You are on page 1of 9

CDR3 Spectratyping Analysis of the TCR Repertoire in Myasthenia Gravis

This information is current as of April 29, 2012 Yoh Matsumoto, Hidenori Matsuo, Hiroshi Sakuma, Il-Kwon Park, Yukiko Tsukada, Kuniko Kohyama, Takayuki Kondo, Satoshi Kotorii and Noritoshi Shibuya J Immunol 2006;176;5100-5107

References

This article cites 37 articles, 16 of which can be accessed free at: http://www.jimmunol.org/content/176/8/5100.full.html#ref-list-1
Downloaded from www.jimmunol.org on April 29, 2012

Article cited in: http://www.jimmunol.org/content/176/8/5100.full.html#related-urls Subscriptions Permissions Email Alerts Information about subscribing to The Journal of Immunology is online at http://www.jimmunol.org/subscriptions Submit copyright permission requests at http://www.aai.org/ji/copyright.html Receive free email-alerts when new articles cite this article. Sign up at http://www.jimmunol.org/etoc/subscriptions.shtml/

The Journal of Immunology is published twice each month by The American Association of Immunologists, Inc., 9650 Rockville Pike, Bethesda, MD 20814-3994. Copyright 2006 by The American Association of Immunologists, Inc. All rights reserved. Print ISSN: 0022-1767 Online ISSN: 1550-6606.

The Journal of Immunology

CDR3 Spectratyping Analysis of the TCR Repertoire in Myasthenia Gravis1


Yoh Matsumoto,2* Hidenori Matsuo, Hiroshi Sakuma,* Il-Kwon Park,* Yukiko Tsukada,* Kuniko Kohyama,* Takayuki Kondo, Satoshi Kotorii, and Noritoshi Shibuya
Because myasthenia gravis (MG) is an autoimmune disease mediated by Abs specic for the acetylcholine receptor, helper T cells play a role in Ab production. In this study, we have performed large-scale cross-sectional and longitudinal TCR studies by CDR3 spectratyping using PBL and thymus tissues from MG patients. We found that there was no preferential usage of any particular TCR -chains that was identical among MG patients. However, the longitudinal study clearly demonstrated that one or more TCR V expansions persisted frequently in MG patients. Importantly, persistent TCR expansions correlated with clinical severity and high anti-acetylcholine receptor Ab titer. Finally, examinations of T cells expressing CXCR5, i.e., follicular B-helper T cells, revealed that spectratype expansions in MG patients were detected mainly in the CD4 CXCR5 T cell populations, whereas CD8 T cells were the major source of clonal expansion in healthy subjects. These ndings suggest that persistent clonal expansions of T cells in MG patients are associated with the development and maintenance of MG. Close examination of pathogenic T cells in MG provides useful information to elucidate the pathogenesis and to estimate the disease status. The Journal of Immunology, 2006, 176: 5100 5107. yasthenia gravis (MG)3 is an autoimmune disorder characterized by weakness and fatigability of skeletal muscles caused by Abs against the acetylcholine receptor (AChR). The Abs bind to AChR at the postsynaptic membrane, leading to receptor destruction and disturbance in neuromuscular transmission (1). Although it is clear that Abs against AChR in most patients are nal effectors, T cells play an important role in helping the Ab production in MG. Another characteristic feature of MG is abnormalities in the thymus. Lymphofollicular hyperplasia of the thymic medulla occurs in 65% and thymoma is found in 15% of MG patients (2). Furthermore, it was demonstrated that AChR, a key molecule for the development of MG, is expressed in the thymus (3) and that thymi showing hyperplasia or with thymoma generate more T cells, including AChR-specic T cells (4 6). On the basis of these ndings, it is generally believed that anti-AChR Abs are generated with the help of T cells in the thymus of MG patients. Thus, characterization of the AChR-specic T cells, especially their TCR usage, is essential for the elucidation of the pathomechanisms of MG and for the development of specic immunotherapy for the disease.

Downloaded from www.jimmunol.org on April 29, 2012

*Department of Molecular Neuropathology, Tokyo Metropolitan Institute for Neuroscience, Fuchu, Tokyo, Japan; Division of Clinical Research and Department of Neurology, National Hospital Organization, Nagasaki Medical Center of Neurology, and Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Nagasaki University Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, Kawatana, Nagasaki, Japan Received for publication October 27, 2005. Accepted for publication February 2, 2006. The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked advertisement in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact. This study was supported in part by Grants-in-Aid from the Ministry of Education, Japan and from the Neuroimmunological Disorders Research Committee of the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare of Japan.
2 1

To date, analysis of the TCR usage by pathogenic T cells in MG patients has revealed extremely controversial results. CohenKaminsky and colleagues (7) showed that V 5.1-positive T cells in the thymus were slightly increased in MG patients compared with control subjects (8). In contrast, other groups observed oligoclonal expansion of V 4, V 6, V 12, or V 13 in MG patients (9 11). Moreover, Infante et al. (12) found a diverse TCR repertoire with no preferential usage of particular TCRs in MG patients. Although the precise reasons for these discrepancies remain unclear, they may reect the difference in the materials used and the methods for the TCR analysis. In a previous study of multiple sclerosis (MS) patients by CDR3 spectratyping analysis (13), we have demonstrated persistent or transient oligoclonal expansions of V 5.2 in the PBL and/or cerebrospinal uid T cells in 70% of the patients studied longitudinally but only in 30% of MS patients in a cross-sectional study. These results strongly suggest that a longitudinal study is essential for TCR repertoire analyses. In this study, we have performed both cross-sectional and longitudinal studies using PBL and thymus tissues from MG patients and PBL from healthy subjects. It revealed no preferential usage of TCRs that recurred in MG patients in the cross-sectional study. However, persistent oligoclonal expansions of V s, which differed from patient to patient, were detected in the longitudinal study. Importantly, they correlated with clinical severity and high anti-AChR Ab titer. These ndings suggest that activated and clonally expanded T cells detected by CDR3 spectratyping are associated with the development of MG and provide useful information to elucidate its pathogenesis and to develop tailor-made immunotherapy.

Materials and Methods


Patients and healthy subjects
Thirty-eight MG patients, 8 males and 30 females (mean age, 57.9 15.5 years; range, 25 80 years), attending the Departments of Neurology, Nagasaki Medical Center of Neurology, or Nagasaki University Hospital were included in the present study. All subjects consent was obtained, and the study was approved by the Institute Review Board. The diagnosis of MG was made on the basis of the clinical presentation and conrmed by laboratory examinations, such as repetitive nerve stimulation tests,
0022-1767/06/$02.00

Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Yoh Matsumoto, Department of Molecular Neuropathology, Tokyo Metropolitan Institute for Neuroscience, Musashidai 2-6 Fuchu, Tokyo 183-8526, Japan. E-mail address: matyoh@tmin.ac.jp

3 Abbreviations used in this paper: MG, myasthenia gravis; AchR, acetylcholine receptor; MS, multiple sclerosis.

Copyright 2006 by The American Association of Immunologists, Inc.

The Journal of Immunology


anti-AChR, and computerized tomography images of mediastinum. For clinical assessment of the severity of the disease, the Myasthenia Gravis Foundation of America clinical classication (from class I: purely ocular disease to class V: dened by intubation) (14) and MG-activities of daily living (15) were used. Muscle-specic tyrosine kinase-seropositive MG patients were not included in this study. Forty-four healthy volunteers, 21 males and 23 females (mean age, 40.1 17.6 years; range, 22 88 years) who had no episodes of common cold or inuenza infection within the previous month were examined as controls. Ten milliliters of heparinized blood was drawn from patients and control subjects, and PBL was isolated using the density gradient method. Thymus tissues (n 9) of MG patients were obtained by thymectomy. Six of them showed hyperplasia and three were uninvolved thymus adjacent to a thymoma.

5101
of the samples was applied to a 6% acrylamide sequencing gel. Gels were run at 30 W for 3 h 30 min at 50C. Then, the uorescence-labeled DNA prole on the gel was directly recorded using an FMBIO uorescence image analyser (Hitachi). Spectratype expansion was evaluated by visual inspection and density analysis of the image using software attached to the uorescence image analyzer as shown in Fig. 1, C and D, and graded into two categories: 1)Oligoclonal pattern, appearing as an increase of the density and thickness of one band within a normal spectratype prole (distortion of the Gaussian distribution) (18); and 2) Monoclonal one, with a marked increase of the density and thickness of one band with faint or no additional spectratypes (18). We tested for contaminations by the reagents used in PCR every 10 PCR analyses by doing PCR without templates; if present, all reagents used and results obtained during the period were discarded.

Cross-sectional and longitudinal studies


The cross-sectional study was performed as described above. When the same person was examined more than once, the results of the rst examination were included in the cross-sectional study. The longitudinal study was performed on 22 MG patients and 17 healthy subjects, and the results obtained from patients and subjects with sufcient follow-up periods were selected for analysis. The spectratype expansion pattern obtained in the longitudinal study was classied into the three categories: 1) heterogeneous, where no particular spectratype expansion was observed in multiple examinations in which the normal pattern was included frequently; 2) persistent, where spectratype expansion of particular V s were constantly observed during the observation period; and 3) intermediate, where a particular spectratype expansion was occasionally observed.

Sequencing of PCR products


cDNA isolated from spectratypes of interest on the acrylamide gel was reamplied with V and unlabeled C primers to remove the uorescence attached to the primer used for CDR3 spectratyping. This process was essential for cloning. To avoid biased amplication of a particular TCR clone, PCR was performed for only ve cycles. Then, PCR products were ligated into pT-Adv vector and cloned using the AdvanTAge PCR Cloning Kit (Clontech Laboratories) according to the manufacturers instructions. The plasmid DNA was then sequenced using Cy5-labeled C primer and Thermo Sequenase Fluorescent Labeled Primer Cycle Sequencing Kit on an ALFexpress DNA sequencer (Pharmacia Biotech). CDR3 length is dened as a region starting from an amino acid residue after the CASS sequence of most V segments and ending before the GXG box in the J region, as described previously (19).

Downloaded from www.jimmunol.org on April 29, 2012

cDNA synthesis and PCR amplication


RNA was extracted from PBL using RNAzol B (Biotecx Laboratories). cDNA was then synthesized by reverse transcription using ReverTra Ace (Toyoba) and amplied in a thermal cycler (PerkinElmer) using primer pairs for TCR. Primers for Va1-24 were the same as those used in a previous study (16). Ca primer was labeled with Cy-5 or rhodamine or was left unlabeled.

Isolation and TCR analysis of CXCR5-positive T cells


Because the majority of CXCR5-expressing cells were CD4 T and B cells (20), we decided to examine CD4 , CD8 , and CD4 CXCR5 T cells. The number of CD8 CXCR5 T cells was too small for the analysis. CD4 CXCR5 T cells were isolated using an AutoMACS (Miltenyi Biotec) following the manufacturers instructions. In brief, we removed adherent cells and some B cells from MG and control PBL by negative selection with 1F5 (anti-CD20) plus LM2/1.6.11 (anti-Mac-1) followed by anti-mouse IgG-microbeads (Miltenyi Biotec). The cells were then positively (the CD8 T cell population) or negatively (the CD4 T cell population) selected with OKT8. Finally, CD4 T cells were further separated into CD4 CXCR5 and CD4 CXCR5 T cells with anti-CXCR5 mAb

CDR3 spectratyping
CDR3 spectratyping was performed as described previously (17). cDNA was amplied with V -specic and rhodamine-labeled C primers, and undiluted or diluted PCR products were added to an equal volume of formamide/dye loading buffer and heated at 94C for 2 min. Two microliters

FIGURE 1. CDR3 spectratyping proles of PBL showing the normal spectratype pattern (A) in a healthy subject and spectratype expansion (B) in a MG patient. In the normal pattern, each V shows a Gaussian distribution without any spectratype expansion (A). In contrast, this MG patient exhibits expansion of several spectratypes indicated by arrows (B). The proles of V 4, V 8, and V 20 spectratypes of a healthy subject (A) and V 3, V 8, and V 14 spectratypes of a MG patient (B) revealed by the density analysis are shown in C and D, respectively.

5102
(DakoCytomation) and anti-mouse IgG-microbeads. Three populations, CD4 T, CD8 T, and CD4 CXCR5 T cells, were subjected to the TCR analysis. We determined the purity of isolated cells by ow cytometry after incubation of the cells with FITC-labeled anti-mouse IgG and conrmed that each population was 90% pure.

TCR REPERTOIRE ANALYSIS IN MG V 9 spectratype expansions seemed to be more frequent compared with other V s, but there was no signicant difference. In MG patients, 29 cases (77.3%) showed the expansion of one or more spectratypes (Table I). Although these were more frequent in the MG patients than in healthy subjects, they did not show preferential usage of a common V , unlike MS. We also examined nine thymus samples from MG patients. Histological examination demonstrated hyperplasia in six cases and normal looking tissues taken adjacent to thymoma in three cases. Interestingly, they all showed the normal spectratype pattern without any spectratype expansion (Fig. 2). Longitudinal study of selected MG patients We have currently performed longitudinal studies on 22 MG patients and 17 healthy subjects. Among them, we selected 16 MG and 11 control cases; we were able to examine MG patients for more than 2 years and healthy subjects for 1 year (Table II and Table IV). Representative proles obtained from MG patients are illustrated in Fig. 3, and all of the results are summarized in Table II. Longitudinal studies of oligoclonal expansions of TCR revealed three behavior patterns. 1) In persistent type, expansions were detected in all samples, as illustrated in Fig. 3 and Table II. In Fig. 3, V 9 and V 11 expansion persisted over 1 year and 5 mo. Nine of 16 patients showed this type of spectratype expansion during the observation periods (patients 4, 5, 7, 8, 10, 11, 12, 13, and 15 in Table II). 2) Heterogeneous type ranged from a normal pattern to one of short-lived expansions (patients 1, 2, 3, 14, and 16 in Table II). 3) In intermediate type, a particular spectratype expansion was intermittently observed (patients 6 and 9 in Table II). We also examined HLA-DR haplotypes of MG patients subjected for the longitudinal study as shown in Table II ( fourth column from the left). As far as we examined, there was no correlation between the HLA haplotype and TCR V usage. CDR3 sequences of TCR clones derived from expanded spectratypes in MG In a series of previous studies in MS (13) and its animal models (17, 22), we demonstrated that persistently expanded spectratypes

Results
Cross-sectional study of MG patients and healthy individuals by CDR3 spectratyping We rst performed a cross-sectional study of 38 MG patients and 44 healthy subjects to characterize the TCR repertoire in MG. Of 38 patients, six cases of the ocular type, 15 cases of MG with thymoma, 13 cases of the early onset, and two cases of the late onset were included. Our previous studies on neuroimmunological disorders revealed that a particular type of V TCR, i.e., V 5.2, showed clonal expansion more frequently in MS (13), whereas there was no preferential usage of TCR in Guillain-Barre syn drome (21). When multiple examinations were performed on the same individuals, the results obtained in the rst examination were included in the cross-sectional study. Representative spectratyping proles are shown in Fig. 1 and the results summarized in Table I. Nearly half of controls (46.5%) showed a normal spectratype pattern (Fig. 1A). The density analysis revealed unskewed Gaussian distributions (Fig. 1C). In contrast, only a quarter of the MG patients showed the normal pattern ( p 0.05) (Table I). Remaining control and MG samples contained one or more expanded spectratypes (arrows in Fig. 1B). The distorted Gaussian distributions (V 3 and V 8 in Fig. 1D) and the monoclonal pattern (V 14 in Fig. 1D) were detected in the density analysis. In healthy subjects,

Downloaded from www.jimmunol.org on April 29, 2012

Table I. The frequency of V expansion in healthy subjects and patients with MGa
Healthy Subjects Incidence (%)b Patients with MG Incidence (%)b

V Expansion

Absent (normal pattern) 1 2 3 4 5.1 5.2 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 No. of subjects examined

20 (46.5) 0 3 3 3 1 2 2 1 4 7 (29.2) 2 2 2 1 2 1 2 0 1 0 1 2 4 2 1 44

9 (23.7)c 3 1 3 2 1 1 3 2 4 7 (28.6) 1 6 (20.7) 1 3 6 (20.7) 0 8 (27.6) 0 2 0 3 0 2 7 (28.6) 1 38

a The number of spectratypes showing oligoclonal expansion is summarized in healthy subjects and MG patients. A total of 49 expansions from 44 controls and 67 expansions from MG patients are shown. b Percentages of each V expansion (the number of samples showing a particular spectratype expansion per total number of samples with any spectratype expansion). Samples with a normal spectratype pattern are not included in percentage calculation. c The incidence of the normal spectratype pattern was signicantly lower in MG patients than in healthy subjects ( p 0.05 by 2 test).

FIGURE 2. CDR3 spectratyping of the thymus tissue. All six thymus tissues examined showed the normal spectratyping pattern without any expansion.

The Journal of Immunology


Table II. Clinical characteristics and spectratyping analysis of MG patientsa

5103

Downloaded from www.jimmunol.org on April 29, 2012

N.E., Not examined; N, the normal spectratype pattern; 124, the spectratype expansion of each V .

represent expansions of particular TCR clones. To test whether that also applies in MG, we did a similar analysis using PBL from patient 7 (Table II), which showed V 11 expansion over 2 years in 4 of 5 examinations. The expanded spectratypes were cut from

the gel, and cDNA was extracted, cloned, and sequenced. As clearly demonstrated in Table III, we found a TCR clone with the CASS-ATPNEQFF-GPG sequence in the CDR3 throughout the 2 years. Evidently, it represents an expansion of a single T cell clone.

5104

TCR REPERTOIRE ANALYSIS IN MG

Downloaded from www.jimmunol.org on April 29, 2012

FIGURE 3. Longitudinal studies of a MG patient showing the persistent pattern. Multiple examinations revealed that V 9 and V 11 expansions (AC) indicated by arrows persisted over 1.5 years. Spectratype expansions other than V 9 and V 11 are not marked. This patient corresponds to Patient 8 in Table II.

Spectratype expansion found in healthy subjects was unstable and did not last for a long period We performed similar longitudinal studies in elderly healthy subjects who occasionally show clonal T cell expansion (2325) to look for differences from those in our MG patients. As can be seen in Table IV, persistent spectratype expansions were found in subjects in their seventies and transient ones in their fties and sixties. These TCR expansions are thought to occur due to exogenous Ag stimulation/infections and to reduce the T cell diversity (26). Interestingly, one volunteer (37 years old) residing in the community had a persistent cough when rst tested (not included in Table IV). As shown in Fig. 4A, there were V 2, 3, 6, 14, 20, and 24 expansions at that time point. Three months later when the cough had disappeared, the number of expanded spectratypes had reduced markedly (Fig. 4B). This change strongly suggests that spectratype expansions in middle-aged to elderly subjects can be elicited by exogenous Ag stimulation and may be short-lived. We also tested for correlations between spectratype pattern and MG severity (Table V) or anti-AChR Ab titer. The persistent pattern was observed more frequently in the patients with grade III-V than in patients with grade I-II and controls ( p 0.02) (Table V). With regard to anti-AChR Abs, the persistent pattern seemed to be found more frequently in patients with the titers above 10 nM

rather than below 10 nM (data not shown). Taken together, they suggest that clonal expansions of particular V s correlate with disease severity and are thus involved in pathogenesis of MG.

Analysis of CXCR5-positive T cells provides useful information for identication of pathogenic T cells in MG These longitudinal studies on total T cells may indicate persistent TCR clonal expansions in autoimmune responses in MG patients. However, some persistent clonal expansions in healthy subjects were indistinguishable from those found in MG patients. To pursue that further, we spectratyped CD4 CXCR5 T cells isolated from healthy subjects and MG patients (Table VI). Because these T cells reportedly act as helpers for follicular B cells (20), they might play an essential role in anti-AChR Ab production and in thymic hyperplasia, a classic sample of lymphoid neogenesis in autoimmune disorders. As shown in Table VI, the spectratype expansions found in three healthy subjects were mainly restricted to CD8 T cells, as reported previously (26, 27), whereas in 2 of 3 cases CD4 and CD4 CXCR5 T cells showed normal spectratype patterns. Characteristically, in most MG patients, spectratype expansions found in the CD4 T cell population were also detected in CD4 CXCR5 T cells. These ndings clearly demonstrate that

Table III. Amino acid and nucleotide sequences of the CDR3 of V 11 TCRs extracted from patient 7a
Sample Follow-up V (N)D(N) J Frequency (%)

4129 4148 4609 4846


a b c

0 mob 6 moc 1 year 2 years

CASS CASS CACS CASS CASS CASS CASS

A L A A A A A A

T S T T T T T T

P V H P P P H P

N Y N N N N N N

E A E E E E E E

Q V Q Q R Q Q Q

F F F F F F F F

F F F F F F F F

GPG GDG GPG GPG GPG GPG GPG GPG

11/13 (85) 1/13 (8) 1/13 (8) 2/3 (66) 1/3 (33) 9/10 (90) 1/10 (10) 8/8 (100)

PCR products were extracted from V 11 spectratype showing expansion, and reamplied and the CDR3 were sequenced after cloning. The rst examination in the longitudinal examination. Six months after the rst examination.

The Journal of Immunology


Table IV. Longitudinal spectratyping analysis of healthy subjectsa

5105

Downloaded from www.jimmunol.org on April 29, 2012

N, The normal spectratype pattern; 124, the spectratype expansion of each V .

the clonal expansions of T cells in MG patients are different from those in healthy subjects.

Discussion
A large body of evidence indicates that the nal effectors in MG are autoantibodies directed against targets at the neuromuscular junction (28, 29). Moreover, Ag-specic Th cells are essential for the generation of myasthogenic autoantibodies and for the development of experimental autoimmune MG (30, 31). Hence, there have been several attempts to characterize MG-associated T cells. However, the TCR usage of pathogenic T cells is very controversial. Most studies used either FACS analysis with anti-TCR mAbs or CDR3 spectratyping. By FACS analysis using PBL or thymic cells, V 5.1- (7), V 12- (9), and V 13- (11) positive T cells were reported to be signicantly increased in MG patients. In our experience, however, this method is not sufciently sensitive for TCR analysis of pathogenic T cells in autoimmune diseases. In

EAE induced in Lewis rats by immunization with myelin basic protein, several lines of evidence indicate that encephalitogenic T cells mainly use V 8.2. Clonal expansion of this cell type was detectable by CDR3 spectratyping in the lymphoid organ at the very early stages of the disease (32). In sharp contrast, by ow cytometry, this expansion could not be detected in the lymphoid organ throughout EAE (33). V 8.2 expansion was only detectable at the peak of EAE in the CNS, where V 8.2-positive cells accounted for 20% (33). This is mainly because the numbers of circulating encephalitogenic T cells are too small for detection by FACS analysis. So far, two CDR3 spectratyping studies have focused on the TCR repertoire in MG. Navneetham et al. reported that V 4 and V 6 were used signicantly more in MG patients than in controls (10). In contrast, Infante et al. (12) found no signicant difference in the TCR repertoire between MG patients and control subjects. The inconsistencies between these two reports and between these reports and our results may be largely attributable to the number of patients and controls and to the presence or

5106

TCR REPERTOIRE ANALYSIS IN MG

FIGURE 4. CDR3 spectratyping prole of one of control subject during persistent cough (A) and after it subsided (B). A volunteer had persistent cough when he was rst examined by CDR3 spectratyping. As shown in A, there were V 2, -3, -6, -14, -20, and -24 expansions at that time point. Three months later when the symptoms had disappeared, expanded spectratypes were markedly reduced (B).

Downloaded from www.jimmunol.org on April 29, 2012

Table V. Classication of the spectratyping pattern in the follow-up study of MG patients and healthy subjects
MG Patients Classication Total Grade IIIVa Healthy Subjectsa

Persistent Intermediate Heterogeneous Total

9 (56%) 2 (13%) 5 (31%) 16

7 (78%) 1 (11%) 1 (11%) 9

2 (18.2%) 2 (18.2%) 7 (63.6%) 11

a The numbers of Grade IIIV MG patients showing the persistent pattern and healthy subjects showing the heterogeneous pattern are signicantly higher than that of their counterparts ( p 0.02 by 2 test).

absence of the longitudinal examination. In previous studies, the number of cases for the analysis was too small, and each case was examined only once. We now summarize intriguing ndings from the large-scale cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses of PBL and thymus taken from MG patients and healthy subjects by CDR3 spectratyping. First, TCR spectratype expansions were more frequently found in MG patients than healthy subjects ( p 0.05), though without preferential usage of any particular TCR -chains. Second, the longitudinal study clearly demonstrated persistent TCR V expansions more frequently in the patients with severe MG. Although persistent spectratype expansions varied from patient to patient, they correlated with severe clinical status and high anti-AChR Ab

titers. Finally, examination of CXCR5 T cells may help to focus on pathogenic Th cells in MG. In MG patients, spectratype expansions were found in CD4 and CD4 CXCR5 T cells, whereas spectratype expansion seen in healthy subjects was observed in CD8 T cells. We have tried to exclude the possibility that preceding infection occurred in MG patients may induce spectratype expansion unrelated to the MG pathogenesis as follows. For this purpose, we have checked all of the patients subjected for the longitudinal study whether they have clinical signs and laboratory data suggesting infection. All of the patients did not have fever and increased white blood cells at the time of spectratype examinations. Only patient 12 at the second examination exhibited slightly increased C-reactive protein. However, it is unlikely that this would modulate the results of CDR3 spectratyping, because the results at the second examination were almost the same as those obtained in other examinations. Taken together, the present study strongly suggests that T cells showing persistent clonal expansion are involved in the development and maintenance of MG. It should be noted that all nine thymus tissues, including six hyperplasmic thymi, exhibited normal spectratype patterns. Although the thymus has previously been implicated as a possible site of the disease origin ( 75% of patients have thymic abnormalities) (1), its role in MG is still a mystery (29). Our ndings from CDR3 spectratyping suggest either that the thymus includes no clonally expanded pathogenic T cells or that their frequency is too low to detect even using this method. Importantly, 30% of

Table VI. CDR3 spectratyping analysis of CD4 , CD8 , and CD4 CXCR5 T cells isolated from healthy subjects and MG patients
CD4 T Cells CD8 T Cells CD4 CXCR5 T Cells

Healthy subjects 1 2 3 MG patients 1 2 3 4


a

Na 8 , 24 Na 2 , 5.1 , 6 , 11 , 16 1 , 3 , 5.2 , 9 11

1 , 6 , 16 8 , 24 11 , 16 9 11 , 13 , 6 , 13 3 ,6 , 11 , 12 16 , 20 , 22 , 23 , 14 , 20 , 21 , 8 , 11 , 15

Na 8 Na 2 , 11 11 , 16 3 , 5.2 , 6 , 9 11

N, Normal spectratype pattern.

The Journal of Immunology MG patients do not show clinical improvement after thymectomy (34). Collectively, it is possible that the thymus plays a role in exacerbation of the disease in some, but not all, MG patients. In this regard, recent progress in elucidating the mechanism of lymphoid neogenesis provides useful information for the understanding of the relationship between thymic abnormalities and MG. As reviewed by Weyand et al. (35), ectopic germinal centers are formed in several organs in the presence of autoantigens, CXCL13-producing tissue cells, follicular dendritic cells, and B and T cells. Although it remains to be elucidated whether all of these factors are present in the thymus of MG patients, it is possible because AChRs are found in the thymic myoid cells (36). In a series of reports, Berrih-Aknin and colleagues (7, 37) have insisted that V 5.1-positive T cells are pathogenic in MG, and that circulating anti-V 5.1 Abs may regulate the excess of pathogenic V 5.1-positive T cells (8). This conclusion was drawn on the basis that by FACS analysis, V 5.1-positive T cells were slightly but signicantly increased in number in the thymus of MG patients. However, this nding was not conrmed by other groups using ow cytometry and CDR3 spectratyping. Similarly, we have not observed signicant V 5.1 clonal expansion in this study. Taking all these ndings into consideration, it can be said that the conclusion by Berrih-Aknin et al. (7, 37) remains unestablished. In summary, we were able to identify disease-associated and clonally expanded T cells in patients with MG by CDR3 spectratyping. Close examination of pathogenic T cells in MG provides useful information to elucidate the pathogenesis and to estimate the disease status.

5107
gravis: prevalence and characterization of expanded T cell populations. Clin. Exp. Immunol. 113: 456 464. Infante, A. J., J. Billargeon, E. Kraig, L. Lott, C. Jackson, G. J. Haemmerling, R. Raji, and C. David. 2003. Evidence of a diverse T cell receptor repertoire for acetylcholine receptor, the autoantigen of myasthenia gravis. J. Autoimmun. 21: 167174. Matsumoto, Y., W. K. Yoon, Y. Jee, K. Fujihara, T. Misu, S. Sato, I. Nakashima, and Y. Itoyama. 2003. Complementarity-determining region 3 spectratyping analysis of the T cell repertoire in multiple sclerosis. J. Immunol. 170: 4846 4853. Jaretzki, A. I., R. J. Barohn, R. M. Ernstoff, H. J. Kaminski, J. C. Keesey, A. S. Penn, and D. B. Sanders. 2000. Myasthenia gravis: recommendations for clinical research standards. Neurology 55: 16 23. Wolfe, G. I., L. Herbelin, S. P. Nations, B. Foster, W. W. Bryan, and R. J. Barohn. 1999. Myasthenia gravis activities of daily living prole. Neurology 52: 14871489. Choi, Y., B. Kotzin, L. Herron, J. Callahan, P. Marrack, and J. Kappler. 1989. Interaction of Staphylococcus aureus toxin superantigen with human T cells. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 86: 9841 8945. Kim, G., N. Tanuma, T. Kojima, K. Kohyama, Y. Suzuki, Y. Kawazoe, and Y. Matsumoto. 1998. CDR3 size spectratyping and sequencing of spectratypederived T cell receptor of spinal cord T cells in autoimmune encephalomyelitis. J. Immunol. 160: 509 513. Maini, M. K., L. R. Wedderburn, F. C. Hall, A. Wack, G. Casorati, and P. C. L. Beverley. 1998. A comparison of two techniques for the molecular tracking of specic T-cell responses: CD4 human T-cell clones persist in a stable hierarchy but at a lower frequency than in the CD8 population. Immunology 94: 529 535. Rock, E. P., P. R. Sibbald, M. M. Davis, and Y.-H. Chien. 1994. CDR3 length in antigen-specic immune receptors. J. Exp. Med. 179: 323328. Moser, B., P. Schaerli, and P. Loetscher. 2002. CXCR5 T cells: follicular homing takes center stage in T-helper-cell responses. Trends Immunol. 23: 250 254. Koga, M., N. Yuki, Y. Tsukada, K. Hirata, and Y. Matsumoto. 2003. CDR3 spectratyping analysis of the T cell receptor repertoire in Guillain-Barre and Fisher syndromes. J. Neuroimmunol. 141: 112117. Matsumoto, Y., Y. Jee, and M. Sugisaki. 2000. Successful TCR-based immunotherapy for autoimmune myocarditis with DNA vaccines after rapid identication of pathogenic TCR. J. Immunol. 164: 2248 2254. Schwab, R., P. Szabo, J. S. Manavalan, M. E. Weksler, D. N. Posnett, C. Pannetier, P. Kourilsky, and J. Even. 1997. Expanded CD4 and CD8 T cell clones in elderly humans. J. Immunol. 158: 4493 4499. Monteiro, J., R. Hingorani, I. Choi, J. Silver, R. Pergolizzi, and P. K. Gregersen. 1995. Oligoclonality in the human CD8 T cell repertoire in normal subjects and monozygotic twins: implications for studies of infection and autoimmune diseases. Mol. Med. 1: 614 624. Khan, N., N. Shariff, M. Cobbold, R. Bruton, J. A. Ainsworth, A. J. Sinclair, L. Nayak, and P. A. H. Moss. 2002. Cytomegalovirus seropositivity drives the CD8 T cell repertoire toward greater clonality in healthy elderly individuals. J. Immunol. 169: 1984 1992. LeMaoult, J., I. Messaoudi, J. S. Manavalan, H. Potvin, D. Nikolich-Zugich, R. Dyall, P. Szabo, M. E. Weksler, and J. Nikolich-Zugich. 2000. Age-related dysregulation in CD8 T cell homeostasis: kinetics of a diversity loss. J. Immunol. 165: 23672373. Messaoudi, I., J. Lemaoult, J. A. Guevara-Patino, B. M. Metzner, and J. Nikolich-Zugich. 2004. Age-related CD8 T cell clonal expansions constrict CD8 T cell repertoire and have the potential to impair immune defense. J. Exp. Med. 200: 13471358. Lindstrom, J., D. Sehlton, and Y. Fujii. 1988. Myasthenia gravis. Adv. Immunol. 42: 233284. Vincent, A. 2002. Unravelling the pathogenesis of myasthenia gravis. Nat. Rev. Immunol. 2: 797 804. Fujii, Y., and J. Lindstrom. 1988. Regulation of antibody production by helper T cell clones in experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis. J. Immunol. 141: 33613369. Zhang, G., B. Xiao, M. Barkhiet, P. van der Meide, H. Wigzell, H. Link, and T. Olsson. 1996. Both CD4 and CD8 T cells are essential to induce experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis. J. Exp. Med. 184: 349 356. Sakuma, H., K. Kohyama, Y. Jee, and Y. Matsumoto. 2004. Tracking of V 8.2positive encephalitogenic T cells by CDR3 spectratyping and subsequent Southern blot hybridization in Lewis rats after neuroantigen sensitization. J. Immunol. 173: 4516 4522. Tsuchida, M., Y. Matsumoto, H. Hirahara, H. Hanawa, K. Tomiyama, and T. Abo. 1993. Preferential distribution of V 8.2-positive cells in the central nervous system of rats with myelin basic protein-induced autoimmune encephalomyelitis. Eur. J. Immunol. 23: 2399 2406. Tellez-Zenteno, J. F., J. M. Remes-Troche, G. Garcia-Ramos, B. Estanol, and J. Garduno-Espinoza. 2001. Prognostic factors of thymectomy in patients with myasthenia gravis: a cohort of 132 patients. Eur. Neurol. 46: 171177. Weyand, C. M., P. J. Kurtin, and J. J. Goronzy. 2001. Ectopic lymphoid organogenesis: a fast track for autoimmunity. Am. J. Pathol. 159: 787793. Schluep, M., N. Willcox, A. Vincent, G. K. Dhoot, and J. Newsom-Davis. 1987. Acetylcholine receptors in human thymic myoid cells in situ: and immunohistochemical study. Ann. Neurol. 22: 212222. Jambou, F., W. Zhang, M. Menestrier, I. Klingel-Schmitt, O. Michel, S. Caillat-Zucman, A. Aissaoui, L. Landemarre, S. Berrih-Aknin, and S. Cohen-Kaminsky. 2003. Circulating regulatory anti-T cell receptor antibodies in patients with myasthenia gravis. J. Clin. Invest. 112: 265274.

12.

13.

14.

15.

16.

17.

18.

19. 20. 21.

Downloaded from www.jimmunol.org on April 29, 2012

22.

23.

Acknowledgments
We are grateful to Dr. Masakatsu Motomura (First Department of Internal Medicine, Nagasaki University, School of Medicine, Nagasaki, Japan) for providing information about MG patients.
24.

25.

Disclosures
The authors have no nancial conict of interest.
26.

References
1. Drachman, D. B. 1994. Myasthenia gravis. N. Engl. J. Med. 330: 17971810. 2. Engel, A. G. 1992. Myasthenia gravis and myasthenic syndromes. In Myopathies, Vol. 62. L. P. Rowland and S. Dimauro, eds. Elsevier Science Publishers, Amsterdam, pp. 391 455. 3. Wheatley, L. M., D. Urso, K. Tumas, J. Maltzman, E. Loh, and A. I. Levinson. 1992. Molecular evidence for the expression of nicotinic acetylcholine receptor -chain in the mouse thymus. J. Immunol. 148: 31053109. 4. Nagvekar, N., A. M. Moody, P. Moss, I. Roxanis, J. Curnow, D. Beeson, N. Pantic, J. Newsom-Davis, A. Vincent, and N. Willcox. 1998. A pathogenetic role for the thymoma in myasthenia gravis: autosensitization of IL-4- producing T cell clones recognizing extracellular acetylcholine receptor epitopes presented by minority class II isotypes. J. Clin. Invest. 101: 2268 2277. 5. Buckley, C., D. Douek, J. Newsom-Davis, A. Vincent, and N. Willcox. 2001. Mature, long-lived CD4 and CD8 T cells are generated by the thymoma in myasthenia gravis. Ann. Neurol. 50: 64 72. 6. Sempowski, G., J. Thomasch, M. Gooding, L. Hale, L. Edwards, E. Ciafaloni, D. Sanders, J. Massey, D. Douek, R. Koup, and B. Haynes. 2001. Effect of thymectomy on human peripheral blood T cell pools in myasthenia gravis. J. Immunol. 166: 2808 2817. 7. Truffault, F., S. Cohen-Kaminsky, I. Khalil, P. Levasseur, and S. Berrih-Aknin. 1997. Altered intrathymic T-cell repertoire in human myasthenia gravis. Ann. Neurol. 41: 731741. 8. Aissaoui, A., I. Klingel-Schmitt, J. Couderc, D. Chateau, F. Romagne, F. Jambou, A. Vincent, P. Levasseur, B. Eymard, M. C. Maillot, et al. 1999. Prevention of autoimmune attack by targeting specic T-cell receptors in a severe combined immunodeciency mouse model of myasthenia gravis. Ann. Neurol. 46: 559 567. 9. Grunewald, J., R. Ahlberg, A. K. Lefvert, H. DerSimonian, H. Wigzell, and C. H. Janson. 1991. Abnormal T-cell expansion and V-gene usage in myasthenia gravis patients. Scand. J. Immunol. 34: 161168. 10. Navneetham, D., A. S. Penn, J. F. Howard, Jr., and B. M. Conti-Fine. 1998. TCR-V usage in the thymus and blood of myasthenia gravis patients. J. Autoimm. 11: 621 633. 11. Xu, B. Y., R. Giscombe, A. Soderlund, M. Troye-Blomberg, R. Pirskanen, and A. K. Lefvert. 1998. Abnormal T cell receptor V gene usage in myasthenia 27.

28. 29. 30.

31.

32.

33.

34.

35. 36.

37.

You might also like