Intrathyroidal T Cell Clones from Patients with Autoimmune Thyroid Disease*
- 1 April 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by The Endocrine Society in Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism
- Vol. 64 (4) , 818-824
- https://doi.org/10.1210/jcem-64-4-818
Abstract
We cloned activated T cells from thyroid tissue of patients with autoimmune thyroid disease. After separation on 40% Percoll gradients, T cells were cultured for 2–7 days with T cell growth factor (interleukin 2; 20 U/mL) and cloned by limiting dilution (0.3 cells/well) in the presence of irradiated autologous peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PMC; 10,000/well) as feeder cells. Fifty-seven clones were successfully expanded and tested for reactivity, cytotoxicity, helper/suppressor function, and phenotype. In the reactivity assays clones were tested for responses to autologous and allogeneic PMC, thyroid cells, human thyroglobulin (hTg), and microsomal antigen. Two distinct patterns of functional T cell clones emerged from these characterization studies. Seventy-five percent of T cell clones recovered from Graves’ disease thyroid tissue (n = 21) were of helper-inducer (CD4+/4B4+) phenotype, and most were effective immunoglobulin helper clones. Fifty percent of Graves’ T cell clones responded to autologous PMC, and 33% had a proliferative response to autologous thyroid cells. No cytotoxic clones were derived from Graves’ thyroid tissue. By contrast, intrathyroidal T cell clones from patients with autoim-mune thyroiditis (n = 36) were 59% suppressor/cytotoxic (CD8+) phenotype, 17% suppressed immunoglobulin secretion, and 55% were cytotoxic to allogeneic blast cells. Fifty-five percent of clones also responded to autologous PMC, and one clone was nonspecifically autocytotoxic. In the thyroid antigen proliferation assays 11% of thyroiditis clones reacted to human thy-roglobulin, but none responded to microsomal antigen. Two clones were cytotoxic to autologous but not allogeneic thyroid cells. These data demonstrate that the majority of intrathyroidal T cells in autoimmune thyroid disease are autoreactive. However, small numbers of thyroid-specific T cell clones are present within the thyroid of such patients; they are principally helper-inducer T cells in Graves’ disease thyroid and cytotoxic T cells in autoimmune thyroiditis.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Human T-Cell Clones from Autoimmune Thyroid Glands: Specific Recognition of Autologous Thyroid CellsScience, 1985
- INSITU IMMUNE-COMPLEXES, LYMPHOCYTE SUBPOPULATIONS, AND HLA-DR-POSITIVE EPITHELIAL-CELLS IN HASHIMOTO THYROIDITIS1985
- Thyroglobulin-induced T-cell in vitro proliferation in Hashimoto's thyroiditis: Identification of the responsive subset and effect of monoclonal antibodies directed to Ia antigensClinical Immunology and Immunopathology, 1984
- Enzyme-linked immunosorbent microassay and hemagglutination compared for detection of thyroglobulin and thyroid microsomal autoantibodies.Clinical Chemistry, 1984
- CHARACTERIZATION OF LYMPHOID-CELLS IN THE THYROID OF PATIENTS WITH GRAVES-DISEASE1984
- Quantitative assessment of the pool size and subset distribution of cytolytic T lymphocytes within human resting or alloactivated peripheral blood T cell populations.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1983
- THYROID AUTOANTIBODY SYNTHESIS BY CULTURES OF THYROID AND PERIPHERAL-BLOOD LYMPHOCYTES .1. LYMPHOCYTE MARKERS AND RESPONSE TO POKEWEED MITOGEN1983
- CLONING OF FUNCTIONAL HUMAN LYMPHOCYTE-T BY LIMITING DILUTION - IMPACT OF FILLER CELLS AND INTERLEUKIN-2 SOURCES ON CLONING EFFICIENCIES1981
- Distribution of T-, B-, and thyroglobulin-binding lymphocytes infiltrating the gland in Graves' disease, Hashimoto's thyroiditis, and de Quervain's thyroiditisClinical Immunology and Immunopathology, 1978
- Microdroplet Testing for HLA-A, -B, -C, and -D Antigens: The Philip Levine Award LectureAmerican Journal of Clinical Pathology, 1978