85 research outputs found

    Pro-inflammatory cytokines in cryptoglandular anal fistulas

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    Background: Sphincter-preserving procedures for the treatment of transsphincteric fistulas fail in at least one out of every three patients. It has been suggested that failure is due to ongoing disease in the remaining fistula tract. Cytokines play an important role in inflammation. At present, biologicals targeting cytokines are available. Therefore, detection and identification of cytokines in anal fistulas might have implications for future treatment modalities. The objective of the present study was to assess local production of a selected panel of cytokines in anal fistulas, including pro-inflammatory interleukin (IL)-1β and tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α). Methods: Fistula tract tissue was obtained from 27 patients with a transsphincteric fistula of cryptoglandular origin who underwent flap repair, ligation of the intersphincteric fistula tract or a combination of both procedures. Patients with a rectovaginal fistula or a fistul

    IgM antibody level against proinflammatory bacterial peptidoglycan is inversely correlated with extent of atherosclerotic disease

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    Objective: Atherosclerosis may lead to acute clinical events by rupture of a vulnerable atherosclerotic plaque. Previously, we demonstrated that peptidoglycan (PGN), a major cell wall component of gram-positive bacteria that induces production of proinflammatory cytokines through TLR2 and CD14, is prevalent in atherosclerotic lesions with histological features associated with plaque vulnerability. We hypothesized that in atherosclerotic patients antibody levels against PGN may differ compared with matched controls. Methods and results: ELISA was performed to measure immunoglobulin levels against PGN in sera of 80 atherosclerotic patients versus 77 control patients with an increased cardiovascular risk, frequency-matched for age, sex and risk factors for atherosclerotic disease. In all patients and controls, intima-media (IMT) thickness was assessed using an array transducer. Significantly lower levels of IgM directed against PGN were found in atherosclerotic patients compared with the control patients without clinically manifested disease (P=0.02). The IgM levels against PGN decreased with increasing mean common carotid IMT thickness (P=0.006). Conclusions: These results show that patients suffering from atherosclerotic disease have decreased IgM levels against PGN. The data suggest that an antibody response against PGN could have a protective effect against the development or activity of atherosclerotic disease

    Arthritis by autoreactive T cell lines obtained from rats after injection of intestinal bacterial cell wall fragments

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    __Abstract__ T cell lines (B13, B19) were isolated from the lymph nodes of Lewis rats 12 days after an arthritogenic injection of cell wall fragments of Eubacterium aerofaciens (ECW), a major resident of the human intestinal flora. These cell wall fragments consist of peptidoglycan polysaccharide complexes (PPC). The cell lines that bear the helper phenotype were arthritogenic in knee or ankle joints upon intravenous injection into irradiated Lewis recipients. B13 was, however, not arthritogenic in irradiated F344 recipients that are largely RT1 identical. The arthritis induced in the knee joints of the irradiated Lewis rats was clearly shown by a 99mtechnetium-pertechnetate scanning technique and was confirmed histologically. In vitro the cell lines showed a proliferative response after stimulation with syngeneic spleen cells alone. The proliferation was significantly higher when bacterial PPC, isolated in soluble form from normal feces or ileostomy fluid were added. Recognition by B13 appeared to be MHC class II restricted. These results show that autoreactive T cell lines can be isolated from rats after injection of bacterial cell wall antigens and that these cell lines can be arthritogenic. This suggests a role for autoreactive T cells in the induction of bacterial cell wall arthritis and might give a clue for the arthritogenic properties of the normal human intestinal flora

    Phenotypic and functional characterization of T cells in white matter lesions of multiple sclerosis patients

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    T cells are considered pivotal in the pathology of multiple sclerosis (MS), but their function and antigen specificity are unknown. To unravel the role of T cells in MS pathology, we performed a comprehensive analysis on T cells recovered from paired blood, cerebrospinal f

    Differential Runx3, Eomes, and T-bet expression subdivides MS-associated CD4<sup>+</sup> T cells with brain-homing capacity

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    Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a common and devastating chronic inflammatory disease of the CNS. CD4 + T cells are assumed to be the first to cross the blood–central nervous system (CNS) barrier and trigger local inflammation. Here, we explored how pathogenicity-associated effector programs define CD4 + T cell subsets with brain-homing ability in MS. Runx3- and Eomes-, but not T-bet-expressing CD4 + memory cells were diminished in the blood of MS patients. This decline reversed following natalizumab treatment and was supported by a Runx3 +Eomes +T-bet − enrichment in cerebrospinal fluid samples of treatment-naïve MS patients. This transcription factor profile was associated with high granzyme K (GZMK) and CCR5 levels and was most prominent in Th17.1 cells (CCR6 +CXCR3 +CCR4 −/dim). Previously published CD28 − CD4 T cells were characterized by a Runx3 +Eomes −T-bet + phenotype that coincided with intermediate CCR5 and a higher granzyme B (GZMB) and perforin expression, indicating the presence of two separate subsets. Under steady-state conditions, granzyme K high Th17.1 cells spontaneously passed the blood–brain barrier in vitro. This was only found for other subsets including CD28 − cells when using inflamed barriers. Altogether, CD4 + T cells contain small fractions with separate pathogenic features, of which Th17.1 seems to breach the blood–brain barrier as a possible early event in MS.</p
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