| Literature DB >> 28107375 |
Michel Lecendreux1,2, Guillaume Churlaud3,4,5, Fabien Pitoiset3,4,5, Armelle Regnault6, Tu Anh Tran7, Roland Liblau8, David Klatzmann3,4,5, Michelle Rosenzwajg3,4,5.
Abstract
Narcolepsy is a rare neurologic disorder characterized by excessive daytime sleepiness, cataplexy and disturbed nocturnal sleep patterns. Narcolepsy type 1 (NT1) has been shown to result from a selective loss of hypothalamic hypocretin-secreting neurons with patients typically showing low CSF-hypocretin levels (<110 pg/ml). This specific loss of hypocretin and the strong association with the HLA-DQB1*06:02 allele led to the hypothesis that NT1 could be an immune-mediated pathology. Moreover, susceptibility to NT1 has recently been associated with several pathogens, particularly with influenza A H1N1 virus either through infection or vaccination. The goal of this study was to compare peripheral blood immune cell populations in recent onset pediatric NT1 subjects (post or non-post 2009-influenza A H1N1 vaccination) to healthy donors. We demonstrated an increased number of central memory CD4+ T cells (CD62L+ CD45RA-) associated to an activated phenotype (increase in CD69 and CD25 expression) in NT1 patients. Percentage and absolute count of regulatory T cells (Tregs) in NT1 patients were increased associated with an activated phenotype (increase in GITR and LAP expression), and of activated memory phenotype. Cytokine production by CD4+ and CD8+ T cells after activation was not modified in NT1 patients. In H1N1 vaccinated NT1 patients, absolute counts of CD3+, CD8+ T cells, and B cells were increased compared to non-vaccinated NT1 patients. These results support a global T cell activation in NT1 patients and thus support a T cell-mediated autoimmune origin of NT1, but do not demonstrate the pathological role of H1N1 prophylactic vaccination. They should prompt further studies of T cells, particularly of Tregs (such as suppression and proliferation antigen specific assays, and also T-cell receptor sequencing), in NT1.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28107375 PMCID: PMC5249232 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0169836
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Demographic and clinical parameters of healthy donors (HD) and H1N1 or non H1N1 NT1 patients.
| Demographics | HD (n = 32) | NT1 (n = 31) | Non H1N1 NT1 (n = 17) | H1N1 NT1 (n = 14) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 13 (4–17) | 13 (5–21) | 13 (6–21) | 13 (5–16) | |
| 17/15 | 18/13 | 12/5 | 7/7 | |
| - | 591 (169–3376) | 1295 (169–3376) | 487 (199–622) | |
| - | 31 / 31 (100%) | 17 / 17 (100%) | 14 / 14 (100%) | |
| - | 20 / 21 (95%) | 7 / 7 (100%) | 13 / 14 (93%) | |
| - | 31 / 31 (100%) | 17 / 17 (100%) | 14 / 14 (100%) |
aContinuous variables were expressed by n; median and range (min-max).
bVariables were expressed by number of positive out of number of tested and percentage (%).
Absolute lymphocyte counts of HD and NT1 patients.
| Cell type | HD (n = 32) | NT1 (n = 28) | pa | Non H1N1 NT1 (n = 15) | H1N1 NT1 (n = 13) | pb |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1428 ± 75 | 1503 ± 110 | NS | 1267 ± 62 | 1774 ± 204 | * 0.018 | |
| 823 ± 43 | 875 ± 62 | NS | 778 ± 44 | 987 ± 119 | NS | |
| 486 ± 35 | 508 ± 60 | NS | 399 ± 34 | 633 ± 115 | * 0.048 | |
| 38 ± 4 | 51 ± 4 | ** 0.003 | 50 ± 5 | 52 ± 7 | NS | |
| 370 ± 34 | 363 ± 26 | NS | 332 ± 29 | 397 ± 43 | NS | |
| 154 ± 12 | 173 ± 21 | NS | 170 ± 23 | 176 ± 37 | NS |
Results are expressed as mean ± SEM (cells / mm3). pa represents the statistical differences between HD and NT1, and pb between H1N1 and non H1N1 NT1 patients; statistical differences are assessed by Unpaired t test (when normality test passed using D’Agostino and Pearson omnibus normality test, alpha = 0.05) or Mann-Whitney test.
Fig 1CD4+ and CD8+ T cell differentiation and activation phenotypes according to NT1 and H1N1 status.
Central memory (CM), effector memory (EM) and naïve CD4+ and CD8+ T cells in peripheral blood were characterized for HD and NT1 patients (A and C) and for H1N1 or non H1N1 NT1 patients (E and G). Activation markers for CD4+ and CD8+ T cells in peripheral blood were characterized for HD and NT1 patients (B and D) and for H1N1 or non H1N1 NT1 patients (F and H).
Fig 2Cytokines profiles after PMA/ionomycine activation in CD4+ (A) and CD8+ (B) T cells or directly in plasma (C) of HD (n = 4–5) and NT1 patients (n = 6–8).
Fig 3Tregs percentages and phenotype according to NT1 (A-B) and to H1N1 (C-D) status. 32 HD, 31 NT1 patients (including 14 H1N1 and 17 non H1N1 NT1 patients), were assayed for Tregs phenotypes.