Abstract

The normal human intestinal mucosa contains clonal T cell expansions. Clonal populations of T cells can be determined through evaluation of the idiotypic, hypervariable region of their T cell receptor (TCR). We have previously reported that there exists a highly conserved TCR pattern among intestinal CD8+ T cells in the majority of ulcerative colitis (UC) patients undergoing colectomy that was not present in normal control individuals. This TCR pattern, or motif, was characterized by particular beta-chain usage (TCRBV3 and TCRBJ1S6) and a defined length in the hypervariable third complementarity determining region (CDR3). The aim of this study was to assess the motif's relationship to disease activity. Subjects were 66 with UC, 19 with Crohn's disease, 14 inflammatory controls, and 6 normal controls. cDNA and gDNA were prepared from colonic biopsies and paraffin blocks, respectively, obtained from study subjects and used to assess TCRBV CDR3 region length and usage, as well as for cloning and sequencing of TCRs. The TCRBV CDR3 region was present in 25 of a series of 48 UC subjects but only 3 of 19 Crohn's disease patients and 3 of 14 inflammatory controls. The motif was more common in UC than either Crohn' s disease or inflammatory controls (chi2 = 7.5, P = 0.006, and chi2 = 4.1, P = 0.04, respectively). The motifs presence was not dependent upon histologic disease activity (either active or inactive UC). Clinical UC disease activity was also not significantly associated with an increased presence of the motif in 14 paired biopsies, which were taken during times of clinical activity or inactivity. There was a trend toward persistence of the motif, as it was present in 6 of 14 subjects over a 3- to 6-month time period. The previously described UC-associated TCRBV CDR3 region motif located in the intestinal CD8+ T-cell subset is found in a significant proportion of UC subjects. The TCR motif does not significantly discriminate active from inactive disease states. The persistent and diffuse nature of this TCR-associated motif in UC suggests that an ongoing T-cell response to a particular antigen(s) is occuring in this disorder.

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