Abstract

Antigen-driven responses by T cells from patients with CVID and normal subjects have been assessed. Low-density cells enriched for antigen-presenting dendritic cells were cultured with T cells using a 20-microliters hanging drop system. T cells from all subgroups of CVID patients showed markedly reduced responses to the recall antigens purified protein derivative (PPD) or tetanus toxoid, whereas responses by cells from patients with X-linked agammaglobulinaemia, used as a disease control, were in the normal range. However, primary allo-stimulation of CVID T cells was normal. CVID cells from two patients failed to respond to stimulation with a neoantigen, an HIV env peptide, under conditions where normal T cells did respond. These data illustrate a profound defect in antigen-stimulated T cell proliferation in vitro in all groups of CVID patients, but do not distinguish whether the defect is in the presenting cell or in the T lymphocyte. In vivo, germinal centre B cells are thought to present antigen to primed T cells to obtain essential signals (e.g. CD40 ligand and IL-2) for B cell survival and progression to immunoglobulin secretion. A failure of antigen-specific T cell function in vivo in CVID would thus not provide the primed T cells needed for B cell rescue, and could be the primary defect leading to the low immunoglobulin production in this condition.

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