Abstract

The native antigen that drives the T-helper cells regulating production of muscle acetylcholine receptor (AChR) autoantibodies is unknown. Human T cell lines activated by autoantigens in vitro are of unproven relevance to B cell help. Here we report the functional interaction and unprecedented longevity of AChR-specific human T and B lymphocytes residing in SCID mice. Lymphoid cells from myasthenia gravis (MG) patients and healthy subjects were injected ip. Recombinant human AChR-α1-subunit-1–210 was injected after day 75. Human AChR-specific Ig was produced rapidly in MG-SCID mice challenged once. Only 1 of 32 control hu-SCID mice produced AChR-specific Ig. This required multiple immunizations, was initially cross-reactive with Torpedo AChR, and had a slow course. Thus, memory T and B lymphocytes specific for human AChR-α1-subunit are readily demonstrable in MG patients, interact to produce autoantibody of the same restricted specificity found in the donor's serum, and are long-lived without exogenous autoantigen challenge. In healthy subjects, AChR-specific lymphocytes are infrequent and exhibit naive response characteristics, including apparent affinity maturation of Ig specificity.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call