Abstract

Cellular infiltrates of bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) and pleural effusion from patients with tuberculosis (TB) and lung cancer were characterized for the presence of different T cell subsets by phenotypic analysis. The specificity of the T cells for mycobacterial antigens was then compared for the two disease compartments. The composition of T cell subsets within the BAL, in contrast to pleural effusion cells (PEC), revealed evidence of sequestration of CD8+ cells. BAL T cells were found to be a predominantly CD29+ DR+ memory population of activated cells. Although polyclonal populations of BAL T cells proliferated poorly to Mycobacterium tuberculosis antigens, mycobacterial antigen-reactive monoclonal T cell populations could be derived from the alveolar compartment. Two clones were shown to recognize the 65-kD heat shock protein of mycobacteria, and one of these clones recognized a conserved sequence of the molecule. Several BAL-derived clones, responding to a mycobacterial soluble extract, did not, however, recognize purified mycobacterial antigens, previously identified as highly stimulatory for PEC-derived T cells. T cell clones, derived from PEC of two TB patients, responded to the 38-kD and 71-kD, as well as the 65-kD mycobacterial antigens. Examination of the activation requirements of BAL-derived T cell clones, specific for mycobacterial antigens, revealed that exogenous IL-2 was necessary for the T cells to sustain proliferation. This was in contrast to the mycobacterial antigen-reactive T cells cloned from PEC. These results suggest that T cell populations with distinct antigen specificities and activation requirements are present in BAL and PEC.

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