Zhang Y, Schluep M, Frutiger S, Hughes G J, Jeannet M, Steck A, Barkas T
Service de Neurologie, Centre Hopitalier Universitaire Vaudois, Lausanne.
Eur J Immunol. 1990 Dec;20(12):2577-83. doi: 10.1002/eji.1830201208.
The response of human T lymphocytes against the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) was studied in five patients with myasthenia gravis (MG) and in six healthy donors using either native Torpedo AChR or recombinant protein derived from the mammalian AChR alpha subunit (X4, residues 6-216 of mouse AChR alpha subunit). The present study demonstrates that (a) AChR-specific T helper cell lines can be generated from MG patients [either from peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) or from thymocytes] as well as from PBL of normal controls, (b) lymphocytes from MG patients, but not from controls, recognize the mammalian AChR but not the Torpedo receptor, (c) in humans, the HLA-DR2-associated T cell epitope is probably located in the region of residues 162-216 of the AChR alpha subunit and (d) there is a considerable heterogeneity of autoreactive T cell responses: (i) T cell lines from different HLA-type donors have distinct epitope profiles; (ii) the epitope specificity of the PBL-derived T cell line is different from that of the thymocyte-derived line; (iii) the epitope specificities of patient-derived T cell lines are different from those generated from normal controls who share the same HLA phenotype.