR3 spectratyping. For each anatomical site 325 semi-nested PCR reactions were performed. About 800 Vbeta-NDN-Jbeta combinations were sequenced. Each of the four patients had distinct T-cell clones that were present in more than two anatomically distinct regions. These clones were not restricted to lesions, but were also present in NAWM. Some clones were present in all investigated lesions, and additionally, in NAWM sites. A single T-cell clone was detected in nine different sites in one patient. None of the clones was shared among different patients. Thus, pervasive T-cell clones exist in distinct regions of MS brain, and these clones are 'private' (unique) to individual patients. Analysis of the hypervariable NDN region revealed 'silent' nucleotide exchanges, i.e. nucleotide exchanges that code for identical amino acids. Such silent nucleotide exchanges suggest that the corresponding T-cell clones were recruited and stimulated by particular antigens. To attribute some of the pervasive clones to particular T-cell subsets, we isolated individual CD8+ T cells from cryosections by laser microdissection and characterized their TCR by single-cell PCR. These experiments revealed that at least some of the pervasive T-cell clones belonged to the CD8+ compartment, supporting the pathogenic relevance of this T-cell subset.
多发性硬化症(MS)是一种炎症性脱髓鞘疾病,其中T细胞攻击大脑和脊髓。已知在靶组织中通常特定的T细胞克隆会扩增,但尚不清楚相同的T细胞克隆是否存在于不同的解剖部位,或者T细胞谱在局部是否多样。因此,我们比较了四名MS患者死后大脑中不同病变和正常外观白质(NAWM)中的T细胞受体(TCR)库。我们分析了19个病变(非活动性脱髓鞘病变,15个;缓慢扩展的慢性病变,3个;活动性病变,1个)和5个NAWM区域。通过CDR3谱型分析研究TCRβ链库。对每个解剖部位进行了325次半巢式PCR反应。对约800个Vβ-NDN-Jβ组合进行了测序。四名患者中的每一位都有独特的T细胞克隆,这些克隆存在于两个以上解剖学上不同的区域。这些克隆不仅局限于病变部位,也存在于NAWM中。一些克隆存在于所有研究的病变中,此外,也存在于NAWM部位。在一名患者的九个不同部位检测到单个T细胞克隆。不同患者之间没有共享的克隆。因此,MS大脑的不同区域存在普遍存在的T细胞克隆,并且这些克隆对个体患者来说是“私人的”(独特的)。对高变NDN区域的分析揭示了“沉默”的核苷酸交换,即编码相同氨基酸的核苷酸交换。这种沉默的核苷酸交换表明相应的T细胞克隆是由特定抗原招募和刺激的。为了将一些普遍存在的克隆归因于特定的T细胞亚群,我们通过激光显微切割从冷冻切片中分离出单个CD8+T细胞,并通过单细胞PCR对其TCR进行表征。这些实验表明,至少一些普遍存在的T细胞克隆属于CD8+区室,支持了该T细胞亚群的致病相关性。