Literature DB >> 10807508

Life, activation and death of intrahepatic lymphocytes in chronic hepatitis C.

N M Valiante1, A D'Andrea, S Crotta, F Lechner, P Klenerman, S Nuti, A Wack, S Abrignani.   

Abstract

The healthy liver of adult humans has little or no lymphocyte component and the histological finding of intrahepatic lymphocytes (IHL) is evidence of liver pathology. In a liver injured by chronic hepatitis C, the most common chronic liver disease, most IHL are activated/pro-inflammatory cells, which are particularly enriched for effectors of innate immunity (natural killer (NK), natural T, and other NK-like T cells). IHL do not undergo clonal expansion in the liver but migrate from extrahepatic sites to the chronically infected liver, where they display effector function and subsequently die, suggesting that maintenance of the IHL pool depends on continuous lymphocyte migration. The cytotoxic and inflammatory functions of these IHL have three potential outcomes: 1) they could be helpful in clearing the virus (a rare case in hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection); 2) they could be useless and have no effect on the infection; or 3) they could be harmful, whereby overaggressive lymphocyte responses destroy the liver in a continuous and unsuccessful attempt to clear the virus. Unfortunately, we do not know as of yet which of these possibilities is the case and, therefore, a more complete picture of the intrahepatic immune response will be relevant to the development of new therapeutic strategies against HCV. Additionally and from a more general perspective, due to the availability of biopsied material and the high prevalence (approximately 3%) of HCV infection worldwide, studying the chronically inflamed liver of hepatitis C patients is an ideal model to investigate the poorly understood processes of lymphocyte trafficking, activation and death to non-lymphoid sites of chronic inflammation in man.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10807508     DOI: 10.1034/j.1600-0528.2002.017417.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Immunol Rev        ISSN: 0105-2896            Impact factor:   12.988


  19 in total

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7.  Oligoclonal CD8+ T-cell expansion in patients with chronic hepatitis C is associated with liver pathology and poor response to interferon-alpha therapy.

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10.  Hepatitis C virus core protein leads to immune suppression and liver damage in a transgenic murine model.

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