Abstract
The expanded T cell populations of 10 patients with either T gamma lymphocytosis (five patients) or proven chronic T cell malignancy (five patients) were analyzed with respect to functional activity in vitro, including proliferative responses to mitogens, cytotoxic activity (killer [K] and natural killer [NK] cell activity), and regulatory activity on pokeweed mitogen- (PWM) induced immunoglobulin (Ig) synthesis (help and suppression) in comparison with marker phenotypes. In each of the five patients with T gamma lymphocytosis, only one out of three functionally distinct cell types was found: T gamma-K cells, T gamma-S cells, or T gamma-NK/K cells, which mediated K-cell activity, suppressive activity, and both NK and K cell activity, respectively. An expanded T gamma-K cell population was demonstrated in three patients with neutropenia with or without recurrent infections. T gamma-S cells were found in a patient with severe hypogammaglobulinemia, and T gamma-NK/K cells in one patient with asymptomatic lymphocytosis. T gamma-K and T gamma-S cells had a similar surface-marker profile (E+ or E-, Fc gamma+, OKT1-3+4-8+I1-M1-), whereas that of T gamma-NK/K cells was different (E+, Fc gamma+, OKT1-3-4-8-I1+M1+). Longitudinal studies of three untreated patients with T gamma-K lymphocytosis showed that the abnormalities were persistent but not progressive. In contrast, five patients with chronic T cell malignancy (two with T-CLL, two with cutaneous T cell lymphoma [CTCL], and one with T-PLL) all had progressive disease. The neoplastic cells in these cases were E+, Fc gamma-OKT1+4+6- with variable expression of the OKT3 and OKT8 markers. The only functional activity observed in these cells was suppressive activity by OKT3-4+8- cells from a patient with CTCL.
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