Abstract
BD is prevalent in the area of the Silk Route. It has been shown that hsp are involved in the T cell activation in patients with BD in the UK, where this disease has developed sporadically. We have thus examined whether the T cell response to the hsp-derived peptides may be induced in patients with BD in Japan, an east pole of the Silk Route. As with patients in the UK, the human 60-kD hsp peptide 336–351 also yielded vigorous proliferation of T cells in Japanese patients with BD, but neither in normal subjects nor in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA); there was significant association between proliferation by this peptide and the presence of ocular lesion, but not any other symptoms of BD. To clarify whether the peptide stimulates T cells as a polyclonal activator, a specific antigen or a superantigen-like substance, we analysed T cell receptor (TCR) usage of responding T cells by means of MoAbs specific for TCR Vβ subfamily and polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP)-based technique. We found that T cells with certain TCR Vβ subfamilies (including Vβ5.2–3, 8, 13.6, 18, 21.3) were increased in circulation and responded to the hsp peptide in an antigen-specific fashion. In addition, TCR Vβ gene-amplified products of freshly isolated T cells of patients with BD formed several bands in the PCR-SSCP analysis; some of them became prominent after stimulation with the peptide. This suggests that T cells in patients with this disease have already been expanded oligoclonally in vivo, which may be a result of stimulation by triggering antigens, including the hsp peptide. In addition, hsp peptide stimulation induced proinflammatory cytokine mRNA expression in peripheral blood mononuclear cells, including IL-8, tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α) and TNF-β in eight out of eight patients studied. Taken together, the results suggest that hsp antigen may play a role in the pathogenesis of BD, not only in the area of the Silk Route, but also outside the Silk Route area.
Keywords: heat shock protein, Behçet's disease, T cell receptor, oligoclonal expansion
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