Perera M K, Carter R, Goonewardene R, Mendis K N
Department of Parasitology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Colombo, Sri Lanka.
J Exp Med. 1994 Jan 1;179(1):311-5. doi: 10.1084/jem.179.1.311.
The percentage of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) bearing the CD3+ phenotype and the alpha/beta and gamma/delta T cell receptors (TCR) in PBMC were examined in Plasmodium vivax malaria patients and convalescents. The cells were labeled with monoclonal antibodies, stained with either fluorescence or phycoerythrin, and examined by ultraviolet (UV) microscopy. A highly significant increase in both the proportion and the absolute numbers of gamma/delta T cells (p < 0.005 and < 0.001, respectively, Student's t test) was observed in nonimmune P. vivax patients during clinical paroxysms compared to nonmalarial controls. These T cells, which normally constitute not more than 3-5% of PBMC, constituted < or = to 30% of PBMC during paroxysms in these nonimmune patients in whom the clinical symptoms were severe. A less significant increase of gamma/delta T cells were also observed in these nonimmune patients during infection, between paroxysms and during convalescence. In contrast, in an age-matched group of semi-immune patients resident in a malaria-endemic region of the country, in whom the clinical disease was comparatively mild, there was no increase in gamma/delta T cells either during infection, even during paroxysms, or convalescence. The severity of disease symptoms in patients as measured by a clinical score correlated positively with the proportion of gamma/delta T cells in peripheral blood (r = 0.53, p < 0.01), the most significant correlation being found between the prevalence and severity of gastrointestinal symptoms, nausea, anorexia, and vomiting, and the proportion of gamma/delta T cells (r = 0.49, p = 0.002). These findings suggest that gamma/delta T cells have a role to play in the pathogenesis of malaria, possibly in the general constitutional disturbances and particularly in gastrointestinal pathology in malaria.
在间日疟患者和恢复期患者中,检测了携带CD3 + 表型的外周血单核细胞(PBMC)百分比以及PBMC中α/β和γ/δ T细胞受体(TCR)。细胞用单克隆抗体标记,用荧光或藻红蛋白染色,然后通过紫外线(UV)显微镜检查。与非疟疾对照组相比,在临床发作期间,非免疫间日疟患者中γ/δ T细胞的比例和绝对数量均显著增加(分别为p < 0.005和< 0.001,Student t检验)。这些T细胞通常占PBMC的比例不超过3 - 5%,在这些临床症状严重的非免疫患者发作期间,占PBMC的比例≤30%。在这些非免疫患者的感染期间、发作间期和恢复期,也观察到γ/δ T细胞有较小程度的增加。相比之下,在该国疟疾流行地区居住的年龄匹配的半免疫患者组中,临床疾病相对较轻,在感染期间,甚至在发作期间或恢复期,γ/δ T细胞均未增加。通过临床评分衡量的患者疾病症状严重程度与外周血中γ/δ T细胞比例呈正相关(r = 0.53,p < 0.01),在胃肠道症状、恶心、厌食和呕吐的患病率和严重程度与γ/δ T细胞比例之间发现了最显著的相关性(r = 0.49,p = 0.002)。这些发现表明,γ/δ T细胞在疟疾发病机制中起作用,可能在全身体质紊乱中,特别是在疟疾的胃肠道病理中起作用。