CD3+ T cells expressing the 110-kDa CD57 antigen are found in survivors of renal, cardiac and bone marrow transplants, in patients with acquired immune deficiency syndrome and in patients with rheumatoid arthritis. They are also present in normal individuals and expand upon ageing. They do not grow in culture and their role in the immune response is poorly understood. The expression of the various isoforms of the leukocyte common antigen (CD45) identifies a spectrum of differentiation in CD4+ and CD8+ T cells ranging from naive (CD45RA+CD45RBbrightCD45RO-) through early primed cells (CD45RA-RBbrightROdull) to highly differentiated memory cells which are CD45RA-RBdullRObright. CD45 isoforms expressed by CD57+ T cells showed distinct differences between CD4+ and CD8+ populations, but in each case indicated an advanced state of differentiation. The expression of T cell receptor V beta families was highly variable between individuals, but both CD57+ and CD57- cells show a full range of the specificities tested. V beta expression was more closely related within either the CD4+ or the CD8+ subsets, irrespective of CD57 expression, than between these subsets, suggesting a relationship between CD57+ and CD57- cells within the same T cell pool. This possibility was supported by experiments showing that CD3+CD57+ lymphocytes were similar to CD3+CD57- T cells in terms of the production of basic T cell cytokines [interleukin (IL)-2, IL-4, and interferon-gamma]. Furthermore, in vitro stimulation of CD3+CD57- T cells in secondary mixed leukocyte reaction or by co-culture with IL-2 and IL-4 induced the appearance of CD3+CD57+ cells with phenotypic and functional similarities to in vivo CD3+CD57+ cells. These data strongly suggest that the expression of CD57 is a differentiation event which occurs on CD57- T cells late in the immune response.
heed, the human homolog of mouse eed and Drosophila esc, two members of the trithorax (trx) and Polycomb group (Pc-G) of genes, was isolated by screening an activated lymphocyte cDNA library versus the immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) MA protein used as a bait in a two-hybrid system in yeast. The human EED protein (HEED) had 99.5% identity with the mouse EED protein and contained seven WD repeats. Two heed gene transcripts were identified, with a putative 407-nucleotidelong intron, giving rise to two HEED protein isoforms of 535 and 494 residues in length, respectively. The shorter HEED isoform, originated from the unspliced message, lacked the seventh WD repeat.
Objective. To determine whether a small CD3+ lymphocyte population expressing 110-kd CD57 antigens (HNK1) is expanded in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), as it is in patients who have undergone bone marrow transplantation and patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, and to investigate whether it is involved in the pathogenesis of RA.Methods. The phenotype of CD3+, CD57+ lymphocytes was analyzed by flow cytometry, and correlations between the percentage of these cells in the blood and various clinical and biologic parameters were investigated.Results. The percentage of CD3+, CD57+ lymphocytes was increased in RA patients compared with controls. These lymphocytes expressed T cell receptor dp. Eighty percent expressed the CD8 accessory molecule, and 20% expressed the CD4 accessory molecule. The leukocyte common antigen CD45RA isoform was expressed by these CD3+, CD57+ lymphocytes in _ _ ._.__
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