Abstract

Superantigens (SAs) are known to induce transient anergy followed by T cell activation. Recent reports have suggested that SAs are involved in the pathogenesis of Kawasaki disease (KD). In the present study, we investigated the peripheral T cell response to SAs by measuring proliferation and IL-2 production to determine whether the T cell anergy is induced by SAs in patients with KD. T cells were obtained from 45 Japanese patients with KD in different stages of the disease and were stimulated by streptococcal pyrogenic exotoxin (SPE)-A, SPE-C, and toxic shock syndrome toxin-1 (TSST-1). T cells from patients with KD in the acute or convalescent stage up to 2 mo showed significantly lower proliferation and IL-2 production than did T cells from healthy control subjects stimulated by SPE-C, but not SPE-A or TSST-1. The T cell response to SPE-C normalized within 1 y. The low T cell response to SPE-C in the acute stage correlated with a peak platelet count and the C-reactive protein-positive period. These findings suggest that the transient low T cell response to SPE-C in patients with KD may have been related to SA-induced anergy or disappearance of SPE-C-responding cells from the circulation. The present results suggested that SPE-C may be involved in the pathogenesis of KD.

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