Drug-specific T cells derived from patients with drug-induced allergic hepatitis.

Abstract
Drug-induced allergic hepatitis is a tissue-specific inflammatory disease caused by hypersensitivity to a particular drug. Although the frequency of drug-induced allergic hepatitis appears to increase in proportion to the medicine, the mechanism by which tissue specificity is determined is still to be elucidated. In this study, we established CD4+ T cell clones specific for particular drugs from patients with drug-induced allergic hepatitis accompanied with mild blood eosinophilia and analyzed the possible role of liver protein as a directing factor of liver-specific inflammatory reactions. All CD4+ T cell clones obtained from two patients with this disease proliferated in response to a combination of the particular drug plus liver specific protein (LSP), which consists of over 30 proteins. Some T cell clones were responsive to an antigenic conformation consisting of the 200-kDa glycoprotein (partly purified LSP), a component of LSP, plus the causal drug. In contrast, all CD4+ T cell clones from a patient with simple drug-induced eosinophilia responded to the causal drug in the absence of LSP and partly purified LSP. These data suggested that LSP or partly purified LSP of the appropriate Ag is the target that leads to liver-specific inflammation in drug-induced allergic hepatitis. Furthermore, T cell lines derived from patients with drug-induced allergic hepatitis and simple drug-induced eosinophilia produced large amounts of IL-5 after the appropriate antigenic stimulation, whereas CD4+ T cell clones from donors with a normal amount of peripheral blood eosinophils secreted a much less IL-5. Taken together, these results indicate that overproduction of IL-5 by the allergen-sensitized T cells may result in blood eosinophilia.

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