Direct Demonstration of Immunoregulatory T‐Cell Defects in Patients with Systemic Lupus Erythematosus

Abstract
The present study was undertaken to determine directly whether immunoregulatory T cells have a defective suppressor function in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and whether anti-T-cell antibodies are essential for immunoregulatory T-cell defects. Peripheral blood T cells and T-cell subsets were determined in 52 SLE patients. The ratio of T4 to T8 cells was distributed over a wider range in patients with SLE than in the controls. Patients with SLE were divided into three groups (low, normal and high) by the T4/T8 ratio. Lymphocytes from 12 SLE patients (7 with low and 5 with T4/T8 ratios) were studied extensively. Their disease was inactive or in remission. Anti-T cell antibodies were not detected, and yet the patients had immunological abnormalities characterized by the presence of antinuclear antibodies and hypergammaglobulinaemia. The SLE patients with high T4/T8 ratios had a decreased number of T8 cells, and defective suppressor-effector cells. In contrast, patients with low T4T8 ratios had decreased T4 cells and/or increased T8 cells, and defective suppressor-inducer cells. Two patients with low T4/T8 ratios had both suppressor-effector and suppressor-inducer cell defects. These results indicate that immunoregulatory circuits in SLE patients are heterogenous and that immunoregulatory defects exist even when the disease is inactive or in remission. Anti-T cell antibodies were not essential for such immunoregulatory defects. Thus, immunoregulatory T-cell defects and the development of SLE may be independent conditions due to other unknown cases.

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