Department of Clinical Immunology & Rheumatology, Amsterdam University Medical Center (Location AMC)/University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
Laboratory of Experimental Immunology, Amsterdam University Medical Center (Location AMC)/University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
Front Immunol. 2022 Jul 27;13:915687. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2022.915687. eCollection 2022.
In patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) different joints were shown to share the same dominant T-cell clones, suggesting shared characteristics of the inflammatory process and indicating that strategies to selectively target the antigen receptor might be feasible. Since T- and B-lymphocytes closely interact in adaptive responses, we analysed to what extent different joints also share dominant B-cell clones.
In 11 RA patients, quantitative B-cell receptor (BCR) repertoire analysis was performed in simultaneously obtained samples from inflamed synovial tissue (ST) from distinct locations within one joint, from multiple joints, from synovial fluid (SF) and peripheral blood (PB).
ST biopsies from different locations in the same joint showed clear overlap in the top-25 dominant BCR clones (16.7%, SD 12.5), in the same range as the overlap between ST and SF in the same joint (8.0%, SD 8.8) and the overlap between ST-ST between different joints (9.1%, SD 8.2), but clearly higher than the overlap between ST and PB (1.7%, SD 2.4; p<0.05) and SF and PB (2.7%, SD 4.1; p<0.05). Interestingly, these figures were substantially lower than the overlap observed in previous T-cell clonality studies.
We conclude that in RA BCR clonal responses may be more localized than TCR clonal responses, pointing to antigen-selective influx, proliferation and/or maturation of B-cells. B lineage cells in the SF may adequately represent the dominant BCR clones of the ST, which is in contrast to T-cells. Collectively, the presence of shared B- and especially T-cells in different joints from the same patient suggests that approaches might be feasible that aim to develop antigen-receptor specific targeting of lymphocyte clones in RA as an alternative to more generalized immunosuppressive strategies.
在类风湿关节炎(RA)患者中,不同关节显示出共享相同的优势 T 细胞克隆,这表明炎症过程具有共同特征,并表明选择性针对抗原受体的策略可能是可行的。由于 T 细胞和 B 细胞在适应性反应中密切相互作用,我们分析了不同关节在多大程度上也共享优势 B 细胞克隆。
在 11 例 RA 患者中,对同一关节不同部位的炎症滑膜组织(ST)、多个关节、滑液(SF)和外周血(PB)同时获得的样本进行定量 B 细胞受体(BCR)谱分析。
同一关节不同部位的 ST 活检显示,前 25 个优势 BCR 克隆之间存在明显重叠(16.7%,SD 12.5%),与同一关节的 ST 和 SF 之间的重叠(8.0%,SD 8.8%)和不同关节之间的 ST-ST 重叠(9.1%,SD 8.2%)相似,但明显高于 ST 和 PB 之间的重叠(1.7%,SD 2.4%;p<0.05)和 SF 和 PB 之间的重叠(2.7%,SD 4.1%;p<0.05)。有趣的是,这些数字明显低于之前 T 细胞克隆性研究中观察到的数字。
我们得出结论,在 RA 中,BCR 克隆反应可能比 TCR 克隆反应更局限,这表明 B 细胞的抗原选择性流入、增殖和/或成熟。SF 中的 B 系细胞可以充分代表 ST 中的优势 BCR 克隆,这与 T 细胞相反。总之,同一患者不同关节中存在共享的 B 细胞,尤其是 T 细胞,表明可能可行的方法是开发针对 RA 淋巴细胞克隆的抗原受体特异性靶向,作为替代更广泛的免疫抑制策略。