Clonal Analysis of T Lymphocytes Infiltrating the Thyroid Gland in Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis

Abstract
T cells isolated from thyroid tissue and peripheral blood of 2 patients with Hashimoto’s thyroiditis were studied by a high cloning efficiency microculture technique. Clonal efficiences of 37 and 24% were obtained from thyroid-derived T cell cultures, while 40 and 90% efficiencies resulted from peripheral-blood-derived cultures. A prevalence of T4––/T8+ T cell clones were found in thyroid infiltrates. The functional analysis of the clones demonstrated significantly higher proportions of clones with cytolytic activity in a lectin-dependent assay in thyroid-derived microcultures, as compared to peripheral blood-derived ones. The proportion of clones displaying natural-killer-like activity was increased in 1 patient only. Cytolytic activity was displayed not only by all T4––/T8+, but also by several T4+/T8–– intrathyroid clones. Remarkable proportions of cytolytic clones were also able to release interleukin-2 upon phytohemagglutinin stimulation. Finally, the proportion of T cell clones able to release gamma-interferon following mitogen stimulation was significantly higher in thyroid- vs. peripheral-blood-derived microcultures. These results provide further data about the possible pathogenetical role of both regulatory and effector T lymphocytes in human autoimmune thyroiditis.

This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit: