Epstein-Barr virus antibodies in patients with ataxia-telangiectasia and other immunodeficiency diseases.
- 15 October 1981
- journal article
- Vol. 125 (8) , 845-9
Abstract
An unusual antibody response to the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) has been noted in patients with ataxia-telangiectasia. Of a group of 16 such patients 8 were found to have antibodies in their serum to the EBV viral capsid antigen (VCA), and 4 of them also had antibodies to the EBV early antigen (EA); antibodies to the nuclear antigen (EBNA), however, were absent in 3 of the 8. The antibody pattern persisted for more than 2 years in the patients available for follow-up study. In comparison, of 24 patients with various other immunodeficiency syndromes 9 were found to have EBV-VCA antibodies in their serum, but none of the 9 had EA antibodies and 3 lacked EBNA antibodies. Two other groups of subjects, all of whom had EBV-VCA and EBNA antibodies in their serum late after an EBV infection, were also studied; 82 had infectious mononucleosis and 55 were healthy and had no such history. EA antibodies were detected in 45 of the first group during the acute phase of the illness but persisted in only 6 of the 68 who were followed up for more than 2 years, and they were detected in only 7 of the second group.All eight lymphoblastoid cell lines established from the peripheral blood of the four patients with ataxia-telangiectasia who are still available for follow-up study express EBV-VCA, whereas most similar cell lines established from normal individuals express only EBNA. In two of these patients cell-mediated immunity, as assessed from lymphocyte transformation induced by mitogens, was markedly decreased but autologous cell-mediated immune regression of EBV-induced transformation of B (bone-marrow-derived)-lymphocytes was normal. The percentage of T (thymus-derived)-helper cells was greatly decreased in two of the three patients in whom it was measured, and the percentage of T-suppressor cells was greatly increased in one of them, but the percentage of total T-lymphocytes was within normal limits in all three.The possible significance of these findings - in particular, the persistence of EA antibodies and the diminished restriction of expression of EA - in the late development of tumours after an EBV infection in patients with ataxia-telangiectasia deserves careful attention. Finally, the apparent correlation between immunoglobulin deficiency and poor or absent EBNA antibody response warrants further study.This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
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