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T cells in Rheumatoid Arthritis

Identification of the role of T cells and their interaction with other cell types remains a major challenge to our understanding of the pathogenesis of rheumatoid arthritis. In this study we have investigated the regulation of the response of T cells infiltrating the rheumatoid joint to IL-6. Furthermore we have investigated the level of T cell activation in the early stages of rheumatoid arthritis. Interleukin-6 is an important regulator of T cell differentiation and survival. It exerts its biological function by either directly binding to the complete IL-6 receptor consisting of CD126 CD130 or via transsignaling, when sIL6R-IL6 complexes bind to CD130. This study addresses the expression and regulation of these receptor components on the T cells infiltrating the rheumatoid joint. While compared to blood T cells, CD126 expression was found at low levels on synovial fluid and tissue T cells, expression of CD130 on synovial tissue T cells was comparable to that of blood T cells, with lower levels in synovial fluid T cells, both at protein and mRNA level. When exposed to sIL6R-IL6 complexes, tissue derived T cells responded with a higher level of STAT3 phosphorylation compared to cells incubated with IL-6, suggestive of transsignaling. High CD130 expression was demonstrable in T cells in the perivascular cuff area. Among a range of cytokines tested, IL-6 reduced CD126 and CD130 expression while IL-10, which is expressed at high levels in the perivascular infiltrate, induced expression of CD130. Taken together these data suggest that the inflammatory microenvironment maintains responsiveness to IL-6 transsignalling by cytokine driven CD130 expression on CD4 positive T cells. To address the question whether the role of T cells changes during the course of progression of RA, we analysed the expression of T cells activation markers on synovial fluid and peripheral blood T cells from patients at the very early stage of disease (within 3 months of disease onset) compared to patients with established or self resolving arthritis. Expression of CD69, CD71 and HLA-DR was upregulated on synovial fluid T cells compared to peripheral blood but there were no differences between the different groups of patients. Furthermore, we quantified the proportion of T cells expressing the invariant TCR Vα24Jα18 in synovial fluid and blood of the same groups of patients. We found a lower frequency of iNKT cells in the synovial fluid of very early arthritis patients compared to other patients. While this is a preliminary result, it suggests that there may be a role for these cells in the regulation of disease susceptibility.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:537293
Date January 2011
CreatorsHildalgo, Ester
PublisherUniversity of Birmingham
Source SetsEthos UK
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation
Sourcehttp://etheses.bham.ac.uk//id/eprint/1715/

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