| Literature DB >> 29579044 |
Meghan Martin1, Brian H Wrotniak1, Mark Hicar1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Kawasaki disease (KD), the leading cause of acquired heart disease in children, primarily affects infants and toddlers. Investigations on immune responses during KD are hampered by a limited understanding of normal immune responses in these ages. It's well known that Infants have poorer vaccine responses and difficulty with maintaining prolonged serum immunity, but there are few studies on human infants detailing immune deficiencies. Limited studies propose an inability to maintain life-long bone marrow plasma cells. Plasmablasts are a transitional cell form of B cells that lead to long-term Plasma cells. Plasmablasts levels rise in the peripheral blood after exposure to a foreign antigen. In adult studies, these responses are both temporally and functionally well characterized. To date, there have been few studies on plasmablasts in the predominant age range of KD.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29579044 PMCID: PMC5868766 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0193539
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Flow cytometry isolation of plasmablasts.
A single example of the flow gating and analysis is shown. After selecting for single cell events, lymphocyte gate was constructed inclusive of blasting cells, which are enriched for plasmablasts. CD14+ and CD3+ cells were excluded. CD19+/CD20low cells that were dual positive for CD27 and CD38 were defined as plasmablasts.
Clinical characteristics of enrolled patients, classified by diagnoses.
| Enrolllee # | Gender | Age months | Febrile days before blood drawn | Clinical Diagnosis and/or associated symptoms and diagnostic result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4 | female | 69 | 7 | Kawasaki Disease |
| 5 | male | 32 | 7 | Kawasaki Disease, Recurrence of diagnosis 3 months prior |
| 6 | male | 28 | 6 | Kawasaki Disease, Gallbladder hydrops |
| 15 | male | 78 | 6 | Kawasaki Disease |
| 17 | male | 49 | 4 | Kawasaki Disease, Polyarthritis |
| 24 | male | 58 | 4 | Kawasaki Disease, neck ultrasound with node cluster |
| 47 | female | 81 | 5 | Kawasaki Disease, + Parainfluenza 2 Respiratory Screen |
| 53 | male | 29 | 6 | Kawasaki Disease |
| 67 | male | 10 | 6 | Kawasaki Disease |
| 68 | male | 21 | 4 | Kawasaki Disease |
| 75 | male | 20 | 7 | Kawasaki Disease, +Rapid Strep screen, + Echo (lack of tapering, LAD z score 2.5), Gallbladder hydrops, neck ultrasound with node cluster |
| 79 | male | 26 | 7 | Kawasaki Disease |
| 80 | female | 53 | 3 | Kawasaki Disease, neck CT with node cluster, retropharyngeal phlegmon |
| 93 | female | 83 | 5 | Kawasaki Disease, Gallbladder hydrops, neck ultrasound with node cluster |
| 97 | male | 54 | 6 | Kawasaki Disease, + RSV Respiratory Screen, Gallbladder hydrops |
| 99 | female | 39 | 9 | Kawasaki Disease |
| 103 | male | 23 | 5 | Kawasaki Disease |
| 119 | male | 29 | 6 | Kawasaki Disease |
| 54 | male | 71 | 14 | Septic Arthritis, pretreated |
| 66 | male | 40 | 14 | Rash, Conjunctivitis |
| 94 | female | 42 | 24 | URI, Conjunctivitis (+ Adenovirus) |
| 123 | male | 30 | 14 | URI, Adenopathy |
| 45 | female | 72 | 5 | URI, Rash, conjunctivitis |
| 59 | male | 36 | 6 | URI, Rash, conjunctivitis |
| 95 | female | 75 | 5 | URI, Rash, conjunctivitis |
| 131 | male | 19 | 4 | URI, conjunctivitis |
| 49 | male | 36 | 2 | Rapid Influenza A+, Rash |
| 101 | female | 85 | 3 | Rapid influenza A + (OSH) |
| 109 | male | 32 | 2 | Rapid influenza B + (OSH) |
| 16 | female | 21 | 3 | Hand-foot-and-mouth disease (HFM) |
| 87 | male | 35 | 5 | Hand-foot-and-mouth disease (HFM) |
| 104 | male | 28 | 6 | Hand-foot-and-mouth disease (HFM) |
| 117 | female | 34 | 4 | Hand-foot-and-mouth disease (HFM) |
| 7 | male | 13 | 4 | MRSA Abscess, Cervical adenitis |
| 25 | male | 37 | 2 | Cellulitis of the leg |
| 30 | female | 13 | 3 | Periorbital cellulitis |
| 42 | male | 15 | 2 | Cervical adenitis; improved on clindamycin |
| 43 | male | 50 | 4 | Parapharyngeal abscess ( |
| 48 | male | 14 | 11 | Cervical adenitis; improved on clindamycin |
| 60 | male | 37 | 7 | Cervical adenitis, conjunctivitis; improved on clindamycin |
| 98 | male | 14 | 5 | Cervical adenitis, Rash, Conjunctivitis; improved on ampicillin-sulbactam |
| 107 | male | 88 | 10 | Cervical adenitis; improved on clindamycin |
| 130 | male | 52 | 7 | Cervical adenitis; improved on clindamycin |
| 58 | male | 68 | 9 | Pharyngitis, Cervical adenopathy, Rapid strep + |
| 89 | male | 62 | 4 | Pharyngitis, Rash, Rapid strep + |
| 92 | female | 20 | 2 | Pharyngitis, Rapid Strep + |
| 113 | male | 34 | 3 | Pharyngitis, Scarlet fever, Rapid Strep + |
| 3 | male | 19 | 4 | URI, Rash |
| 10 | male | 56 | 4 | Viral syndrome, bilateral adenopathy |
| 12 | male | 27 | 6 | Viral pneumonia |
| 13 | female | 64 | 3 | Viral pneumonia, Gastroenteritis, Conjunctivitis; + Parainfluenza 3 Respiratory Screen |
| 14 | male | 22 | 1 | Cough |
| 20 | female | 14 | 6 | URI, Rash |
| 29 | female | 52 | 6 | Pyelonephritis, Septicemia |
| 31 | female | 15 | 5 | Viral syndrome, Neutropenia |
| 34 | male | 23 | 7 | Bacteremia ( |
| 52 | male | 80 | 3 | Bacteremia ( |
| 55 | male | 11 | 7 | Acute pyelonephritis ( |
| 61 | male | 21 | 5 | Cough, Rash, Conjunctivitis |
| 64 | female | 82 | 6 | Viral Syndrome, Peeling |
| 65 | male | 18 | 2 | Viral Syndrome |
| 69 | female | 27 | 6 | Rash |
| 70 | male | 9 | 4 | URI |
| 71 | female | 16 | 3 | Viral syndrome, Rash |
| 72 | male | 108 | 5 | Viral syndrome, Hepatitis, Rash, Conjunctivitis |
| 74 | male | 12 | 7 | Viral syndrome, + Enterovirus |
| 76 | female | 38 | 2 | Allergic reaction with fever, Rash, Hand and feet swelling |
| 77 | male | 48 | 4 | Viral syndrome, Rash, Allergic drug reaction |
| 78 | male | 67 | 2 | Viral syndrome, Adenopathy |
| 81 | male | 11 | 5 | Viral syndrome, Rash |
| 82 | male | 46 | 2 | URI, Conjunctivitis, Adenopathy |
| 83 | male | 14 | 6 | Gastroenteritis, Rash |
| 84 | male | 23 | 4 | URI, Gastroenteritis, Rash |
| 85 | female | 16 | 1 | Viral Syndrome, Rash |
| 86 | female | 49 | 4 | Viral syndrome, Gastroenteritis |
| 88 | male | 43 | 2 | URI |
| 90 | female | 43 | 6 | Viral syndrome, Gastroenteritis |
| 91 | female | 57 | 6 | Viral Pharyngitis |
| 102 | male | 10 | 1 | URI, Cough |
| 106 | male | 29 | 2 | Erythema multiforme |
| 110 | male | 59 | 1 | Staph scalded skin syndrome |
| 112 | male | 11 | 7 | Gastroenteritis |
| 115 | female | 40 | 4 | Rash, Conjunctivitis |
| 116 | male | 11 | 6 | Viral syndrome, Rash |
| 122 | male | 16 | 3 | Rash |
| 125 | male | 12 | 3 | Rash, Conjunctivitis, referred to rule-out KD |
| 129 | female | 10 | 1 | URI, Conjunctivitis |
Demographic and laboratory comparison of Kawasaki disease to control.
| Variable | Kawasaki Disease (KD) | All Controls | P-value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Male Gender, n (%) | 13 (72.2) | 49 (71.0) | 0.920 |
| Age in months ±(SD) | 43.4(23.0) | 36.3 (23.6) | 0.955 |
| Febrile days prior to blood draw ±(SD) | 5.7 (1.4) | 5.0 (3.7) | 0.208 |
| White blood cell count maximum ±(SD) | 17.6 (5.4) | 13.1 (6.0) | |
| Platelet count maximum ±(SD) | 393.4 (113.2) | 326.7 (145.9) | |
| C-reactive protein [CRP] maximum ±(SD) | 129.4 (62.3) | 73.3 (88.9) | |
| Sedimentation rate [ESR], prior to IVIG ±(SD) | 83.6 (30.3) | 55.4 (28.4) | |
| Hemoglobin minimum ±(SD) | 10.4 (1.2) | 11.6 (1.0) | |
| Hematocrit %, minimum ±(SD) | 31.2 (3.5) | 34.8 (2.9) | |
| Aspartate Aminotransferase [AST] maximum ±(SD) | 36.8 (20.0) | 52.4 (31.2) | |
| Alanine Aminotransferase [ALT], maximum ±(SD) | 51.2 (36.5) | 57.1 (78.3) | 0.726 |
| Serum Albumin minimum ±(SD) | 2.9 (0.5) | 3.7 (0.5) | |
| Urine WBC, n (%) | 6 (40) | 22 (78.6) |
Median values of cell subsets from flow cytometry of peripheral blood mononuclear cells.
| Cell Subset | Kawasaki (n = 18) | Control (n = 69) | P value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Percent of Lymphocytes | B cells | 17.3 | 14.8 | 0.081 |
| IgG Cells | 1.19 | 0.71 | ||
| IgA Cells | 0.69 | 0.56 | 0.237 | |
| Plasmablast | 0.33 | 0.29 | 0.607 | |
| Percent of B cells | IgG | 7.15 | 4.74 | 0.074 |
| IgA | 4.35 | 3.59 | 0.470 | |
| Plasmablasts | 2.51 | 2.32 | 0.942 | |
| Percent of Plasmablasts | IgG | 11.93 | 9.24 | 0.177 |
| IgA | 47.4 | 43.6 | 0.441 | |
Fig 2Plasmablast comparison between different clinical diagnoses.
Plasmablast levels, as a percentage of overall B cell number, were compared between children with KD (star), prolonged fever (closed circle), and all controls (open circles). Mean values are marked by horizontal dash. Data is shown on a logarithmic scale to improve separation of individual points. Five subsets of all controls that qualified as specific diagnoses are shown (Adenovirus, Influenza, Hand-foot-and-mouth (HFM), Skin and Soft tissue infections (SSTI), and Group A streptococcal pharyngitis (GAS)) and also listed in Table 1.
Fig 3Plasmablast level relationship to C-reactive Protein (CRP).
Linear regression analysis of level of CRP and plasmablast level in KD (starred, small dashed line) and controls (open circles, long dashed line). Results failed to show any linear correlation.
Fig 4Relationship of plasmablast level to day of fever.
A) Values of means of all samples graphed by day (diamonds) with connected line showing trend. KD samples (stars) and controls (open circles) are shown. B) Showing KD samples alone, single timepoint samples are again labelled with stars. Samples of five individuals with repeat samples are shown by connected (short dash) lines and distinguished by open distinct symbols.
Fig 5Plasmablast level and temporal pattern relative to age of subject.
A) In KD children, Linear regression (small dashed line) shows relationship of older children to higher plasmablast levels. B) Mean values for plasmablast percentage of B cells by day of fever for those 24 months and under (long dashed line) compared to subjects over 24 months of age (solid line).