Abstract
We investigated the levels of TCR-γδ T cells and their subpopulations Vδ1 and Vδ2 in the peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) of 28 heart transplant (HTx) patients. Patients (n = 10) receiving cyclosporin A (CsA) for treatment of a nephrotic syndrome (NS) and 10 healthy individuals served as controls. There was no difference in levels of TCR-γδ T cells between the different groups. However, an elevated proportion of Vδ1+γδ T cells was found in the PBL of HTx patients, especially when these cells were present in their graft-infiltrating lymphocyte (GIL) cultures. Vδ1+γδ T cells of HTx patients showed normal expression of CD45RO and lacked the activation markers CD25 and HLA-DR. After expanding in IL-2-containing medium, PBL cultures of HTx patients more often were dominated by Vδ1 cells than PBL cultures of controls, in which Vδ2 cells were predominantly grown. The aberrant composition of the TCR-γδ population in HTx patients was not a result of immunosuppressive medication, since the proportion Vδ1+γδ T cells was normal in the PBL of the NS patients receiving a similar dose of CsA. It is postulated that long-term antigenic stimulation by the graft, at low level, might be responsible for the altered composition of the γδ pool in the HTx patients. Since no donor HLA-specific γδ T cells have been detected, other ligands, such as heat shock proteins, may be involved.
Keywords: γδ cells, Vδ1/Vδ2 ratio, heart transplantation
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