Abstract

The production of antinicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AcChR) antibodies in myasthenia gravis (MG) is modulated by specific Th (CD4+) lymphocytes that can recognize epitopes on the denatured AcChR alpha subunit. Thirty-two overlapping synthetic peptides corresponding to the complete sequence of human AcChR alpha subunit were used to investigate the anti-alpha subunit response of unselected lymphocytes and of CD8(+)-depleted, CD4(+)-enriched lymphocytes from the blood of nine MG patients and from four healthy controls. One subject was a newly diagnosed MG patient that was tested three times after the development of the disease. An anti-AcChR response of the CD4(+)-enriched cells was present that could be detected only after removal of the CD8+ population and that seems to be related to the clinical conditions of the patient. The high basal rate of the cell proliferation of the unselected unstimulated blood lymphocytes and the normal basal rate observed for the CD8(+)-depleted population suggested the presence of activated CD8+ cells. The study of surface markers of the T cells confirmed the existence of activated CD8+ and CD4+ cells in numbers correlated with the severity of the disease and the results of the in vitro response of the T cells. The anti-AcChR activity of the CD4+ cells in MG may be a useful marker of the activity of the disease and it seems to be influenced by activated CD8+ cells present in the patients' blood.

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