Stinissen P, Vandevyver C, Raus J, Zhang J
Multiple Sclerosis Research and Immunology Unit, Dr. L. Willems-Instituut, Diepenbeek, Belgium.
Cell Immunol. 1995 Dec;166(2):227-35. doi: 10.1006/cimm.1995.9975.
gamma delta T cells have been implicated as playing a role in the demyelinating processes of multiple sclerosis (MS). However, the nature of the ligands which lead to activation and accumulation of gamma delta T cells in the brain lesions remains unknown. This study was undertaken to examine whether gamma delta T cells derived from cerebrospinal fluid and blood of MS patients could be stimulated by bacterial superantigens: staphylococcal enterotoxins A and B and toxic shock syndrome toxin-1. A panel of 16 gamma delta T cell clones isolated from MS patients and controls was found to react with the superantigens used at a nanogram range and displayed specific cytotoxic activity toward target cells pulsed with the corresponding superantigens. The responses of the gamma delta T cell clones did not require MHC-matched accessory cells and were not blocked by antibodies to the MHC molecules, suggesting a non-MHC restricted interaction. The superantigen reactivity was associated with both V delta 2+/V gamma 2+ and V delta 1+/V gamma 1+ subsets, reportedly found in the MS lesions. Our data suggest an alternative pathway which may account for gamma delta T cell activation in MS.