Evaluation of lymphocyte activation in skin lesions of patients with mixed connective tissue disease and discoid lupus erythematodes

Abstract
Biopsy specimens from mixed connective tissue disease (MCTD) and discoid lupus erythematodes (DLE) skin lesions were stained with monoclonal antibodies to differentiation and activation antigens. In addition, the blast cells were studied by combining autoradiography with immunoperoxidase staining. In both disease conditions most of the inflammatory cells in situ were positive for T11 antigen, the CD4/CD8 ratio being low. Only a few of the cells were pan-B positive B cells. The expression of various activation antigens did not differ significantly between MCTD and DLE biopsy specimens; the number of T9, Tac, and 4F2 antigen carrying cells was relatively low, whereas Iapositive cells were more numerous. 3H-Thymidine incorporating T blasts comprised less than 1% of all inflammatory cells. T4 and T8 marker-carrying blast cells were present in about equal proportions. These findings suggest that Ia antigen-expressing T cells are important from the pathogenetic point of view in both MCTD and DLE. Because the local proliferation of T cells was extremely low according to the lack of interleukin-2 receptor and OKT9 markers and 3H-thymidine incorporation, it seems probable that most of the T cells are recruited from the circulation to the site of the inflammation.