Abstract

Objective: To analyse the relation between serum autoantibodies and leuko-/lymphocytopenia in patients with lupus erythematosus (LE). Methods: Laboratory routine analyses (white blood cell counts, autoantibody detection), and flow cytometry (annexin V, CD3, CD4, CD8, CD95, F(ab)2 anti-human IgG) have been performed in LE-patients versus healthy controls. In vitro, the influence of pooled serum containing anti-dsDNA antibodies has been analysed on the CD95 expression. Results: Leukocytes, lymphocytes, CD3+, CD3+ CD4+, and CD3+ CD8+ cells from LE-patients were significantly reduced compared with controls. Patients with autoantibodies had significantly lower absolute cell counts than those without. Apoptosis was increased in LE versus controls (p<0.04). The percentage of CD95+ T-cells was increased, and the absolute number of CD95+ cells was reduced in LE. In vitro up-regulation of CD95 could be detected on T-cells of healthy donors. Induction of CD95 seems to be donor-dependent. Conclusion: The data suggest that autoantibodies may be associated with blood cytopenias. CD95 seems to play a central role in this signalling cascade. The underlying mechanism is unclear, but seems to be autoantibody-related apoptosis induction.

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