Abstract

To investigate the phenotypic and functional characteristics of peripheral and tissue-infiltrating stem cells called fibrocytes in patients with idiopathic orbital inflammation (IOI). Seven patients with IOI were studied. In the 3 patients requiring orbital biopsy, fibrocytes were identified in orbital tissue from patients with IOI compared with healthy controls using immunohistochemistry. Fibrocytes from the peripheral blood of all 7 patients and controls were quantified and phenotyped by flow cytometry and immunofluorescence for expression of CD34, alpha smooth muscle actin, CD40, and collagen 1. Quantitation of CD40-mediated interleukin-6 (IL-6) production was measured using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Orbital biopsy specimens from patients with IOI demonstrate tissue infiltration by fibrocytes (n = 3). Fibrocytes are present in the peripheral blood of IOI patients (n = 7) but are scarce in healthy donors (n = 19). Fibrocytes from IOI patients express substantial levels of CD40, and ligation of CD40 increases IL-6 expression. Fibrocytes are present in the peripheral blood and orbital tissues of patients with IOI and constitutively express CD40 and express IL-6 in response to ligation. This site-specific predilection of CD34(+) fibrocytes to sites of orbital inflammation and fibrosis may suggest a role in IOI. Moreover, CD40-mediated activation cytokine production may contribute to the proinflammatory and profibrotic features of IOI and may provide a mechanism for future targeted therapy.

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