Decreased T-Cell Receptor Excision Circles in Cutaneous T-Cell Lymphoma
Purpose: The T cell repertoire in patients with advanced cutaneous T cell lymphoma (CTCL) is significantly contracted despite the presence of relatively normal absolute numbers of T cells. We propose that many normal T cells were being lost in patients with CTCL, with the remaining normal T cells ex...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Clinical cancer research 2005-08, Vol.11 (16), p.5748-5755 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Purpose: The T cell repertoire in patients with advanced cutaneous T cell lymphoma (CTCL) is significantly contracted despite the
presence of relatively normal absolute numbers of T cells. We propose that many normal T cells were being lost in patients
with CTCL, with the remaining normal T cells expanding clonally to fill the T cell compartment. T-cell receptor excision circles
(TREC) form as a result of the initial gene rearrangement in naïve T cells. Although they are stable, they do not replicate
and are subsequently diluted with the expansion of a population of T cells. Their concentration is therefore a measure of
unexpanded naïve T cells relative to T cells that have undergone expansion.
Experimental Design: We analyzed TRECs from unfractionated peripheral blood T cells from 108 CTCL patients by quantitative PCR. In patients with
obvious peripheral blood involvement, we also analyzed TRECs from clonal and nonclonal T cells.
Results: We found a decrease in the number of TRECs in peripheral blood of patients with CTCL at all stages of disease, and this decrease
was proportional to the loss of complexity of the T cell repertoire as measured by complementarity-determining region 3 spectratyping.
In patients with leukemic CTCL and a numerically expanded clone, we also found a significantly lower-than-expected number
of TRECs in the nonclonal normal T cells.
Conclusions: We hypothesize that the nonmalignant T cells have proliferated to fill the empty T cell repertoire space left by the loss
of other T cells, leading to diminished TRECs and loss of T-cell receptor diversity. |
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ISSN: | 1078-0432 1557-3265 |
DOI: | 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-04-2514 |